ATA CHALLENGES: ENEMY ACTION
It is easy to forget that all of Britain was effectively a "war zone" until the end of WWII. For the bulk of the war, the Luftwaffe had airfields in occupied France and Norway and could reach any part of the British Isles they wanted. In the last year of war, Britain was also threatened by rockets, the V-2s. This meant that although the ATA was a civilian organisation, it did occasionaly encounter the enemy in the skies of Great Britain. The intensity and nature of enemy air activity over the British Isles varied over time, but for the ATA, flying in unarmed aircraft without radios, the risks were always high. Like the rest of the British population, they and their airfields were vulnerable to bombing and strafing while on the ground. In addition, they were subject to attack while flying in British airspace. Germany's first and most intensive bombing offensive starting in late 1940 and continuing to mid-1941 took over 50,000 lives and hundreds of thousands were made h...