This year-on-year study of Norfolk at war is the first such for many
years, which utilizes material that has not been published in book form
before or, sometimes, at all. In both the First and Second World War,
Norfolk was pivotal, albeit for different reasons. During the war of
1939-45 Norfolk was home to many bases of the USAAF, changing the area
forever with bases remaining a fond feature of Norfolk life. Another
unique and enduring legacy was the arrival and often permanent
settlement of many Poles, who are commemorated today by a shrine in the
Cathedral of St John the Baptist in Norwich. Norfolk was in many ways
changed forever as it had largely, up until this time, been proudly,
even stubbornly, isolated - a feature that could not have changed more
dramatically. This study is both inevitably a military and social study.
The major events both at home and overseas are laid out, together with a
description of how home life unfolded in very dark times when the
stoicism and humor of the Norfolk residents were tested. Contemporary
material from newspapers, diaries and local records, as well as over 200
photographs, are used to bring life and color and life to the account.