Authors: Roger Moorhouse
twinkle in his ‘Irish eyes’ and his ‘nasal voice’, and branding him as a
‘hard-fisted, scar-faced Fascist rabble-rouser’. Yet, he conceded that ‘if
you can get over your revulsion at his being a traitor, you find him
an interesting and amusing fellow’. In Joyce’s company, lubricated by
a bottle of schnapps, Shirer ‘watched the fireworks’ as the flak
hammered away over the south of the city, lighting up the sky.53
Though often cramped and uncomfortable, the cellars repeatedly
proved their worth as the bombing intensified that autumn. Newspaper
reports after many of the raids noted that the casualties recorded were
among those people who had ‘failed to follow instructions’ and had
remained above ground.54 The subtext was clear: if you neglected to
proceed to the nearest cellar or air raid shelter as soon as the siren
sounded, you did so at your own peril.
Consequently, those caught away from home during a raid faced
the sometimes ignominious prospect of being shooed into the nearest
shelter by an often brusque policeman or air raid warden. Henry
Flannery was on the Friedrichstrasse in central Berlin when the sirens
sounded in late November 1940. He noted that the pedestrians picked
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up their pace, hurrying hither and thither, as calls and shouts echoed
through the darkened streets. Soon after, he was stopped by a
policeman: ‘Get in a shelter’, he was ordered. He protested that his
hotel was only two blocks away, but the policeman was unmoved.
‘Doesn’t make any difference’, he said. ‘Get into a shelter.’ After asking
directions, Flannery found himself in the doorway of a house with a
young German, watching the searchlights and ‘pandemonium’ as the
raid began in earnest. This time, it was the air raid warden who admon-
ished him and ordered him to go down into the cellar. ‘“You’ll have
to go below”, he said. “I’m responsible for this place and no one can
stand outside. Someone might see you and report me.”’ Finally,
Flannery was forced to make his way down into the cellar.55
Though the activity was frowned upon and actively discouraged,
remaining above ground to watch the raids was a common sport that
autumn. Those who managed to evade the air raid wardens and
policemen and witness the raids first-hand were often impressed by the
tremendous light show that unfolded. Searchlight beams raked across
the sky, while the flak shells flashed between them and tracer bullets
slashed through the darkness. Above it all, the coloured marker flares
drifted down, spreading a pale light amid the gloom. Missie Vassiltchikov
observed from the western suburb of Grunewald as flares fell on the city
during a raid. ‘We stood in the garden’, she wrote, ‘watching the many
green and red “Christmas trees” that were dropped.’ It was, she recalled
with considerable understatement, ‘quite a to-do’.56 Another eyewitness
recalled British parachute flares falling over the very heart of the city:
‘Once a tangle of four flares swung down vertically over the centre of
Berlin, and sank with a blinding light onto Unter den Linden.’57
For all the deadly beauty of the light show, it was the awful concerto
of sounds that many recalled most clearly, probably because it could
be heard even by those who dutifully remained in their shelters and
cellars. First came the wailing of the siren, which was followed by the
din of a rushed evacuation and the hushed chatter in the cellar. In
time, the distant hum of aero-engines could be discerned, growing
louder and more distinct with every passing minute. ‘The noise was
ghastly’, Missie Vassiltchikov wrote, ‘the planes flew so low that one
could hear them distinctly . . . they seemed just above our heads.’58
Finally, the climax of the performance would be reached, as the noise
of the aero-engines, flak fire and detonating bombs coincided. It was
a taste of things to come
153
a cacophony to which some would become hardened and immune,
a combination of sounds that one learned to filter and block out.
Helmuth James von Moltke described the various – almost musical –
components of a raid in September 1940:
I had slept through the starting sirens again but woke when the heavy
anti-aircraft artillery . . . began firing like mad. The windows were
rattling and the explosions of the guns created lightning effects. Quite
soon I was wide awake . . . From time to time a little hail of shrapnel
fell in the garden, some splinters so close to the window that they made
a whistling noise.
