Title: How were civilians affected by World War 1?
1How were civilians affected by World War 1?
- Aim To revise key details about the British
Home Front during the First World War
2Total War
- What was the Total War?
- A war where the countries drafts all the people
and collects all resources that they can. - When did this war take place?
- Around 1916
- Where did it take place?
- Europe
- Why did the Total War occur?
- The war turned into a Total War because the
countries expected the war to be short so they
werent prepared for long term war, when their
supplies ran out, total war was their only
option. - What was the significance of the war?
- WWI turned into a Total War which affected the
home front and government a lot. - It affected women too because with the absence of
men they were expected to take over more jobs and
help out with the war effort. - They received the rights to new jobs, to vote,
and the right to apartments.
3WWI on the Home Front
- WWI was a Total War required populations on
the home front to mobilize their resources
completely toward the war effort civilian
population centers also became targets of the war
effort not since the US Civil War the
Napoleonic Wars had the world seen such complete
mobilization for war - Mass conscription was carried out by all nations
most European nations had armies of 1-2 million
eventually over 70 million would be drafted
worldwide many women would volunteer services
as nurses at home the front - Entire economies were geared toward war
production led to rationing of all sorts of
essentials as raw materials agricultural
products were utilized to feed the war machine
led to increased centralization govt control
of economies - WWI saw an increase in restrictions of civil
liberties the press was censored as was speech
mail due process of law was suspended for
those suspected of treason German books were
burned, speaking German was banned lynchings of
German-Brits were interned in Britain and its
colonies - Women played an important role in the war effort
taking up jobs as men were sent to the home
front over 35 of the workforce was women in
many European nations during the war
4War on the Home Front
5DORA
- Newspapers and radio broadcasts were censored
- The government could control what people heard
about the war - This made sure the public continued to support
the war effort by only hearing good things
6Propaganda
- What is this?
- These were ideas spread around to influence
public opinions or to go against a cause. It is a
method that the government used to create
enthusiasm for the war also. - When did this occur?
- August 1914
- Where did this take place?
- In Europe
- Who used propaganda?
- The European government
- What is the significance of using propaganda?
- They used it because before the wars it stirred
up national hatreds.
7WW I Propaganda - The Poster War
- Propaganda - the spreading of ideas, information,
or rumor for the purpose of helping or injuring
an institution, a cause, or a person. - A deliberate attempt to influence individuals by
leading one to behave as though his response
were his own decision. - In war, its used as an instrument for
maintaining unity, good will and a common
purpose - Maintaining and boosting the morale of soldiers.
- Unifying society at home in support of the war
effort.
8Propaganda WWI
- WWI was one of the 1st wars in which a massive
propaganda campaign was unleashed usually to
gain support for the war and/or demonize the
enemy - Germany faced an onslaught of negative
propaganda stemming from their illegal invasion
of Belgium (and treatment of civilians)
savages barbarians and Huns were often-used
phrases - Propaganda was used to sell war bonds, persuade
volunteers/recruits and to demonize the enemy
(justify the war effort) - Germany (and Adolf Hitler) would learn the
lessons of winning the propaganda war at home
and utilize it effectively in WWII - The propaganda that Germany started WWI would
be critical in the post-war agreements shaping
of the post-war world
9- Propaganda was used to stimulate or revive
national morale and damage the enemy - Propaganda was used in the church, in classrooms,
in the cinema, in music halls, in postcards, in
cartoons, in porcelain figures, in jigsaw
puzzles, childrens toys, and even in Christmas
decorations - Example Christmas scene that had a trench scene
with a tank
10The following posters are divided into three
parts
- Propaganda symbols
- The use of the soldier on the battlefront as a
universal propaganda image. - The home-front, especially the evolution in the
portrayal of women.
11Propaganda Symbols
- Identify and vilify the enemy.
- Glorify the Allies
- Portrayal of Women as Victims.
