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Sketch of Dunkirk escape among rarely-seen documents in new book

The War on Paper from the Imperial War Museums tells the story of the Second World War through 20 documents highlighting key moments of the conflict.

Published
A hastily scribbled diagram used to aid the retreat from Dunkirk is among the documents featured in The War on Paper (Estate of Captain F K Theobald/IWM/PA)

A never-before published sketch used to aid the escape from the beaches of Dunkirk is among the rare documents featured in a new book on the Second World War.

The War on Paper: 20 Documents That Defined the Second World War, explores the conflict through a series of rarely-seen papers which changed the course of the war.

Published by the Imperial War Museums (IWM), the book also features more than 50 images, extracts from letters and diaries, maps and posters charting the conflict.

The key documents range from Adolf Hitler’s signed directive ordering the invasion of Poland in 1939 to Winston Churchill’s annotated “End of the Beginning” speech, made after the Allied victory at El Alamein in 1942.

The War on Paper published by Imperial War Museums includes Churchill's annotated End of the Beginning speech (IWM/PA)
The War on Paper published by Imperial War Museums includes Churchill’s annotated End of the Beginning speech (IWM/PA)

There is also the hastily scribbled “diagrammatic lay out of embarkation” by Captain Ken Theobald of the 5th Battalion Royal West Kent Regiment, which was used by the British Expeditionary Force to flee from Dunkirk in 1940.

The drawing is one of five pull-out replica documents in the book.

Home Front documents in the book include an “If the Invader Comes” leaflet and Air Raid Precautions, while Kindertransport identity papers and the Governor of Singapore’s final broadcast are also featured.

The Anglo-German Declaration from September 1938 states Britain and Germany's desire not to go to war (IWM/PA)
The Anglo-German Declaration from September 1938 states Britain and Germany’s desire not to go to war (IWM/PA)

Other documents include the Anglo-German Declaration signed by British prime minister Neville Chamberlain and Hitler in September 1938, spelling out the desire not to go to war and leading Chamberlain to claim “peace for our time”.

There are also photographs of Chamberlain holding the declaration aloft to the cheering crowd who greeted him at Heston Airport on September 30, 1938, and of the occupation of Warsaw, Poland.

British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain holds aloft the Anglo German Declaration to a cheering crowd in Britain, which features in the book The War on Paper (IWM/PA)
British prime minister Neville Chamberlain holds aloft the Anglo German Declaration to a cheering crowd in Britain, which features in the book The War on Paper (IWM/PA)

Another image shows the signing of the surrender of all German forces in northwestern Europe at Luneberg Heath, May 4, 1945.

Anthony Richards, IWM’s head of documents and sound and author of The War on Paper, said: “It has been my privilege to have worked with the IWM documents collection for over two decades, and in that time it has never ceased to impress and at times surprise me with its depth of coverage and insight into how the war was fought and experienced.

A picture of the signing of the surrender of all German forces in northwestern Europe at Luneberg Heath, 4 May 1945, features in the book (IWM/PA)
A picture of the signing of the surrender of all German forces in northwestern Europe at Luneberg Heath, 4 May 1945, features in the book (IWM/PA)

“The story behind certain documents can be fascinating, and I hope that readers will find the examples included in The War on Paper to be both interesting and thought-provoking, as they portray the events of the war in a most immediate, direct way.”

The War on Paper is published by IWM on 27 September and can be pre-ordered at www.iwmshop.org.uk/p/26664/The-War-on-Paper/ at the online shop.

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