Humberside
Home
World
UK
England
N. Ireland
Scotland
Wales
Business
Politics
Health
Education
Sci/Environment
Technology
Entertainment & Arts
16 March 2011
Last updated at
17:25
In pictures: New images show WWII Hull blitz aftermath
Black Swan, Clifford Street. Hull was the most heavily bombed city outside of London. More than 1,200 people died in the raids and more than 90% of houses were destroyed or damaged. Photo courtesy of English Heritage.
Charterhouse. The first heavy raid took place in March 1941 when 378 German aircraft bombed over seven hours causing 96 deaths. Photo courtesy of English Heritage.
Hull National Picture Theatre: This was one of the first buildings hit. The audience of 150 people - who were watching The Great Dictator starring Charlie Chaplin when the bomb struck - took shelter in the foyer and miraculously no-one was killed. Photo courtesy of English Heritage.
George Street. Hull was subject to the first daylight air raid of the war and the last piloted attack on 17 March 1945. Photo courtesy of English Heritage.
Hunter Street, Wesley Chapel. The city was bombed throughout the war and suffered more than 80 raids. Photo courtesy of English Heritage.
Master Mariners Almshouses. These photos, which were taken by John Summerson and G Bernard Wood, were originally intended to show the buildings intact. But enemy bombers had destroyed them before the photographers could get to the sites. Photo courtesy of English Heritage.
Share this page
Delicious
Digg
Facebook
reddit
StumbleUpon
Twitter
Email
Print
Related Stories
Families battle for war memorial
Tales from the Blitz, 70 years on
Did the Blitz really unify Britain?
Recording memories of the blitz
Related Internet links
English Heritage
Services
Mobile
Connected TV
News feeds
Alerts
E-mail news
About BBC News
Editors' blog
BBC College of Journalism
News sources
Editorial Guidelines