12Britain 1917 Artist David Wilson
13USA 1917
14One last effort we will get them. Artist
Unknown France 1917
15USA 1918
16Sottoscrivete al Prestito Subscribe for the
Loan Artist Giovanni Capranesi Italy 1917
17Canada 1918
18Liberation Loan France 1918
19The use of the soldier on the battlefront
- Defender of Civilization
- Heroes
- One who always does his duty despite hardships.
20They Shall Not Pass France 1918
21We Will Get Them France 1916
22Zeichnet 7. Kriegsanleihe - Wiener
Kommerzialbank Translation Subscribe for the 7th
War Loan Alfred Offner 1917 - Germany
23Canada 1917
24Offering the Army and Navy Germany 1916
25For The Supreme Effort France 1915
26USA 1917
27THE HOME-FRONT
- Evolution in the portrayal of women.
- Shifted from one of women as victims to a more
positive image - As care givers.
- Factory workers in jobs formerly held by men.
28USA 1918
29USA 1918
30USA 1918
31The Frenchwoman in War-Time. Artist G. Capon -
France 1917
32Censorship
- British journalists were expelled from France in
August 1914 - Official Press Bureau allowed only six war
correspondents - Persuaded writers, artists, and intellectuals to
publish materials in support of the war Rudyard
Kipling, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Thomas Hardy,
and HG Wells
33Propaganda and Censorship
- News was tightly controlled-censorship
- Reports aimed to
- Maintain morale
- Encourage civilians to support the war effort
- Create hatred and suspicion of the enemy
- Newspapers, radio broadcasts, films and even
board games were used
34The Home Front and Censorship
- Censorship
- Not told about high death toll
- Romanticized the battlefields
- soldiers have died a beautiful death, in noble
battle, we shall rediscover poetryepic and
chivalrous
35Censorship
- Censorship
- Newspapers described troops as itching to go
over the top. - Government reported to the press that life in
the trenches promoted good health and clear air
36Propaganda and Censorship
- The film, The Battle of the Somme, was filmed in
1916 - The Battle was a disaster for the British Army
- Failed objectives
- Enormous causalities
- What can the film tell an historian about the use
of propaganda in WW1?
37BATTLE OF THE SOMME MOVIE
- For the first time the home front in Britain was
exposed to the horrors of modern war with the
release of the propaganda film, The Battle of the
Somme which used actual footage from the first
days of the battle. - The film spanned five reels and lasted 63 minutes
. - It was first screened on 10 August, 1916, while
the battle was still raging. - On 21 August the film began showing
simultaneously in 34 London cinemas.
38Battle of the Somme Video Clips
http//www.encyclomedia.com/video-battle_of_the_so
mme.htmlmoretext
39Battle of the Somme Film
- Created by Malins and McDowell- who were sent to
the British Fourth Army to do some general
filming. - Ended up turning into a documentary of the Somme
offensive. - On July 1, Malins filmed the famous scene of the
explosion of a large British mine under the
German Hawthorn Redoubt.
40Battle of the Somme Film
- The film caused awareness- most notably from some
faked scenes of men falling dead and wounded. - Led to the establishment of the War Office Cinema
Committee in November 1916. - Eventually war films were replaced with
newsreels.
41SOMME MOVIE CONT
- The film was screened for British soldiers at
rest in France where it provided new recruits
with some idea of what they were about to face. - Soldier's main complaint was failure of film to
capture sounds of battle. However, as a silent
film, the titles could be remarkably forthright,
describing images of injury and death. - The film was shown to British public as a morale
booster and was favorably received. - British public's response to film was enormous
with an estimated 20 million tickets being sold
in two months. On this basis, The Battle of the
Somme remains one of the most successful British
films ever.
42Effects of the Battle of the Somme
- The film, The Battle of the Somme, is seen by
historians as a propaganda triumph - People at home felt they could see how their
efforts were helping the troops - Although it showed some casualties, it also
showed advancing troops, helping morale
43Propaganda and Censorship
- The film, Britains Effort, was created in 1917
- What was its purpose?
