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Owned by Charlie

History Vault

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The History Vault – I go deep into real history. Planes, wars, crazy stories, and the bits they usually leave out.

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9 contributions to History Vault
💡 Daily History Fact
Bread was NEVER rationed in Britain during World War II. Instead, the government introduced the "National Loaf" in 1942—a gray, mushy bread made from wholemeal flour to save shipping space. While people complained about the texture, you could buy as much of it as you wanted. The real shock came AFTER the war ended. Due to a massive global wheat shortage and a shattered domestic economy, the government was forced to ration bread for the first time ever in July 1946. Imagine surviving six years of world war only to have your bread restricted after winning! Rationing didn't fully end in Britain until 1954. 💬 Did you know that rationing actually got worse AFTER the war? Let me know your thoughts below! 👇
1 like • 2d
@Evgeny Klimkin Im pretty sure my grandmother actually still has a ration items still somewhere, i should have to ask. but it would have been unimaginable through the disastrous events of the war. If war happens again (which it very much could) we could see a very similar ration. But something they had back then was a very strong togetherness and we see that exactly after the war but it very well and truly started long before. Modern day Britain and alot of countries have turned a dark corner once more. Maybe not at the scale of war but division and terrible things on a daily bases is very much a problem. Very much appreciate the comment Evgeny.
The Brittish Civil war
The British Civil War (1642–1651): When England Executed Its Own King In the middle of the 17th century, Britain tore itself apart in one of the bloodiest conflicts in its history. It wasn’t just “England vs Parliament.” It was a brutal, multi-kingdom civil war — England, Scotland, and Ireland all dragged into the chaos. At its heart was a simple but explosive question: Who should rule — the King, or Parliament? King Charles I believed he had a divine right to rule as he pleased. Parliament believed the king was subject to the law and the will of the people. Religion, money, power, and clashing personalities turned that disagreement into full-scale war. Brothers fought brothers. Fathers fought sons. Cavaliers (Royalists) vs Roundheads (Parliamentarians). Key moments that still shock today: The creation of the New Model Army — Britain’s first professional standing army The decisive Battle of Naseby (1645) The trial and public execution of King Charles I in 1649 — the only time a British monarch has ever been beheaded by his own subjects Oliver Cromwell’s rise as Lord Protector, and the brief experiment with republican rule By the time it ended in 1651, an estimated 200,000 people had died — around 4.5% of the entire population. Proportionally, that’s comparable to the death toll of the First World War. The war changed Britain forever. It established once and for all that no king is above the law, laid the groundwork for modern parliamentary democracy, and left scars that are still felt today. History isn’t always glorious. Sometimes it’s families destroyed, towns burned, and a king losing his head in front of his own palace.
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What Would You Like?
What would you like in this community? This could be a new classroom or channel. it could be anything. I want to create a valuable space for all who come but also create a space where we can build friendships and create something truly special.
0 likes • Apr 22
@Luke Young I can look into this and maybe make this like a daily fact section 🤔 I'll look into it
Daily facts
In 1943, sales of pressure cookers in the United States jumped almost 5 times higher than the previous year — from about 66,000 in 1942 to 315,000 in 1943. Why? Because of food rationing. Sugar, meat, butter, canned goods, and many other items were strictly limited with ration books. To feed their families, millions of people started "Victory Gardens" in backyards, rooftops, and even public parks. They grew their own vegetables... but then had to preserve them somehow. So families went crazy buying pressure cookers to can and preserve their home-grown produce. It became a huge patriotic activity — women (and sometimes kids) spent hours in the kitchen canning tomatoes, beans, and fruits so they wouldn't waste anything and could trade extras with neighbours. It was such a big deal that hardware stores often had long waiting lists for pressure cookers, and old, unreliable ones from before the war were dug out of attics because new ones were hard to get (factories were making weapons instead). This is one of those tiny, forgotten details of daily life that shows how the war reached into every kitchen. People weren't just "supporting the troops" with posters — they were literally changing how they cooked and ate every single day. Would you like another rare 1940s daily life fact (maybe about Britain during the Blitz, fashion, entertainment, or kids' life)? Or something more specific?
Lancaster bomber
My great grandfather was a morse coder on the famous Lancaster bomber, here's what that cockpit would look like!
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Lancaster bomber
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Charlie Davies
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@charlie-davies-6872
Faith Fuels me ✡️

Active 19h ago
Joined Apr 7, 2026