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Today is the day that we remember all those that gave their lives for their country. Please at 11am take a minute to remember those that paid the ultimate sacrifice. Thank you!
Will do thanksToday is the day that we remember all those that gave their lives for their country. Please at 11am take a minute to remember those that paid the ultimate sacrifice. Thank you!
Anyone interested in getting a comprehensive insight into what WW1 was like should read “ The first day on the Somme” by Martin Middlebrook. It comprises research from diaries, archives, interviews etc on both sides. Films and documentaries never can reveal the sheer immensity and human aspects of the build up and day1 of the battle.
Thank you I have ordered a (used )copy from Amazon.I have that book among many others. Its very good factually but very few of these books take us right down into the mud. I have a first edition print of a book called "The War the Infantry Knew", and although it is a full narration across the whole war from the POV of one battalion, its created almost entirely from the diaries of the officers and men, written as it happened. Its unique and gives a real insight.
An even more poignand read are the actual war diaries if individual battalions, of which i have a few on .pdf and if anything gives a feel of the changing attitudes as the Great War progressed its them. It starts in the vein of Pte Smith was killed today. He was from Manchester, and usually went on to give half a page of the soldier in question. After 1st july 1916 exerpts are more in the line of "35 men killed, rations arrived." Its so easy to get blaise in a charnel house like that.
LEST WE FORGET!
There’s so many angles that you can read about to try and achieve a more rounded view. The book I listed above does a reasonable comparator. Yes there were indications of officers having dining nights but other indications of senior officers who decided to go with their battalions and brigades despite being ordered not to. The real impact to my mind was how it must have felt to be in the following waves when you saw what had happened to the leading waves. Plus the sheer effort of organising such an attack involving such vast numbers constrained by the trench layouts, geography and German redoubts, machine gun locations and artillery. The staff and logistics effort was prodigious.I've just finished reading ....
I Shall Not Be Away Long: The First World War Letters of Lt Col Charles Bartlett
Actually only read about two thirds of it before giving up as it got repetitive although I'm told that later chapters showed his breakdown.
An amazing piece of research by the author.
It highlights the difference in experiences between the middle to upper ranks compared with those that were not from privileged backgrounds.
It's a collection of letters from Bartlett to his wife. He seems to be mostly concerned about his laundry, who he was dinning with and whether the pheasants his wife was supposed to be sending had been posted. A cursory mention to actually being in the trenches and having to write to the loved ones of those who'd lost their lives.
I got no idea about what it must have been like to be in the front line.
Of course censorship may have been on his mind so he couldn't say too much but I'm not convinced that the situation of the front line troops was his main concern.
ThingyOc, will you let me know what you think of TWTIK.
Its a poignant read for we as the battalion involved was in the same div as my great grandfather, so it rather helped us understand the info we researched when we followed his war.
Yes Max Hastings has recently published a book with that title. I like his style.Pedestal. Wasnt that the Malta Convoy and the SS Ohio? That must have been some sight?
Is that the book of BAOR anecdotes which describes 'the legend of the hanging dog' in which a German woman tied her dog's lead to a closed railway crossing barrier while she remonstrated with some British squaddies?Try not to laugh Sgt Major........................with BAOR. (featuring Hermanns Chippy and the mobile brothels)
Warning, proper military humour and banter, not suitabley for shy and retiring people, or RAF types!!![]()
If you like Max Hastings style, Catastrophe is a worthy read. Personally, I find him a bit dry.
Two great books for light reading though
Dont Cry For Me Sgt Major.................Hands and MacGowan embedded at worm level in the Falklands Campaign (authors shared a cabin with Hastings and werent too pleased about it)
and same authors,
Try not to laugh Sgt Major........................with BAOR. (featuring Hermanns Chippy and the mobile brothels)
Warning, proper military humour and banter, not suitable for shy and retiring people, or RAF types!!![]()
Another good read is "We were soldiers once and young" by Lt Gen Harold Moore and Joseph Galloway. It was about the Vietnam war. I think a film was made starring Mel Gibson.