44Propaganda and Censorship
- It is hard to measure how effective propaganda
was - BUT
- Support for the war was reasonably constant
- Only really changed with the enormous causalities
at the Battle of the Somme in 1916 - People read lots of newspapers, and watched the
films, so they were being exposed to it
45Effects of Propaganda
- The Parliamentary Recruiting Committee (PRC)
eventually printed almost 6 million posters and
over 14 million leaflets at a total cost of
24,000. - For every PRC leaflet produced in 1914-1915, at
least ten had been produced by the three main
political parties during the 1910 election
campaigns. - Propaganda was certainly not the most significant
factor in Germanys defeat.
46The Brown Familys Four War Christmas
- What is happening in each frame?
- Explain why these things are happening, based on
what you know about life on the Home Front
47(No Transcript)
48(No Transcript)
49Womenand theWarEffort
50Key points Before the war, the most common
employment for a woman was as a domestic
servant. However, women were also employed in
what were seen to be suitable occupations
e.g. teaching, nursing, office work.
51Key points When war broke out in August
1914, thousands of women were sacked from jobs in
dressmaking, millinery and jewellery making.They
needed work and they wanted to help the war
effort.
52Key points Suffragettes stopped all
militant action in order to support the
war effort.
53Obstacles They Still Faced
- In 1914, Dr. Elsie Inglis offered to raise an
ambulance unit to help the wounded soldiers.
She was told by the Ministry of WarMy good
lady, go home and sit still. - But despite this view, women played a vital role
in winning the war.
54Key points At first, there was much trade
union opposition and the employment of women had
not increased significantly before the summer
of 1915. In July 1915, a Right to Work ,march
was organised by a leading suffragette,
Christabel Pankhurst.
55Key points The introduction of conscription in
1916 led to an increase in the number of women
employed in all sectors of the economy.
56War Girls by Jessie Pope
- Theres the girl who clips your ticket for the
train, - And the girl who speeds the lift from floor to
floor, - Theres the girl who does a milk-round in the
rain, - And the girl who calls for orders at your door.
- Strong, sensible, and fit,
- Theyre out to show their grit,
- And tackle jobs with energy and knack.
- No longer caged and penned up.
- Theyre going to keep their end up
- Till the khaki soldier boys come marking back.
57War Girls continued
- Theres the motor girl who drives a heavy van,
- Theres the butcher girl who brings your joint of
meat, - Theres the girl who cries All fares, please!
like a man, - And the girl who whistles taxis up the street.
- Beneath each uniform
- Beats a heart thats soft and warm,
- Though of a canny mother-wit they show no lack
- But a solemn statement that is,
- Theyve no time for love and kisses
- Till the khaki boys come marching back.
58War on the Home Front
- Women in War
- Millions of men at battle
- Work on home front done by women
- Some worked in factories, producing war supplies
- Others served as nurses to wounded
- Contributions of women
- Transformed public views of women
- Helped women win right to vote
59Women on the Home Front
- Women took war factory jobs
- Received lower wages than males
- Food shortages made running a household difficult
60Women and Jobs
- Women were asked to take over jobs that had not
been available to them before - Women were employed in jobs that had once been
considered beyond their capacity. - Jobs included
- Chimney Sweeps
- Truck Drivers
- Farm laborers
- Factory workers
61Key points Many women were paid good wages,
especially in munitions factories, but in most
cases they were paid lower rates than
men. Improved wages did permit greater
independence for some women.
62Key points Women became more visible in the
world of work. They were seen to be doing
important jobs.
63Women and Work
- Theres the girl who clips your ticket for the
train, - And the girl who speeds the lift from floor to
floor, - Theres the girl who calls for orders at your
door. - Strong, sensible, and fit.
- Theyre out to show their frit.
- And tackle jobs with energy and knack.
- No longer caged and penned up, Theyre going to
keep their end up - Till the khaki soldier boys come marching back.
