JF Ptak Science Books LLC Post 656
Now this was a case in which you were given the result and had to find
everything else for yourself. -- Sherlock
Holes in A Study in Scarlet
Augustine cleaved two cities from one, the good and the
doomed, in The City of God
Of course these were also the days
of pre-RADAR, and of aviators simply holding a bomb by its fins and letting go
once a target was in sight, so the possibility of causing this sort of
dissonance was at least palpable. The planes held the pilot and a lot of fuel,
and not much flight weight was devoted to bombs, so the bombing runs were
necessarily quick and comparatively light (by standards of just a decade
later). So the idea of a Sham Paris
might’ve, could’ve sort’ve worked, maybe; but not really. It had a very strong, fatal, feculent (thank
you for this word, Mr. Depp) air about it, like that misty doomsday smell that
lifted the Maginot Line out of the earth and dumped it in the dim and stinking
past.
The story of Sham Paris may have been “broken” in The
Illustrated London News of 6 November 1920 in a remarkably titled photo essay, “A
False Paris Outside Paris—a ‘City’ Created to be Bombed”. There were to be sham streets lined with
electric lights, sham rail stations, sham industry, open to a sham population
waiting to be bombed by real Germans. It
is a perverse city, filled with the waiting-to-be-murdered in a civilian
target. Sham Paris
Sham Paris
(All images here are clickable and can be enlarged.)


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