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Title: How were civilians affected by World War 1?


1
How were civilians affected by World War 1?
  • Aim To revise key details about the British
    Home Front during the First World War

2
Total 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.

3
WWI 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

4
War on the Home Front
5
? starter activity
This was arguably the most successful recruitment
poster of the War. It shows Lord Earl Kitchener,
the man responsible for getting men to join the
army. It uses a clever visual trick. Can you
guess what it is?
6
Recruitment
  • Initial recruitment used posters, leaflets, etc.
    to build an army quickly
  • What is the message of this poster?
  • How would this poster encourage men to join the
    army?

7
Why did people join up?
8
Patriotism
  • Britain joined the War on 4 August 1914
  • People encouraged to do your bit for King
    country
  • Kings shilling
  • Pals brigades (including villages, football
    teams, orchestras, old school friends)
  • Over by Christmas
  • By December 1914, 1 million men had enlisted

What is the artist of who made this poster trying
to say?
9
Propaganda
  • Leaflets posters
  • Women were told to encourage sons, husbands
    boyfriends to enlist
  • By January 1916, 2.6 million men had enlisted

What do you think the man in the poster is
thinking?
10
Recruitment
  • Initial recruitment used posters, leaflets, etc.
    to build an army quickly
  • What is the message of this poster?
  • How would this poster encourage men to join the
    army?

11
Recruitment
  • Womens organisations tried to boost recruitment
  • White feathers were given to men as a sign of
    their cowardice
  • The Mothers Union urged its members to get their
    sons to join up

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13
Recruitment
  • Initial recruitment used posters, leaflets, etc.
    to build an army quickly
  • What is the message of this poster?
  • How would this poster encourage men to join the
    army?

14
Recruitment
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29
Recruiting by E. A. Mackintosh
  • Lads, youre wanted, go and help,
  • On the railway carriage wall
  • Stuck the poster, and I thought
  • Of the hands that penned the call.
  • Fat civilians wishing they
  • Could go out and fight the Hun.
  • Cant you see them thanking God
  • That theyre over forty-one?
  • Girls with feathers, vulgar songs-
  • Washy verse on Englands need-
  • God-and dont we damned well know
  • How the message ought to read.

30
Recruiting continued
  • Lads, youre wanted! Over there,
  • Shiver in the morning dew,
  • More poor devils like yourselves
  • Waiting to be killed by you.
  • Go and help to swell the names
  • In the casualty lists.
  • Help to make a columns stuff
  • For the blasted journalists.
  • Help to keep them nice and safe
  • From the wicked German foe.
  • Dont let him come over here!
  • Lads, youre wanted-out you go.

31
Recruiting continued
  • Theres a better word than that,
  • Lads, and cant you hear it come
  • From a million men that call
  • You to share their martyrdom.
  • Leave the harlots still to sing
  • Comic songs about the Hun,
  • Leave the fat old men to say
  • Now weve got them on the run.
  • Better twenty honest years
  • Than their dull three score and ten.
  • Lads, youre wanted. Come and learn
  • To live and die with honest men.

32
Recruiting continued
  • You shall learn what men can do
  • If you will but pay the price,
  • Learn the gaiety and strength
  • In the gallant sacrifice.
  • Take your risk of life and death,
  • Underneath the open sky.
  • Live clean or go out quick-
  • Lads, youre wanted. Come and die.
  • What aspects of Home Front changes are addressed
    in this poem?
  • What is the overall message?