- The place of women in the workforce was far from
secure - Both men and women expected that many of the new
jobs were only temporary - This was evident in the British poem War Girls
written in 1916
64Women and Work
- At the end of the war, governments would quickly
remove women from the jobs they had encouraged
them to take earlier - The work benefits for women from World War One
were short-lived - By 1919, there would be 650,000 unemployed women
in Great Britain - Wages for women who were still employed were also
then lowered
- In some countries, the role women played in
wartime economies had a positive impact on the
womens movement - The most obvious effects was the right to vote
given to women in Germany, Austria, and the USA
immediately after the war - In Britain, women over the age of 30 were given
the right to vote and be elected to Parliament in
1918 - Many upper and middle class women gained new
freedoms as their young women took jobs, got
their own apartments, and became independent
65Upper and Middle Class Women
- Womens Police Service
- Womens Patrols Committee of the Nation Union of
Women Workers - Womens Emergency Corp
- Womens Volunteer Rescue
- Queen Alexandras Imperial Military Nursing
Service - Territorial Force Nursing Service
- Voluntary Aid Detachment (VADs)---74,000 women
- First Aid Nursing Yeomanry (FANY)
66Motor Ambulance Drivers in France 1917
- Poster from WWI calling on women to do their
patriotic duty by fulfilling their 'role' in the
home and industry.
67Women's Police Volunteers compare notes with a police constable. Imperial War Museum Q31088
68Motor Ambulance Drivers in France 1917
69A Woman Ambulance Driver
70(No Transcript)
71(No Transcript)
72Red Cross Nurses
73Women in the Army Auxiliary
74(No Transcript)
75(No Transcript)
76- Womens Army Auxiliary Corp (WAAC) was for
working and lower middle class women - Formed in March 1917
- 41,000 women volunteered
- Womens Land Army (WLA)
- Opened to all classes
- Formed in March 1917
- 16,000 women
- Paid less than unskilled male agricultural
workers - Overall by end of the war, 260,000 women were
farming and producing food for the soldiers and
home front.
77Working in the Fields
78- WLA Handbook reminded its members
- that they were doing a mans work, and so youre
dressed rather like a man, but remember just
because you wear smocks and breeches, you should
take care to behave like a British girl who
expects chivalry and respect from everyone she
meets. - The Times in July 1917 described the WLA women
as - the land women, bronzed, freckled, and
splendidly healthy.
79(No Transcript)
80Munitions Workers
81Women in Munitions
- 947,000 women were employed in munitions work
- 300 lost their lives to TNT poisoning and from
explosions in the factories
82- Munitionettes
- Primarily for lower middle class and working
class - Women in worked in the munition factories
- Shift work and very long hours
- Horrible working conditions badly ventilated,
poorly lit, and overrun by rats - One women working in a munitions factory in
Lanchashire walked three miles to and from work,
worked 12 hour shifts, and shared a room with
five other women - Whereas in 1914 there were 212,000 women working
in the munitions industry, by the end of the war
it had increased to 950,000. - Christopher Addison, who succeeded David Lloyd
George as Minister of Munitions, estimated in
June, 1917, that about 80 per cent of all weapons
and shells were being produced by women.
