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Season 1

  • S01E01 Getting Away With Murder

    • August 22, 2011
    • ITV1

    It was easier to break the law between 1939 and 1945 simply because there were so many new laws to be broken. A mind-numbing barrage of regulations sprang up, to govern the nation's consumption, such as food and fuel, and to protect the island's security. Scarcity drove many thousands of worthy, law-abiding citizens to become criminals.

  • S01E02 Innocence and Guilt

    • August 22, 2011
    • ITV1

    World War II was, traumatic for pretty well everyone who lived through it. Young people, dealt with it in different ways - some, such as Daphne Baker, who lived then at Snodland in Kent, and now near Bexhill in Sussex, simply ignored the nightly air raids, as far as it was possible and got on with studying hard to fulfil her life's ambition to get to Cambridge and become a teacher.

  • S01E03 How Young Jim Set Out To Kill Hitler

    • August 22, 2011
    • ITV1

    All over Britain, families were becoming single-parent families. While Dad was away, on his country's business, the kids played more boisterously, and with less discipline. There were new 'toys' to play with. War toys were favourite toys - at least for a gang of youngsters at Broomfield near Herne Bay in Kent. The Finn family lived in the pub. It was the gang headquarters.

  • S01E04 Cops and Robbers

    • August 22, 2011
    • ITV1

    Some people take to organized crime like ducks to water. Frankie Fraser was 16 when World War II broke out in 1939 and he was already in Borstal for a jewel robbery.

  • S01E05 Rubble, Trouble and Death

    • August 22, 2011
    • ITV1

    The appetite for "who-dunnits" was as keen in World War II as it is today. In the post-war years, lawyer Edgar Lustgarten made a series of films for the cinema based on crimes and criminals - many of them thinly disguised versions of real-life crimes. This one, he called "The Drayton Case".

  • S01E06 Country Bobbies

    • August 22, 2011
    • ITV1

    In the villages of Britain, though their job became more complicated, the wartime role of the policeman, his place in society, at least outwardly, changed little. But just as in society, not all policemen were incorruptible. The Folkestone force came under a cloud, as former Kent Policeman Roy Ingleton, now living in Maidstone, remembers.

  • S01E07 Mayhem and Memories

    • August 22, 2011
    • ITV1

    The US army was still segregated. Some units were black. Others were white. At home, these men couldn't sit in the same bus seats as white men, couldn't eat at the same counter in the local diner. Now, they were in the same army. Tragically British citizens sometimes got caught up in military disputes.