Sheffield Blitz

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sheffield_Blitz an entity of type: Thing

The Sheffield Blitz is the name given to the worst nights of German Luftwaffe bombing in Sheffield, England, during the Second World War. It took place over the nights of 12 December and 15 December 1940. The full moon was on 14 December 1940 and both blitz nights were cold and clear. The German code name for the operation was Schmelztiegel ("Crucible"). rdf:langString
rdf:langString Sheffield Blitz
rdf:langString Sheffield Blitz
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xsd:integer 3520082
xsd:integer 1120474228
rdf:langString Devastation in Sheffield city centre after the Blitz
xsd:integer 660
xsd:integer 1500
xsd:integer 3000
xsd:integer 40000
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Unknown
rdf:langString Adolf Hitler
rdf:langString Hermann Göring
rdf:langString Winston Churchill
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Albert Kesselring
rdf:langString Hans Jeschonnek
rdf:langString Hugo Sperrle
rdf:langString Hugh Dowding
rdf:langString Frederick Pile
rdf:langString Owen Tudor Boyd
rdf:langString Sir Leslie Gossage
rdf:langString Sheffield Blitz
rdf:langString
xsd:integer 300
rdf:langString The Blitz; the Western Front of World War II
rdf:langString Sheffield, United Kingdom
rdf:langString German strategic failure:
rdf:langString * steel factories in Sheffield continued to operate and provide supplies for the war effort. * Widespread damage and civilian casualties, Sheffield in extensive structural ruins.
xsd:string 53.38333333333333 -1.4666666666666668
rdf:langString The Sheffield Blitz is the name given to the worst nights of German Luftwaffe bombing in Sheffield, England, during the Second World War. It took place over the nights of 12 December and 15 December 1940. In 1940, Sheffield was a city of about 560,000 people and contained many heavy industries, primarily centred on steel and armaments. Hadfields steelworks was also the only place in the UK at that time where 18-inch armour-piercing shells were made. Most of the factories were located in the East End of the city beside the River Don. Documents captured at the end of the war showed that the targets for the raids included the Atlas Steelworks, Brown Bayley Steelworks, Meadowhall Iron Works, River Don Works, Darnall Wagon Works, Tinsley Park Collieries, East Hecla Works and Orgreave Coke Ovens. The full moon was on 14 December 1940 and both blitz nights were cold and clear. The German code name for the operation was Schmelztiegel ("Crucible").
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 10415
xsd:string 1,500+ injured
xsd:string 3,000+ houses destroyed
xsd:string 40,000+ homeless
xsd:string 660+ dead
xsd:string
xsd:string * steel factories in Sheffield continued to operate and provide supplies for the war effort.
xsd:string German strategic failure:
xsd:string * Widespread damage and civilian casualties, Sheffield in extensive structural ruins.
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