83- In World War I Britain, about 1 million mostly
lower-class women worked in munitions jobs. - They were called munitionettes or Tommys
sister. - Unlike nurses, the munitions workers could not
profess pacifism since their work directly
contributed to the fighting. - In fact, in 1918, Scottish women working at a
shell factory raised money and bought a warplane
for the air force. - However, the munitionettes main motivation was
financial, contrary to the popular belief that it
was patriotic. - The women found the wages at first livable and
later lucrative. - Compared with domestic work, war work offered
escape from jobs of badly paid drudgery. - However, although they earned more than they
would have doing womens work, the women received
nowhere near the fortunes they had been led to
expect when deciding to take war work.139
84- Hazards
- TNT poisoning
- The chemicals attack the red corpuscles in the
blood and the tissues of organs like the liver - Their skin became jaundiced due to the toxin and
their skins turned yellow - They became known as Canaries
- Health Effects loss of memory, sight disorders,
convulsions, delirium, and death - 109 women died from this
85- Hazards Continued
- The dope varnish applied to aircraft canvas
caused many women to collapse unconscious. - An explosion at the National Filling Factory near
Leeds killed 35 women in Dec 1916. - Other explosions
- Nottingham July 1918---35 dead
- East London in Jan 1917---69 dead
86(No Transcript)
87 Edward Skinner, For King and Country (1916)
88Women At Munition Making by Mary Gabrielle
Collins
- Gaining nourishment for the thoughts to be,
- Are bruised against the law,
- Kill, kill.
- They must take part in defacing and destroying
the natural body - Which, certainly during this dispensation
- Is the shrine of the spirit.
- O God!
- Throughout the ages we have seen,
- Again and again
- Men by thee created
- Cancelling each other.
- And we have marvelled at the seeming annihilation
- Of Thy work.
- But this goes further,
- Taints the fountain head,
- Mounts like a poison to the Creators very heart.
- O God!
- Must It anew be sacrificed on earth?
- Their hands should minister unto the flame of
life, - Their fingers guide
- The rosy teat, swelling with milk,
- To the eager mouth of the suckling babe
- Or smooth with tenderness
- Softly and soothingly,
- The heated brow of the ailing child.
- Or stray among the curls
- Of the boy or girl, thrilling to mother love.
- But now,
- Their hands, their fingers
- Are coarsened in munition factories.
- Their thoughts, which should fly
- Like bees among the sweetest mind flowers,
89- The women working in factories began to play
football during lunch-breaks. - Teams were formed and on Christmas Day in 1916, a
game took place between Ulverston Munitions Girls
and another group of local women. - The munitionettes won 11-5.
- Soon afterwards, a game between munitions
factories in Swansea and Newport. - The Hackney Marshes National Projectile Factory
formed a football team and played against other
factories in London. -
90- Blyth Spartans Munition Girls - Munitionette Cup
Winners 1918
91 92Women and girls working at a Scottish sugar refinery. Imperial War Museum Q28345
93(No Transcript)
94Munition Wages by Madeline Ida Bedford
- Were all here today, mate,
- Tomorrow---perhaps dead,
- If Fate tumbles on us
- And blows up our shed.
- Afraid! Are yer kidding?
- With money to spend!
- Years back I wore tatters,
- Now---silk stockings, mi friend!
- Ive bracelets and jewellery.
- Rings envied by friends
- A sergeant to swank with,
- And something to lend.
- I drive out in taxis,
- Do theatres in style.
- And this is my verdict---
- It is jolly worth while.
- Earning high wages? Yus,
- Five quid a week,
- A woman, too, mind you,
- I calls it dim sweet.
- Yeare asking some questions---
- But bless yer, here goes
- I spends the whole racket
- On good times and clothes.
- Me saving? Elijah!
- Yer do think Im mad.
- Im acting the lady,
- But----I aint living bad.
- Im having lifes good times.
- See ere, its like this
- The oof come o danger,
- A touch-and-go bizz.
95Munition Wages continued
- Worth while for tomorrow
- If Im blown to the sky,
- Ill have repaid mi wages
- In death----and pass by.
- What is the message of this poem?
- What does it tell us about the dangers of the
work women did during World War One?
96(No Transcript)
97(No Transcript)
98French Women Factory Workers
99Working conditions unionism and pay
- Trade unionism proved to be the second legacy of
the war. - Female workers had been less unionised than
their male counterparts. - This was because they tended to do part-time work
and to work in smaller firms (which tended to be
less unionised). - Also, existing unions were often hostile to
female workers. World War One forced unions to
deal with the issue of women's work. - The scale of women's employment could no longer
be denied and rising levels of women left
unmarried or widowed by the war forced the hands
of the established unions.
