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The Home Front 1914-1918 book cover
The Home Front 1914-1918
How Britain Survived the Great War
2006
First Published
3.89
Average Rating
224
Number of Pages

Every war has its ‘home front’, but World War I - the ‘Great War’ - was the first to utterly transform civilian life. Not only did families risk their fathers and sons in active combat, but every member of society was mobilized in some way to contribute to the war effort. In the course of these eventful years the population experienced rationing, shortages, aerial bombing, thousands more women in work (known as ‘dilution’ of the workplace!), industrial unrest, a large influx of foreign refugees, and a host of other shocks. Even the king was not he, too, had a ration card, and the flowerbeds of Buckingham Palace were planted with vegetables. Ian Beckett examines the full story - one that is, by turns, grim, humorous, touching, surprising, and even inspiring. Among other details, learn how the feeding of pigeons was declared illegal, why a town council forbade punctuation, and what ‘Belgian flush’ was. The author’s narrative is reinforced by a welter of photographs, original documents and letters, and poignant personal stories of life on Britain’s home front.

Avg Rating
3.89
Number of Ratings
19
5 STARS
16%
4 STARS
63%
3 STARS
16%
2 STARS
5%
1 STARS
0%
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Author

Ian F.W. Beckett
Author · 10 books
Dr. Ian F.W. Beckett is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and retired Professor of Military History at the University of Kent, Canterbury.
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