Battle
of Dunkirk "Dynamo"
The Battle of Dunkirk lasted from around May 25 to June 3,
1940. After the Phony War, the Battle of France began in earnest in mid-May
1940.
German armour burst through the Ardennes
region and advanced rapidly. The combined British, French and Belgium forces
were rapidly split around Armentieres.
The German forces then swept north to capture Calais,
holding a large body of Allied soldiers trapped against the coast on the Franco-Belgian
border.
It became clear the battle was lost and the question now
became how many Allied soldiers could be removed to the relative safety of
England before their resistance was crushed.
From May 22 preparations for the evacuation began, codenamed
Operation Dynamo, commanded from Dover by Vice-Admiral Bertram Ramsay. He
called for as many naval vessels as possible as well as every ship capable of
carrying 1,000 men within reach.
It initially was intended to recover around 45,000 men of
the British Expeditionary Force over two days, this
was soon stretched to 120,000 men over five days.
On May 27 a request was placed to civilians to provide all
shallow draught vessels of 30 to 100 feet for the operation, that night was the
first rescue attempt.
A large number of craft including fishing boats and
recreational vessels, together with Merchant Marine and Royal Navy vessels,
were gathered at Sheerness and sent to Dunkirk and the surrounding beaches to
recover Allied troops.
Due to heavy German fire only 8,000 soldiers were recovered.
Another ten destroyers were recalled for May 28 and
attempted rescue operations in the early morning but were unable to closely
approach the beaches although several thousand were rescued.
It was decided that smaller vessels would be more useful and
boatyards were scoured for suitable craft, gathering them at Sheerness, Chatham
and Dover.
The Allied held area was reduced to a 30 sq km block by May
28. Operations over the rest of May 28 were more successful, with a further
16,000 men recovered but German air operations increased and many vessels were
sunk or badly damaged, including nine destroyers.
On May 29 there was an unexpected reprieve, the German armour stopped its advance on Dunkirk leaving the operation
to the slower infantry, but due to problems only 14,000 men were evacuated that
day.
On the evening of May 30 another major group of smaller
vessels was dispatched and returned with around 30,000 men.
By May 31 the Allied forces were compressed into a 5 km deep
strip from La Panne, through Bray-Dunes to Dunkirk,
but on that day over 68,000 troops were evacuated with another 10,000 or so
overnight.
On June 1 another 65,000 were rescued and the operations
continued until June 4, evacuating a total of 338,226 troops aboard around 700
different vessels.