33
  • While it is true that the start of World War One
    was greeted with vast amounts of patriotism
    throughout Europe and the Empire, there were
    those who were pacifists and refused to have
    anything to do with the war. The pacifists were
    few in number (the UK had about 16,000 in total
    during the war) and would have had no impact on
    the number of fighting men Britain had in the
    lead up to conscription.
  • However, despite their lack of numbers, the
    military and War Office came down on pacifists
    were great energy.  
  • In the autumn of 1914, so many men volunteered
    for the British Army, that the few pacifists in
    society were all but overlooked.
  • As the war would be over by Christmas 1914, most
    men were more concerned about missing out as
    opposed to thinking about those who did not want
    to fight.
  • Religion was the main reason why men did not want
    to join up. Many such as Bert Brocklesby were
    very religious.
  • On the day war was declared he said God has
    not put me on this Earth to go destroying His
    children.
  • Therefore, he refused to have anything to do with
    the military and the war.
  • Initially, the most these men could expect were
    white feathers being given to them and petty
    verbal abuse in the street.
  • However, when it became clear that the war would
    not be over by Xmas 1914, the stance taken on
    pacifists became more aggressive.
  • As the number of British casualties greatly
    increased from 1915 to 1916, it got worse. In
    public, known pacifists ran the risk of being
    assaulted and thrown in jail for the most trivial
    of reasons.

34
Conscription
  • Voluntary recruitment was decreasing, but the
    demand for troops was increasing
  • Voluntary recruitment didnt share the burden
    between all parts of society
  • Conscription introduced in 1916
  • All men aged 18-40 had to register
  • They could be called up to fight at any time

35
Conscription
  • The British army had consisted of all volunteers.
  • As hundreds of thousands of men were killed or
    wounded, more volunteers were needed.
  • Due to this the height limit was reduced.
  • And the upper age limit increased.
  • But the flow of volunteers was not enough.
  • In January 1916, the Military Service Act was
    passed.
  • It required all unmarried men between 18 and 41,
    except those in exempted occupations to serve.
  • On April 26, 1916, the Act was extended to
    include married men between the ages of 18 and 41
    as well.
  • The law went through several changes before the
    war's end with the age limit eventually being
    raised to 51.

36
Conscription
  • It has been argued that enforced enlistment was
    more to do with employment circumstances,
    familial circumstances, physical fitness, skills
    and aptitudes and, to a much lesser extent
    religious and political grounds.
  • This was vetted very closely by the Tribunals who
    had to assess a man's fitness for military
    service and weigh that against his usefulness to
    the domestic economy.
  • As one historian has pointed out "a farm lad,
    aged 19, might have escaped call-up in one part
    of the country whereas a 40-year old brickie from
    another part may have been drafted."
  • Conscription caused real hardships for the
    British people.
  • For example, in November 1917 a widow asked
    Croydon Military Tribunal to let her keep her
    eleventh son, to look after her.
  • The other ten were all serving in the British
    armed forces.
  • A man from Barking asked for his ninth son to be
    exempted as his eight other sons were already in
    the British Army.
  • The man's son was given three months exemption.

37
Conscription
  • Who took practiced conscription during the time
    of World War I?
  • Europe
  • When exactly did conscription occur during this
    time?
  • Between 1890 and 1914
  • What was conscription?
  • Conscription was a military draft which made
    European armies double in size.
  • Why did countries choose to practice
    conscription?
  • European countries felt the need to become more
    powerful because of tensions tightening between
    them.
  • What was the significance of conscription during
    this time?
  • Conscription, which is an act of militarism,
    cause Military leaders to receive more power and
    gave countries the means to go to war.

38
Conscription
  • Casualties increased
  • News returned to Britain of horrors of trenches
  • Conscription introduced for all men between ages
    of 18 and 41
  • Conscientious objectors (conshies) given white
    feathers
  • By 1918 2.5 million extra men had been enlisted

Why did millions of men feel obliged to fight
in the War?
39
  • King George V, statement issued on 25th May
    1916.
  • To enable our country to organise more
    effectively its military resources in the present
    great struggle for the cause of civilisation, I
    have, acting on the advice of my Ministers,
    deemed it necessary to enrol every able-bodied
    man between the ages of eighteen and forty-one.
  • I desire to take this opportunity of expressing
    to my people my recognition and appreciation of
    the splendid patriotism and self-sacrifice which
    they have displayed in raising by voluntary
    enlistment since the commencement of the War, no
    less than 5,041,000 men, an effort far surpassing
    that of any other nation in similar circumstances
    recorded in history, and one which will be a
    lasting source of pride to future generations. I
    am confident that the magnificent spirit which
    has hitherto sustained my people through the
    trials of this terrible war will inspire them to
    endure the additional sacrifice now imposed upon
    them, and that it will, with God's help, lead us
    and our Allies to a victory which shall achieve
    the liberation of Europe.