100- In addition, feminist pressure on established
unions and the formation of separate women's
unions threatened to destabilise men-only unions.
- The increase in female trade union membership
from only 357,000 in 1914 to over a million by
1918 represented an increase in the number of
unionised women of 160 percent. - This compares with an increase in the union
membership of men of only 44 percent.
101- However, the war did not inflate women's wages.
- Employers circumvented wartime equal pay
regulations by employing several women to replace
one man, or by dividing skilled tasks into
several less skilled stages. - In these ways, women could be employed at a lower
wage and not said to be 'replacing' a man
directly. - By 1931, a working woman's weekly wage had
returned to the pre-war situation of being half
the male rate in more industries.
102- Germany
- In World War I, when the expected quick victory
turned to protracted war, German women entered
industrial jobs (about 700,000 in munitions
industries by the end of the war), - and served as civilian employees in military jobs
in rear areas (medical, clerical, and manual
labor women trained for jobs in the signal corps
late in the war but never deployed). - German women won the vote after World War I, and
some kept their jobs in industry.28
103German Women Factory Workers
104(No Transcript)
105The wartime employment of women became a staple subject for humour. Imperial War Museum
106For Recruitment
107- Women played an important role in persuading men
to join the army. - In August 1914, Admiral Charles Fitzgerald
founded the Order of the White Feather. - This organisation encouraged women to give out
white feathers to young men who had not joined
the army.
108- The British Army began publishing posters urging
men to become soldiers. - Some of these posters were aimed at women.
- One poster said "Is your Best Boy wearing
khaki? If not, don't you think he should be?" - Another poster read "If you cannot persuade him
to answer his country's call and protect you now,
discharge him as unfit."The Mothers' Union also
published a poster. - It urged its members to tell their sons "My
boy, I don't want you to go, but if I were you I
should go." - The poster added "On his return, hearts would
beat high with thankfulness and pride."
109- Baroness Emma Orczy founded the Active Service
League, an organisation that urged women to sign
the following pledge "At this hour of England's
grave peril and desperate need I do hereby pledge
myself most solemnly in the name of my King and
Country to persuade every man I know to offer his
services to the country, and I also pledge myself
never to be seen in public with any man who,
being in every way fit and free for service, has
refused to respond to his country's call."
110Financing the War
111- Russia
- During World War I, some Russian women took part
in combat even during the Czarist period. - These women, motivated by a combination of
patriotism and a desire to escape a drab
existence, mostly joined up dressed as men. - A few, however, served openly as women. The
Czarist government had no consistent policy on
female combatants. - Russias first woman aviator was turned down as a
military pilot, and settled for driving and
nursing. - Another pilot was assigned to active duty,
however.32
112- The most famous women soldiers were the
Battalion of Death. - Its leader, Maria Botchkareva, a 25-year-old
peasant girl (with a history of abuse by men),
began as an individual soldier in the Russian
army. - She managed (with the support of an amused local
commander) to get permission from the Czar to
enlist as a regular soldier. - After fighting off the frequent sexual advances
and ridicule of her male comrades, she eventually
won their respect especially after serving with
them in battle. - Botchkarevas autobiography describes several
horrendous battle scenes in which most of her
fellow soldiers were killed running towards
German machine-gun positions, and one in which
she bayoneted a German soldier to death. - After two different failed attacks, she spent
many hours crawling under German fire to drag her
wounded comrades back to safety, evidently saving
hundreds of lives in the course of her service at
the front - . She was seriously wounded several times but
always returned to her unit at the front after
recuperating. - Clearly a strong bond of comradery existed
between her and the male soldiers of her unit.33
113Russian Women Soldiers
114- The battalion was formed in extraordinary
circumstances, in response to a breakdown of
morale and discipline in the Russian army after
three horrible years of war and the fall of the
Czarist government. - By her own account, Botchkareva conceived of the
battalion as a way to shame the men into fighting
