But. War came to Folkestone in 1940 with the Blitz. And when the dust settled, although England was victorious, it was also near bankrupt. Dover and Folkestone were hit hard by both German bombs from the Luftwaffe and long range guns from Calais.
Unrelated to either the map or the book, I also found on the internet an interesting photo of shell damage to the lovely Edwardian
hotels along Folkestone’s Leas. When I first saw this image I immediately recognised the location. This is what is now the Southcliff Hotel, a well known watering hole in for attendees of Euro. A K5 railway gun located in the Pas de Calais fired numerous shells across the Channel during the way. Folkestone and its environs had the unique misfortune of being the only part of the country to face this type of shelling.
During the wars early days the Leas was an exclusion zone for which only military personal were permitted, the hotels taken over officers and other ranks. I hate to think what happened to those billeted in the this part of the hotel.
Of course Folkestone carried on after the war, but post-war Spanish, French and Italian beaches were on offer and such reasonable rates due their privations during the war that British holiday makers began to take their holidays outside of England. Things were to never be the same for the seaside towns, nor Folkestone.

