NAZI GERMANY INVADES FRANCE, CAPTURES CAPITAL PARIS
Sedan, France • May 12, 1940
Great Britain and France declared war on Nazi Germany on September 3, 1939, on account of Germany’s aggression against its eastern neighbor Poland 2 days earlier. Both nations honored their guarantee to protect Poland’s borders in the event of a German invasion. Ten days into May 1940 Germany attacked neutral Belgium to that country’s west, then swiftly crossed the Franco-Belgian frontier to capture the French town of Sedan on this date, May 12, 1940. The 46‑day Battle of France (German, Fall Gelb; English, Case Yellow) ended on June 25 with France’s capitulation to Adolf Hitler’s Wehrmacht and with the displacement of several million panicky Parisians as well as millions of homeless, frightened residents of Northern France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg (2 million asylum seekers from the Benelux countries in May alone) who sought sanctuary in France beyond the Wehrmacht’s grasping reach.
Even as the invaders moved from Sedan west across Northern France to the Channel coast and were reported on May 16 to be less than 100 miles/160 km from Paris, French nationals, foreign-born residents, and internally displaced Frenchmen generally believed their nation’s defeat was impossible because the military capabilities of each nation were estimated to be roughly equivalent. While more enemy troops and equipment spilled over the Franco-Belgian frontier French government officials downplayed their country’s dire situation—all this and more against the backdrop of the hair-raising rescue between May 26 and June 4, 1940, of 338,000 British, French, and Belgian soldiers besieged at the French resort town of Dunkirk and other ports. In the face of overwhelming odds, a multinational flotilla ranging from small private craft to large warships pulled off the evacuation of all but 90,000 Allied soldiers and equipment in Operation Dynamo, aka the “Miracle of Dunkirk.”
Ordinary French citizens and fighting men and the exhausted refugees who camped out in train and bus stations, parks, or on the streets were not so easily fooled by government-controlled organs and boulevard media that the situation was well in hand. Sure, public flower gardens, shrubs, and trees were still being cared for and sidewalk cafes and bistros, boulangeries, patisseries, boutiques, and the like were still bustling with customers, yet the public’s nerves were being stretched ever tighter.
On June 3 the Luftwaffe bombed Paris, sparking fears of German terror bombings on the scale of Dutch Rotterdam almost 3 weeks earlier. On June 6 a French defensive line collapsed north of Paris, sending troops and more refugees into the French capital. Two days later, June 8, schools in Paris closed, which quickened the tempo of Paris departures. On June 10 government officials in the capital fled their offices for Tours, later Bordeaux on the Atlantic coast, before winding up in Vichy, a spa resort recently emptied of clientele. The next day Paris’s gasoline reserves were set afire. On June 13 the government declared Paris an “Open City” and thus undefended, a declaration intended to protect the “City of Light” so long as French troops and residents offered no resistance to the advancing enemy. On June 14, a Friday and a black one at that, the German army entered a nearly empty Paris. In an alarmingly short period nearly 3 million Parisians forsook their residences, workplaces, and cafes. In all, some 15 percent or more of the French population—up to 10 million people, mostly women absent their husbands who were either off fighting or interned, in hospitals or dead, together with children and the elderly—clogged roads and highways to the south and west hoping to escape potential harm. For hundreds of thousands of people who were in flight, escaping harm didn’t happen (see photo essay below). Frenchmen called the rapid and chaotic evacuation of their cities, towns, and villages “the Exodus” (l’Exode). Little known today, the Paris exodus remains one of the great human tragedies of World War II.
The Battle of France, May 10 to June 25, 1940
Left: Desperate and terrified French refugees flee advancing German troops, their cars, horse-drawn wagons and carts, wheelbarrows, and bicycles loaded with household possessions. Despite the stifling summer heat, it was common to see women wearing layered clothing: skirt over skirt (as seen here), skirt over trousers, coats over jackets, gloves, scarves, and hat. To add to the unfolding tragedy Luftwaffe pilots roared their Junkers Ju‑87 Stuka dive-bombers and Messerschmitt Bf 109 fighters low over the crowded roads, bombing and strafing defenseless civilians and French soldiers in retreat. Some mothers, deathly afraid and wearied by carrying toddlers, entrusted their children to passing motorists and military convoys, eventually losing track of them in the ensuing chaos. Heart-rending messages begging for news of lost children appeared tacked on public buildings and in print media for weeks afterwards. The French Red Cross managed to reunite 90,000 lost children with their parents.
Right: Heading toward the unknown, the former occupants of an automobile push their overloaded vehicle along a rural road in France after it ran out of gas. Lots of refugees had no idea where the column they were in was heading or where they would eventually end up, especially those from the Low Countries and working-class Parisians who had never been outside the capital. Many of the displaced found they had packed too much, and roadsides soon became littered with abandoned belongings, cars, and trucks. Nearly everyone had run out of food inside several days on the road.
Left: A packed Paris train station, June 12, 1940, as panicky Parisians try boarding trains leaving the capital. Two days earlier the government vacated Paris, signaling to Parisians that it was no longer safe to remain in the capital. Almost 3 out of 5 million Parisians clamored to get out of the city. By the time representatives of defeatist French premier (since June 16, 1940) Marshal Philippe Pétain signed a humiliating armistice on June 22, 1940, the German Blitzkrieg had loosed itself across more than half the nation.
Right: One observer of l’Exode reminisced: “People would go to the station with their entire fortunes: baskets, mattresses, suitcases, trunks, strollers, bicycles and caged canaries” and try to load their possessions on trains already packed with anxious and weary passengers bringing similar items on board. Toilets provided additional seating and storage space. He also recalled that “runaways and the failed soldiers” often looted homes abandoned by their frightened residents.
Left: Baby in stroller lifted into impossibly crowded train, Paris, June 1940. To avoid German aerial attacks, some trains carrying evacuees traveled in the evening or night with lights out.
Right: Standing atop the Arc de Triomphe in Paris, German soldiers and collaborationist French officials attend to mounting the swastika-emblazoned Nazi flag on one of the most recognizable symbols of French national pride, June 1940. The French capital endured four years of Nazi occupation and oppression before its liberation by U.S., British, and Free French soldiers on August 25, 1944.