40
The No-Conscription Fellowship was founded as
early as 1914 and it produced the following
leaflet
  • Repeal the Act Fellow citizens
  • Conscription is now law in this country of free
    traditions. Our hard-won liberties have been
    violated. Conscription means the desecration of
    principles that we have long held dear it
    involves the subordination of civil liberties to
    military dictation it imperils the freedom of
    individual conscience and establishes in our
    midst that militarism which menaces all social
    graces and divides the peoples of all nations.
  • We re-affirm our determined resistance to all
    that is established by the Act. We cannot assist
    in warfare. War, which to us is wrong. War, which
    the peoples do not seek, will only be made
    impossible when men, who so believe, remain
    steadfast to their convictions. Conscience, it is
    true, has been recognised in the Act, but it has
    been placed at the mercy of tribunals. We are
    prepared to answer for our faith before any
    tribunal, but we cannot accept any exemption that
    would compel those who hate war to kill by proxy
    or set them to tasks which would help in the
    furtherance of war.
  • We strongly condemn the monstrous assumption by
    Parliament that a man is deemed to be bound by an
    oath that he has never taken and forced under an
    authority he will never acknowledge to perform
    acts which outrage his deepest convictions.
  • It is true that the present act applies only to a
    small section of the community, but a great
    tradition has been sacrificed. Already there is a
    clamour for an extension of the act. Admit the
    principle, and who can stay the march of
    militarism?
  • Repeal the Act. That is your only safeguard.
  • If this be not done, militarism will fasten its
    iron grip upon our national life and
    institutions. There will be imposed upon us the
    very system which statesmen affirm that they set
    out to overthrow.
  • What shall it profit the nation if it shall win
    the war and lose its own soul?

41
What Happened to The No-Conscription Fellowship?
  • The No-Conscription Fellowship was an
    organisation made up by members of the Socialist
    Independent Labour Party and the Quakers.
  • The men who signed the above leaflet were
    Clifford Allen, Edward Grubb, A Fenner Brockway,
    W J Chamberlain, W H Ayles, Morgan Jones, A
    Barratt Brown, John Fletcher, C H Norman and Rev.
    Leyton Richards.
  • All charged under the Defence of the Realm Act.
  • They were all fined those who decided not to pay
    the fine were sent to prison.  

42
Conscientious Objectors
  • The Military Service Act that introduced
    conscription put many who opposed the war into a
    position of direct personal conflict with the
    British Government.
  • Exemption was allowed on grounds of conscience,
    and unsympathetic and biased trials were set up
    to assess those who claimed conscience as a
    reason for not fighting.
  • David Lloyd George, the British Prime Minister,
    promised the conscientious objectors a rough
    time.
  • However, such was the decline in enthusiasm for
    the war, there were 750,000 claims for conscience
    exemption.
  • One was told that he was only fit to be on the
    point of a German bayonet.
  • Of these tribunals, only 16,500 of the 750,000
    were accepted as Conscientious Objectors.
  • The great majority of these men accepted some
    form of alternative service, working in
    hospitals, factories, mines, etc
  • However, over 1000 refused all forms of war
    service.
  • These men were imprisoned, and most were brutally
    treated, resulting in physical and mental abuse.
  • 70 of these men dies in prison.

