A Talk with Angela Brown from Pegasus WW2 Reenactment.
Join Angela as she takes you through an engaging journey of what it would have been like to grow up during a period of shortages and upheaval (and no sweets!).
On December 22, 1940, the British Ministry of Agriculture released a statement urging people to eat carrots. Britain was struggling with food shortages and carrots were cheap and plentiful. This led government agencies to tout them as having eye-strengthening powers. Posters began to appear with Dr Carrot and Britain’s Ministry of Food published recipes such as carrot fudge and carrot croquettes, while proclaiming the vegetable could help people “see better in the blackout.”
Portraying carrots as a night vision-enhancing superfood had another benefit—hiding a secretive English radar technology from the Nazis. To counter act Germany’s night-time bombing raids, the Royal Air Force pioneered the Airborne Interception (AI) radar. Britain already had a land-based system of radar towers along the coast. But the AI radar could be mounted to planes and detect German bombers from the air.
To keep this new development secret, “night fighters” were publicized as having night vision spectacular enough to spot enemy planes in the dark. Officials began telling reporters this ability was supplemented by a carrot-rich diet.