The Globe At War
The majority of the British Expeditionary Force sent to France in
1939-1940 escaped German capture. For reasons debated to this day
the rampaging German panzers that had eviscerated the Western
European Allied armies in just under a fortnight during May 1940 had
been held up just short of capturing the French port of Dunkirk; a port
serving as the collection point for the retreating Allied armies cut off
along the English Channel.

In a brilliant rescue operation the British had managed to save
338,226 Allied soldiers from the Germans. Although the BEF was forced
to leave all heavy weapons behind the rescue operation provided a
tremendous psychological boost to the reeling British war effort at a
time when Britain seemed on the verge of total defeat.

Picture Courtesy US National Archives, local identifier no. 242-EB-7-35


British prisoners of war taken by the Wermacht at Dunkirk France in
the spring of 1940