43
  • Herbert Morrison, An Autobiography (1960) A
    large anti-conscription conference was held at
    the Ethical Society's Hall near Liverpool Street
    Station, London. There were determined but
    unsuccessful efforts to break it up. Toughs who
    had obviously been encouraged to be present
    fiercely attacked us as we emerged, with the City
    police doing little or nothing to stop them.
  • When conscription came into force in 1917 I duly
    received my call-up notice. Of course, there was
    no question of my being fit for military service
    because of my blindness in one eye and it would,
    I suppose, have been easy to pretend that I
    wanted to put on uniform and then allow the
    medical officers to turn me down, but I was
    intent on sticking to my principles. In due
    course I was ordered to report before the
    Conscientious Objectors Tribunal for Wandsworth.
    Exemption could be absolute conditional on
    taking up some form of national service or
    refused on the grounds that the applicant had
    failed to prove the genuine nature of his
    objection.
  • There are many stories of the ruthless and
    sometimes insulting behaviour of the members of
    these tribunals in the First World War when the
    standard question to an absolutist (as men who
    were not willing to help the military machine
    directly or indirectly were called) was, "What
    would you do if you came upon a German attempting
    to rape your sister?". However, my inquisitors
    were both courteous and fair.
  •  

44
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45
'The Ideal' - one of many cartoon produced by
COs (1917).This and several other were also
produced and widelydistributed as
postcard        
46
In The Daily Express on July 4, 1916, Lieutenant
Colonel Reginald Brooke, Commander of the
Military Detention Barracks for the C.O.s bragged
about how he broke them
  • Some of the early batches, when nothing could be
    done with them, were taken singly and run across
    the yard to special rooms---airy enough, but from
    which they could see nothing. They were fed on
    bread and water and some of them presently came
    round. I had them placed in special rooms, nude,
    but with their full army kit on the floor for
    them to put on as soon as they were so minded.
    There were no blankets or substitutes for
    clothing left in the rooms which were quite bare.
    Several of the men held out naked for several
    hours, but they gradually accepted the
    inevitable. Forty of the conscientious objectors
    who passed through my hands are now quite willing
    soldiers.

47
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48
Conscription and Conscientious Objectors
  • Conscientious objectors opposed the war for
    political or religious reasons
  • They refused to fight, and were imprisoned or
    executed for doing so
  • Others helped the war effort, but not through
    military action
  • Field hospitals
  • Stretched bearers

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50
The Conchies
  • Conscientious objectors were people who simply
    did not want to fight in World War 1.
  • Conscientious objectors became known as
    'conchies' or C.O's
  • They were a sign that not everybody was as
    enthusiastic about the war as the government
    would have liked.

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52
  • Over one million soldiers died on the Western
    Front during World War One but there were some
    men who refused to go because they believed the
    war was wrong.

53
There were several types of conscientious
objector.
  • Some were pacifists who were against war in
    general.
  • Some were political objectors who did not
    consider the government of Germany to be their
    enemy
  • Some were religious objectors who believed that
    war and fighting was against their religion.
    Groups in this section were the Quakers and
    Jehovah Witnesses.
  • A combination of any of the above groups.

54
Quakers were prominent in promoting conscientious
objection, and were ridiculed in the papers.
  • A Christian To A Quaker
  • I much regret that I must frown
  • Upon your cocoa nibs, (reference to Cadbury
    chocolate owned by a Quaker family)
  • I simply hate to smite you down
  • And kick you in the ribs
  • But since you will not think as I,
  • Its clear you must be barred,
  • So in you go (and may you die)
  • To two years hard.
  • We are marching to freedom and to love
  • Were fighting every shape of tyrant sin
  • We are out to make it worth
  • Gods while to love the earth,
  • And damn it, you wont join in!
  • To drive you mad, as I have done,
  • Has almost made me sick.
  • To torture Quakers like a Hun
  • Has hurt me to the quick.
  • But since your logic wars with mine
  • Youre something I must guard,
  • So in you go, you dirty swine,
  • To two years hard.
  • We are marching to destroy the hosts of hate
  • Weve taken, every man, a Christian vow
  • We are our to make war cease,
  • That men may live at peace,
  • And, damme, youre at it now!
  • By Harold Begbie

55
  • Some conscientious objectors did not want to
    fight but were keen to 'do their bit'. These
    people were willing to help in weapons factories
    and some went to the trenches to become stretcher
    bearers etc., though not to fight. Other C.O's
    refused to do anything that involved the war -
    these were known as 'absolutists.

