Atnaujinkite slapukų nuostatas

Grandad's Army: Volunteers Defending the British Isles in the First World War [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 286 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 234x156x27 mm, weight: 572 g, 19 colour and black & white photographs and other illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 18-Feb-2021
  • Leidėjas: Fonthill Media Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1781558183
  • ISBN-13: 9781781558188
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 286 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 234x156x27 mm, weight: 572 g, 19 colour and black & white photographs and other illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 18-Feb-2021
  • Leidėjas: Fonthill Media Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1781558183
  • ISBN-13: 9781781558188
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
This book tells the largely untold story of WWI’s Volunteer Training Corps, the forgotten equivalent of World War II’s Home Guard. Self-financing and training in their spare time they developed as an effective anti-invasion force. Alongside VTC were the many medical, transport, police and youth organisations which also kept the home fires burning.

In August 1914, on the outbreak of the First World War, there was enormous pressure on men to enlist in Kitchener’s New Armies, supplementing the tiny regular army and Territorial Force. This pressure was intense, and posters, the entreaties of local worthies, and an apparently indiscriminate scattering of white feathers, all exacerbated masculine sensitivity. We are all familiar, if only through BBC TV’s ‘Dad’s Army’, with the Home Guard of the Second World War.Far less is known of their First World War equivalent: the Volunteer Training Corps (VTC). Like their counter-parts in WW2, the VTC comprised those who were too old, too young, too unfit or too indispensable to serve in the regular forces. They fought for the right to be armed, uniformed and trained; to be employed on meaningful duties; and at first, to exist at all. This book explores the origins, development and structure of the VTC, along with those who belonged to the many supporting medical, transport, police and youth organisations who kept the home fires burning or, in some cases, tried to put them out. The VTC arose from the need of those men who were forced to stay at home to be seen to be doing their bit. They saw the removal of the bulk of both the regular army and the Territorial Force to the Western Front as their opportunity to prepare to resist the expected German invasion of Britain, and as a way of countering accusations of shirking, or even cowardice.

This book tells the largely untold story of WWI's Volunteer Training Corps, the forgotten equivalent of World War II's Home Guard. Self-financing and training in their spare time they developed as an effective anti-invasion force. Alongside VTC were the many medical, transport, police and youth organisations which also kept the home fires burning.
Acknowledgements 5(7)
List of Abbreviations
9(3)
Chronology of the Volunteer Force in the First World War 12(5)
Introduction 17(4)
1 Britain's Tradition of Volunteer Armies
21(19)
2 The Development of the Volunteer Training Corps
40(41)
3 A Volunteer Army Takes Shape: Public Image, Function and Operations
81(46)
4 Training, Weapons, Uniform and Personnel of the VTC/VF
127(46)
5 Involving the Young Volunteer: Service and Preparation
173(20)
6 Volunteer Support Services on the Home Front
193(16)
7 Volunteer Forces in Ireland
209(8)
Epilogue 217(3)
Appendix I VTC and County Volunteer Regiments 220(25)
Appendix II Cadet Units 245(6)
Appendix III VTC Badges and Badge Manufacturers 251(1)
Appendix IV The Royal Defence Corps 252(1)
Appendix V Tour of Inspection of the VF by Lord French during the Autumn of 1916 253(1)
Appendix VI The Home Front: Lines of Communication (TF) 254(1)
Appendix VII The Special Service Companies, Summer 1918 255(1)
Appendix VIII Some Unit Strengths 256(1)
Bibliography 257(4)
Index 261
Dr Mike Osborne's interest in fortification began with childhood visits to castles. It has developed over the years to include all aspects of the topic from Iron-Age forts to Cold War bunkers. He was a volunteer-coordinator for the Defence of Britain Project recording twentieth-century military structures. After a thirty-year-career in education he took early retirement to write, producing over twenty books to date. Topics include: Civil War sieges and fortifications, drill halls, twentieth-century military structures, a series of county surveys of defences including the award-winning 'Defending Cambridgeshire', and the best-selling 'Defending Britain'.