For many, such sounds were genuinely terrifying. One eyewitness
described how an acquaintance of hers reacted when the flak began
to fire during a raid: ‘The shooting was very loud and poor Mäxchen
Kieckebusch, whose nerves have gone to pieces since he was injured
in the spine in France, rolled on the floor moaning “
Ich kann das nicht
mehr hören
” [“I cannot listen to this any more”] over and over again.’59
Much of the sound and light generated during a raid came from
the flak batteries positioned around the capital. Goebbels described the
flak barrage as ‘a majestic spectacle’,60 and Missie Vassiltchikov found
her room brightly illuminated by its intensity. William Shirer was no
less impressed. ‘The concentration of anti-aircraft fire’, he wrote, ‘was
the greatest I’ve ever witnessed. It provided a magnificent, a terrible
sight.’61
The anti-aircraft defences around Berlin were indeed substantial,
consisting of searchlight units, barrage balloons and some isolated
squadrons of fighters. Their mainstay, however, was flak artillery, espe-
cially the formidable 88mm anti-aircraft gun. These guns would
provide the backbone of Berlin’s air defence network in 1940, being
arranged in 29 batteries, alongside 14 batteries of lesser calibres and
11 searchlight units. These detachments were situated across the city,
primarily located in the suburbs to the north and north-west, but also
perched on high buildings and dotted around the parks and open
spaces. In addition, four squadrons of night-fighters were posted
around the capital and a railway-mounted anti-aircraft battery was
positioned in the sidings close to Sundgauerstrasse Station in the
south-western suburbs.62
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berlin at war
Because of the sheer intensity of the barrage they fired, the Berlin
flak batteries inspired great confidence in the population. One young
Berliner spoke for many when he expressed the optimistic belief that
‘as long as the flak was firing, we were in no danger.’63 As many neutral
observers noted, however, for all its impressive firepower the flak actu-
ally appeared to be rather ineffectual at bringing down enemy planes.64
Yet Berlin’s anti-aircraft gunners were certainly effective enough,
especially if one considers that the flak barrage was intended not only
to shoot enemy aircraft down, but also to force them to increase their
altitude or to abandon their bombing runs altogether. Another
American journalist, Percival Knauth, observed many raids, often from
a rooftop close to his office. In late September, he recalled a particularly
dramatic incident:
For more than quarter of an hour, the silvery shape [of a British plane]
flashed in and out of the spiderweb of white beams stabbing upward
from various parts of the city, while anti-aircraft batteries poured a
veritable hail of fire directly around it. It was a scene of the highest
intensity. Once the plane was caught, the searchlights were inexorable,
moving slowly around from the north to northwest as the flier
attempted to escape from the trap . . . If that plane got away, it must
have been riddled with shell punctures.65
Whatever shortcomings there were in the air defences, they were
at least partially rectified in late autumn, when the flak targeting
system was overhauled. Whereas flak crews traditionally aimed by
ready reckoning and a fair amount of guesswork, by the winter of
1940 a new, automated targeting system was brought into service,
which would greatly improve the accuracy of anti-aircraft fire. In
addition, an Air Raid Warning Centre was established in Berlin to
coordinate air defence. Visited by Goebbels in November 1940, it was
described by the Propaganda Minister as ‘a miracle of system and
organisation’.66
As a result of such advances, a number of British raids were very
hard hit. German successes were naturally trumpeted in the press and
often accompanied by ghoulish pictures of the wreckage. One report
from mid-October 1940 was accompanied by a graphic image of a
British bomber that had crashed in a leafy suburban street in the west
a taste of things to come
155
of Berlin. The raid of 14 November was especially disastrous for the
British. Of the twenty-five or so bombers that actually reached the city,
ten were recorded as being shot down – the heaviest nightly loss
of the war to date for the RAF.67 True to form, Goebbels claimed that
the losses were greater, insisting that twelve bombers had been downed,
but he was certainly correct in attributing the success to the new
targeting techniques that were being employed.68
For all the elaborate measures designed to thwart them, British
bombers caused comparatively little material damage in the German
capital that autumn. This was only partly a result of the efficiency
of the flak. For one thing, the numbers of aircraft available were
very limited. Though the RAF would boast of its ‘thousand-bomber
raids’ later in the war, in the autumn and winter of 1940 only a
handful of raids consisted of more than a hundred aircraft, and it
was not unusual for only half of any force dispatched actually to
reach the target area. Meanwhile, the payloads offered by the British
planes of the period – mostly twin-engine medium bombers such
as Hampdens, Wellingtons and Whitleys – simply did not compare
to those that would later become available with the advent of the
Avro Lancaster in 1942.
The result was that the tonnage and the numbers of bombs dropped
were never sufficient to cause the mayhem that was desired. Incendiaries,
therefore, though dreaded on the ground, could not be dropped in
sufficient concentrations to cause widespread fires. And even though
a stick of high explosives might destroy a single house, or even two,
it would scarcely dent a residential block, let alone an entire street. In
fact, the most disruption was often caused by bombs with ‘delay fuses’,
which could cause roads to be closed, factory work suspended and
residents evacuated, sometimes for days on end, until the peril had been
defused and removed. In 1940, therefore, the bomber could certainly
‘get through’, but whether it could have much effect once it had got
there was rather more debatable.
Ironically, then, one of the primary risks to the Berlin public during
that early phase of the air war came not from the bombs themselves,
but from the German flak splinters falling back to earth. Given that
each of the approximately fifty flak guns around Berlin fired up to
fifteen 16-pound shrapnel shells per minute – each of which burst into
around a thousand jagged fragments – it is not hard to understand
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why those on the ground sometimes got the impression that it was
raining metal. William Shirer recalled the experience in August 1940:
As I stepped out of the building at five minutes to one . . . I heard a
softer but much more ominous sound. It was like hail hitting a tin roof.
You could hear it dropping through the trees and on the roofs of the
sheds. It was shrapnel from the anti-aircraft guns. For the first time in
my life, I wished I had a steel helmet. There had always been some-
thing repellent to me about a German helmet, something symbolic of
brute German force . . . Now I rather thought I could overcome my
prejudice.69
The damage inflicted by flak splinters on Berlin’s roofs was such
that the task of checking for missing or cracked roof tiles was added
to the already substantial remit of the air raid wardens. In addition,
serious material damage was regularly caused by unexploded flak
shells. During a raid in late October 1940, thirteen faulty flak shells
exploded on returning to earth, causing extensive damage. The
following month brought similar chaos, with thirty-six exploding on
the night of 14 November alone.70
There were also serious injuries and deaths. In October 1940, a railway
worker was killed by a flak shell in Rummelsburg.71 The following
month, twelve soldiers were injured in a single night by falling flak
splinters.72 In the suburb of Reinickendorf, meanwhile, a forty-two-year
old man was killed when a flak shell exploded after falling into his
bedroom.73 From reading such reports, one could almost conclude that
Berliners were as much at risk from their own flak guns as they were
from the bombs of the RAF.
Nonetheless, for all the danger that they caused, the flak splinters