56
What did people think of the conchies?
  • They were treated as cowards
  • Traitors
  • Criminals
  • White feathers were handed out to young men who
    had not joined the army
  • They could not get jobs in factories doing war
    work

57
What happened to the conchies?
  • Some did war work
  • Medical services
  • Support services
  • Some refused every kind of alternative service
    and went to prison. Ten died and 31 went mad as
    a result of their experiences

58
  • In his autobiography, Fate Has Been Kind,
    Frederick Pethick-Lawrence explained why he
    refused to be conscripted into the British
    Army.It was not until the middle of 1918 that
    my age group came within the Conscription Act and
    I was called up. I was then 46. Believing as I
    did that the war could and should be brought to
    an end by a negotiated peace, I could not very
    well go out to fight for Mr. Lloyd-George's
    'knock-out blow'. I accordingly went before a
    tribunal in Dorking as a conscientious objector.
    The Clerk to the Council told the tribunal that
    he knew I had held my views for a considerable
    time, and the military representative said that
    he did not particularly 'want this man'. So I was
    awarded exemption, conditional on my doing work
    of national importance, and work on the land was
    indicated.

59
  • After Raymond Postgate was sent to prison for
    refusing to be conscripted, his sister, Margaret
    Postgate, became involved in the Peace Movement.
    In the spring of 1916 Ray, a scholar in his
    first year at St. John's College, Oxford, was
    called up. Of course he refused to go, thereby
    reducing his father to apoplectic fury and,
    after he had failed to secure exemption and was
    brought before the magistrates as a mutinous
    soldier, I went up to Oxford be by his side. At
    that date it needed a fair amount of courage to
    be a C.O. Though the Military Service Act allowed
    exemption on grounds of conscience, it was
    regrettably vague in its definition of either
    "conscience" or "exemption" and the decision as
    to whether a man had or had not a valid
    conscientious objection, and if he had, whether
    he was to be exempted from all forms of war
    service or from combatant service only, or
    something between the two, was left to local
    tribunals all over the country, who had no common
    standard or guidance, and generally - though not
    by any means invariably - took the view that
    every fit man ought to want to fight, and that
    anyone who did not was a coward, an idiot, or a
    pervert, or all three.

60
Raymond Postgate continued
  • Objection on religious grounds was for most part
    treated with respect, particularly if the sect
    had a respectable parentage Quakers usually came
    off lightly, and were permitted to take up any
    form of service they felt able to do though
    Quakers who were "absolutists," i.e., who refused
    to aid the war effort in any way whatever, were
    apt to be jailed after a long and futile
    cross-examination by the Tribunal on how they
    would behave if they found a German violating
    their mother. But non-Christians who objected on
    the grounds that they were internationalists or
    Socialists were obvious traitors in addition to
    all their other vices, and could expect little
    mercy. They would be sent to barracks, and thence
    to prison - and then nobody quite knew what would
    happen to them. There was talk of despatching
    them to France, unarmed, and shooting them there
    for mutiny. It is almost literally true that
    when I walked away from the Oxford court-room I
    walked into a new world, a world of doubters and
    protesters, and into a new war - this time
    against the ruling classes and the government
    which represented them, and with the working
    classes, the Trade Unionists, the Irish rebels of
    Easter Week, and all those who resisted their
    governments or other governments which held them
    down. I found in a few months the whole lot which
    Henry Nevinson used to call "the stage-army of
    the Good" - the ILP, the Union of Democratic
    Control, the Fellowship of Reconciliation, the
    Daily Herald League, the National Council of
    Civil Liberties - and, above all, the Guild
    Socialists and the Fabian, later the Labour
    Research Department.

