Event    From 1944  To 1945

V1 and V2 rockets

Categories: Tragedy

The V1 and V2 rockets were developed as a reaction to the heavy allied bombing of German cities towards the end of WW2. (V stands for Vergeltungswaffe - retribution weapon'). In total, over 3,000 V2s were launched against Britain, resulting in an estimated 9,000 deaths.

V1s, known as doodlebugs, flew until they ran out of fuel and then they dropped to the ground. So people on the ground would listen hoping to hear it pass overhead, but if the noise stopped while it was still coming towards them they would dive for cover. The V2s were the world's first long-range guided ballistic missile and as such no one heard them coming.

This Wikipedia image shows a V2 rocket.

2018: A London Inheritance has a great post about V2s.

2018: "Drone Warfare: The Development of Unmanned Aerial Conflict" by Dave Sloggett, references "Most Secret War" by R. V. Jones where Tower Bridge is named as the permanent target for all the London V1 rockets. It seems to be generally agreed that the V1s were not at all accurate and many fell short.

2018: In 2009 Matt the Magnificent Mapper at Londonist plotted all the V2 sites he had access to at that time.  Then in 2018 that was superseded by WWII V2 Rocket Attacks.

2019: LRB has an interesting post about these bombs, particularly in the comments about their random nature.

 

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
V1 and V2 rockets

Commemorated ati

Adam Faith

Adam Faith (Terry Nelhams), 1940 - 2003, singer & actor born in a house o...

Read More

Canadian WW2 firefighters

{On the floral emblem:} Canada fire fighters. In memory of three members of ...

Read More

Crooked Billet - V2 attack

In memory of all those killed and injured at this site by a V2 rocket which d...

Read More

First Blackfriars Station

SER Blackfriars Station This is the entrance to the former Blackfriars Statio...

Read More

First flying bomb

From English Heritage: "The plaque was unveiled on 13 June, 41 years after th...

Read More

Show all 27

Other Subjects

Laura Susan Webb

Laura Susan Webb

Laura Susan Webb was born on 12 October 1975 in Kingston-upon-Thames, Surrey, the youngest of the three children of George C. R. Webb and Hazel M. Webb née Broadbent. Her elder brothers were Robert...

Person, Tragedy

2 memorials
Thomas Tadman

Thomas Tadman

Role on the lost expedition: Able seaman on SS Erebus. See John Franklin.

Person, Exploring, Tragedy

1 memorial
Alan Lai
1 memorial
Peter John Docking

Peter John Docking

Died in an accident at St Magnus House. Lived in Downham, Bromley.

Person, Tragedy

1 memorial
Lieutenant Charles Campbell Wood

Lieutenant Charles Campbell Wood

Hero. R.A.F (South African Artillery). On 27 December 1919 he dived into the Thames from the upstream footway of Hammersmith Bridge and saved a drowning woman. He contracted tetanus as a consequenc...

Person, Armed Forces, Tragedy, South Africa

1 memorial