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If the Kaiser Comes: Defence Against a German Invasion of Britain in the First World War [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 224 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 11-May-2017
  • Leidėjas: Fonthill Media Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1781555753
  • ISBN-13: 9781781555750
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 224 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 11-May-2017
  • Leidėjas: Fonthill Media Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1781555753
  • ISBN-13: 9781781555750
On the night of 20 November 1914, everything pointed to the likelihood of invasion by a German army, whisked across the North Sea on a fleet of fast transports. The Royal Navy’s Grand Fleet prepared to sail south from remote bases in Scotland; shallow-draught monitors were moored in the Wash; and 300,000 troops stood by to repel the enemy on the beaches. Fortunately, the night passed without incident. For thirty years prior to the First World War, writers, with a variety of motivations, had been forecasting such an invasion. Britain regarded the army as an imperial police force and, despite the experience gained in military exercises involving simulated invasions, the Royal Navy was still expected to fulfill its traditional role of intercepting and destroying enemy forces. However, as the technology of warfare developed, with the proliferation of ever more powerful warships, submarines, mines, and torpedoes, alongside the added promise of aerial assault, it became obvious that these long-established notions of the Navy’s invincibility might no longer be realistic. The perceived threat of invasion, whether justified or not, persisted throughout the First World War, and this book describes the measures taken to protect Britain against enemy attack by land, sea, or air.
Acknowledgements 5(4)
Abbreviations 9(4)
Introduction 13(2)
1 British Expectations of Invasion
15(19)
2 Britain's Defence Strategy Prior to the First World War
34(13)
3 Britain's Anti-Invasion Defences in the First World War
47(47)
4 Defending the Homeland: The Role of the Navy
94(19)
5 Defending the Homeland: The Role of the Army
113(20)
6 Military Aviation and Home Defence
133(21)
7 Did the Kaiser Come?
154(13)
Appendix I `Defended Ports' as Classified by the Owen Committee, 1905 167(2)
Appendix II The Royal Navy in Defence of the Seas: Shore Bases and Support Ships 169(7)
Appendix III The British Army in Defence of the Homeland: Garrisons, Home Defence Formations and Reserve Forces Bases 176(7)
Appendix IV The RFC and RNAS in Defence of the Skies: Stations and Aerodromes 183(4)
Bibliography 187(3)
Index 190
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 the military structures of the twentieth-century. After a thirty-year-career in education he took early retirement and since then has produced nearly twenty books. Topics include: Civil War sieges and fortifications, drill halls, twentieth-century military structures, a series of county surveys of defences and the best-selling 'Defending Britain'.