(since nothing else was getting them to fight). - She argued that numbers were immaterial, that
what was important was to shame the men and that
a few women at one place could serve as an
example to the entire front.The purpose of the
plan would be to shame the men in the trenches by
having the women go over the top first. The
battalion was thus exceptional and was
essentially a propaganda tool. - As such it was heavily publicized Before I had
time to realize it I was already in a
photographers studio. The following day this
picture topped big posters pasted all over the
city. - Bryant wrote in 1918 No other feature of the
great war ever caught the public fancy like the
Death Battalion, composed of Russian women. I
heard so much about them before I left
America.35
115- The battalion began with about 2,000 women
volunteers and was given equipment, a
headquarters, and several dozen male officers as
instructors. Botchkareva did not emphasize
fighting strength but discipline (the purpose of
the women soldiers was sacrificial). - Physical standards for enlistment were lower
than for men. - She told the women, We are physically weak, but
if we be strong morally and spiritually we will
accomplish more than a large force. - She was preoccupied with upholding the moral
standards and upright behavior of her girls. - Mostly, she emphasized that the soldiers in her
battalion would have to follow traditional
military discipline, not elect committees to rule
as the rest of the army was doing. - I did not organize this Battalion to be like
the rest of the army. We were to serve as an
example, and not merely to add a few babas
women to the ineffective millions of soldiers
now swarming over Russia. - When most of the women rebelled against her harsh
rule, Botchkareva stubbornly rejected pleas from
Kerensky and others including direct orders
from military superiors to allow formation of a
committee. - Instead she reorganized the remaining 300 women
who stayed loyal to her, and brought them to the
front, fighting off repeated attacks by
Bolsheviks along the way. - The battalion had new uniforms, a full array of
war equipment, and 18 men to serve them (two
instructors, eight cooks, six drivers, and two
shoemakers).36
116- Other womens battalions were formed in several
other cities apparently less than 1,000 women
in all but they suffered from a variety of
problems, ranging from poor discipline to a lack
of shoes and uniforms. - These other units never saw combat.
- There was not another offensive before the
Bolsheviks took power in October and sent most of
the women soldiers home, telling them to put on
female attire.39 - The Battalion of Death, then, never tested an
all-female units effectiveness in combat. - Nonetheless, on one day in 1917, 300 women did go
over the top side by side with 400 male comrades,
advanced, and overran German trenches. - The women apparently were able to keep
functioning in the heat of battle, and were able
to adhere to military discipline. - These women were, of course, an elite sample of
the most war-capable women in all of Russia. - Nonetheless, they did it advanced under fire,
retreated under fire, and helped provide that
crucial element of leadership by which other
nearby units were spurred into action, overcoming
the inertia of fatigue and committee rule. - The Battalion of Death did this not as scattered
individual women but as a coherent military unit
of 300 women instructed by Botchkareva that
they were no longer women, but soldiers.40
117Spies
- Mata Hari
- Real Name Margareetha Geertruide
Zelle - German Spy!
118- After the War
- 1 Women were expected to give way to men
returning from the forces and return to pre-war
womens work. - 2 The assumption that a womans place is in the
home returned. - 3 The percentage of women at work returned to
pre-war levels. - 4 More women than before worked in offices.
119- After the War
- 5 Shorter skirts and hair became fashionable.
- 6 Women went out with men without a chaperone.
- 7 Women smoked and wore make-up in public for the
first time. - 8 In 1919 being female or married was no longer
allowed to disqualify someone from holding a job
in the professions or civil service.
120Internment of Enemy Aliens
- On October 22, 1914, in response to press
campaigns calling for the round up of enemies at
large on the home front, the British Cabinet
ordered the arrest of un-naturalized male
Germans, Austrians, and Hungarians between the
ages of 17 and 45. - Internment camps were set up all over the
mainland and on the Isle of Man. - But this was not enough, and after the sinking of
the Lusitania, the press called for more. - Propagandists like Horatio Bottomley lashed out
at the local Germans. - The press campaigns incited riots and looting of
German shops and property in Britain.
