The British working class and enthusiasm for war, 1914-1916

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200 pages 2005

About This Book

"Millions of men volunteered to leave home, hearth and family to go to a foreign land to fight in 1914, the start of the biggest war in British history. It was a war fought by millions of soldier-citizens, most of whom had volunteered willingly to go. They made up the Army that first held and then, in 1918, pushed back the German Army to win the Great War.".

"The British Tommy has been lionized in the decades since the war, but little attention has been paid in the literature to what motivated the ordinary British man to go to France, especially in the early years when Britain relied on the voluntary system to fill the ranks. Why would a regular working class man leave behind his job, family and friends to go to light a war that defended not British soil, but French? Why would a British man risk his life to defend places whose names he could barely pronounce?" "This book gives the answers in the words of the men who were there. Young and old, from cities and the country, single and married, they went to war willingly and then carried their experiences with them for a lifetime."--BOOK JACKET.

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