61
  • John William Graham, Conscription and Conscience
    (2010) In this place, alone, you spend
    twenty-three hours and ten minutes out of the
    twenty-four in the first month of your sentence,
    hungry most of the time. You get little exercise,
    and probably suffer from indigestion, headache or
    sleeplessness. The entire weekend is solitary
    until you attend chapel. After the first month
    you have thirty minutes exercise on Sunday. You
    would go mad but for the work. You sit and stitch
    canvas for mailbags. Your fingers begin by being
    sore and inflamed, but they become used to it. At
    first your daily task can hardly be finished in a
    day. You struggle hard to get the reward of a
    large mug of sugarless cocoa and a piece of bread
    at eight o'clock. It will save you from hunger
    all night, for your previous food - I cannot call
    it a meal - had been at 4.15. This extra ration,
    which varied, and was not universal, was a
    war-time incentive to produce work of national
    importance. It was cut off as a war economy in
    1918.
  • Except on monthly visits (15 minutes), or if he
    has to speak to the Chaplain or doctor, or if he
    has to accost a warder, the prisoner is not
    allowed to speak for two years the sentence
    usually given to a conscientious objector.
  • The punishments for breaking a rule, for talking,
    for lying on your bed before bedtime, looking out
    of a window, having a pencil in your possession,
    not working, and many other such acts were
    savage. If those things were reported to the
    Governor, there would be, say, three days bread
    and water and in a gloomy basement cell, totally
    devoid of furniture during the daytime. This was
    famine. In addition, your exercise might be taken
    away, and your work in association, your letter
    or visit would be postponed, whilst your family
    were left wondering what had happened, and marks,
    with the effect of postponing your final release,
    would be taken off.

62
  • The case of James Brightmore was even more
    outrageous. It certainly got more publicity.
    Brightmore was a young solicitor's clerk from
    Manchester. After serving eight months of a
    twelve months sentence for refusing to put on the
    uniform, Brightmore was sent to Shore Camp,
    Cleethorpes. Still refusing, he was sentenced to
    twenty-eight days solitary confinement on bread
    and water. According to Army Order X, Brightmore
    should have been serving his sentence in prison,
    but the authorities pretended not to know. There
    was no solitary cell in the camp, so the Major
    had to improvise, like the efficient soldier he
    was. He had a deep hole dug in the parade ground,
    coffin shaped, and into this young Brightmore was
    inserted. For four days he stood ankle-deep in
    water, then a piece of wood was lowered for him
    to stand on, but that sank into the water, which
    now stank, and in which a dead mouse floated.
  • One day it rained heavily. Some of the soldiers
    took him from the hole and put him into a tent
    where he slept the night. He remained there all
    the next day, and then the Major became aware of
    it, and he was roughly wakened and thrust down
    the hole again, and a black tarpaulin pulled over
    it to keep out the rain. He was kept there for a
    week, the Major calling on him during the day to
    jeer, telling him on one occasion that his
    friends had been sent to France and shot, and
    that he would be in the next batch.
  • One of the soldiers who had been reprimanded for
    taking Brightmore out of the hole, realising that
    there was no intention of releasing the youth,
    tore open a cigarette packet and passed it down
    with a stub of pencil, suggesting that Brightmore
    write to his parents. He did so, and the soldier
    added a covering note, saying that the hole was
    twelve feet deep. They were under orders not to
    take any notice of the boy's complaints, but "the
    torture is turning his head." At that time
    Brightmore had been in the vertical grave for
    eleven days.