121Horatio Bottomley wrote
- I call for a vendetta---a vendetta against every
German in Britain---whether naturalized or
notYou cannot naturalize an unnatural abortion,
a hellish freak. But you can exterminate him. - We have been very patient---patient with the
Government, patient with the enemythousands and
thousands of German savages are roaming at large
in our midst---and all the time our brave and
honourable soldiers are being asphyxiated in the
trenches our wounded are tortured prisoners are
being starved and insulted unfortified towns are
being bombarded peaceful civilians---old men,
women, and children---are being murdered
trawlers and merchant vessels are being sunk and
now comes the crowning infamy of the Lusitania - I should welcome the formation of a National
Council of Righteous Retribution---a National
Vendetta, pledged to exterminate every
German-born man (God, forgive the term!) in
Britain---and to deport every German-born woman
and child - As regards, naturalized Germans they should be
registered, made to report themselves every day,
and compelled to wear a distinctive badge. - In John Bull on May 15, 1915
122The Alien Presence
- Many precautions were taken against
aliens---resident foreigners even though they
posed little threat to national security - There were 35,000 Germans in Britain---the third
largest immigrant group after the Irish and the
Jews - The German immigrants became the object of public
suspicion and attack due to the imperial
struggles in South Africa and the more recent
naval arms race and spies scare
123The Half-Man by William Watson
- Sparing not age, sparing not youth,
- They tore their way with wolfish tooth
- Through human homes, through human hopes
- Not men, not men, but lycanthropes!
- Thus do not the fabled monsters rear
- Their heads anew thus reappear
- Old Shapes that free us and appal
- And the Half-Man is worst of all.
124Internment
- Distinguished men with German connections were
hounded by the press---even Lord Haldane, simply
because he had been partly educated in Germany. - He had been Minister for War until 1912,
re-modelled the army and founded the
Territorials. - Yet he was victimized by the press until a
formation of a coalition government in May 1915,
when he was removed from office.
125The Alien Presence
- The spy scare continued until 1915 with many
people caught up in wild rumors and false
accusations - The Daily Mail advised its readers that if a
waiter serving them appeared German, but claimed
Swiss, they should demand to see his passport - Because of the fear of spies using carrier
pigeons, the DORA required owners to have a
permit for homing pigeons - In reality, some 22 known German spies were
rounded up in 1914, and 11 were executed
126The Alien Presence
- However, the public increasingly demanded the
internment of aliens - This led to 30,000 interned mostly on the Isle of
Man under the Alien Restrictions Act of August
1914 - Fueled by many stories of German atrocities in
Belgium and elsewhere, actual or supposed Germans
were subjected to harassment - There were at least 7 deaths in the East End
riots in May 1915 following the torpedoing of the
Lusitania - Even dachshunds, the Germanically named dogs,
were stoned on the streets sometimes
127The Alien Presence
- Air raid by the zeppelins also increased
anti-German feelings - They even went after people with German surnames
who had lived in the area for generations and had
Cockney accents - There were large scale demonstrations against
enemy aliens in a number of cities in 1918 - And a petition was signed with 1.2 million
signatures - Orchestras began to avoid German composers
- The German measles became known as the Belgian
Flush
128The Isle of Man
- The Isle of Man was used by the British
Government for the internment of enemy aliens
during both World War One and World War Two and
there is still a great deal of interest,
primarily from family historians who had
relatives or friends detained in the camps. - During 1914-1919 there were two large camps on
the Island at Douglas and Knockaloe near Peel. - The first was a requisitioned holiday camp whilst
the second was purpose built using prefabricated
huts and even had its own railway link. - Large numbers of internees were held for up to
five years until the camps finally closed in
1919.
129(No Transcript)
130The Alien Presence---Jews
- Jews also came under physical attack in East
London in 1917 in the belief that they were
dodging conscription