The appeal was not specifically directed towards Channel Islanders, but a few bold people joined in nevertheless. Such signs were painted on street signs, houses and walls. The sabotage provoked a strong reaction from the Germans who threatened to punish whole neighbourhoods if the culprit was not found.

German forces landed on Guernsey on 30 June and on Jersey the next day. There was no organised resistance movement against German forces – only acts by individuals or small groups. The occupying forces enforced a number of restrictions such as a nightly curfew and censorship of the press. Only a few people tried to escape to Britain.



During the occupation the islands were heavily fortified. Construction was overseen by the German Forces and the Organisation Todt – a German civil military engineering group. Foreign workers, many of whom were worked to death, were imported to build the fortifications.



Channel Islanders acutely suffered from food shortages, which, by late 1944, were critical. After appeals for help, a Red Cross ship started delivering food parcels.



The D-Day landings in 1944 signalled the beginning of the end of the German occupation, but it was not until nearly a year later that the islands were finally liberated. HMS Bulldog arrived in Guernsey on 9 May 1945 and a declaration of unconditional surrender was signed the following day.