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  • Brightmore's parents took the letter to the
    Manchester Guardian, which published it with a
    strongly worded editorial. Within forty minutes
    of the paper arriving at the camp, Brightmore had
    been taken from the hole, which was hastily
    filled in. The major and a fellow officer were
    dismissed from their posts for disobeying the
    Order.
  • The third case of Court Martial did not involve a
    young man, but the mature and articulate C.H.
    Norman, a writer on international politics and
    founder-member of the No Conscription Fellowship.
    He came up against the out-spoken sadist Lt. Col.
    Reginald Brooke, Commandant of Wandsworth
    Military Detention Camp, who declared that he
    didn't give a damn for Asquith and his
    treacherous Government. He would do what he liked
    with his prisoners.
  • C.H. Norman thought differently. When he went on
    hunger strike he was badly beaten, tied to a
    table and a tube forced up his nose and down into
    his stomach. Through this, liquid food was
    poured. Then he was forced into a straitjacket
    fastened so tightly that breathing was difficult,
    and he suffered a spell of unconsciousness. He
    was bound in the jacket for twenty-three hours,
    during which time the Col, called on him to jeer.
    Norman was not an inexperienced adolescent he
    brought a civil action against the Col., who was
    court martialled and sentenced to be dismissed
    from his cherished position where his sadism (for
    it could have been no less) had free play.

64
  • John Taylor Caldwell, Come Dungeons Dark The
    Life and Times of Guy Aldred (1988)The
    treatment of nineteen-year-old Jack Gray was in
    blatant defiance of the Order. On 7th May 1917 he
    arrived at Hornsea Detention Camp. Refusing to
    put on the uniform he was abused and tormented
    for the rest of the day. Live ammunition was
    fired at his feet, his ankles were beaten with a
    cane, his mouth was split open by a heavy blow
    from a sergeant. Next day the process was
    continued. Then his hands were bound firmly
    behind his back and his ankles tied together. A
    rope was fastened to his wrists and pulled tight
    to the ankles. In this position he had to stand
    for several hours, then a bag of stones was
    fastened on his back and he was beaten round the
    training field till he collapsed. There were
    other brutalities inflicted on Jack which we will
    not detail, but of such a nature that eight of
    the soldiers refused to take part, leaving
    themselves liable to severe penalties.
  • The torture which broke the boy's resolve was
    when he was stripped naked and had a rope tied
    round his waist. He was then thrown into the camp
    cesspool and pulled around. After the second
    immersion the rope had so tightened round his
    waist that he was in great pain. Still the
    treatment continued "for eight or nine times",
    said a witness at the subsequent court martial.
    Someone, transported into ecstasies of sadistic
    excitement at the sight of the lad's muddy,
    filth-encrusted body, got an old sack and making
    holes for arms and head, forced the youngster
    into it for further grotesque immersions. Then
    Jack Gray gave in, promising to fight for England
    and save the world from the barbarity of the Hun.
  • The local M.P. forced an Enquiry. The officers
    responsible were censured. Nobody was allowed to
    see the report of the Enquiry.

65
  • HAROLD BING'S STORYThere were plenty of
    protests against war in 1914. Some of the
    protesters were socialists, who believed that the
    working men of the world should unite, not obey
    orders to kill each other.
  • Some belonged to religious groups which forbade
    taking human life.
  • Some thought this particular war was wrong, some
    thought all war was wrong.
  • Thousands of these varied protesters gathered in
    London's Trafalgar Square on August 2 to make
    their anti-war voices heard.
  • A 16-year old called Harold Bing was there.
  • He had walked the 11 miles from Croydon (and
    walked back again afterwards).
  • It was thrilling,' he said. Harold and his father
    were both pacifists (his father had opposed the
    Boer War as well), and they both joined the
    No-Conscription Fellowship.
  • Harold helped to distribute NCF leaflets from
    house to house on one occasion he was chased by
    a hostile householder wielding a heavy stick.
  • After conscription was introduced in 1916,
    Harold, an 'absolutist' CO, went before his
    tribunal.
  • He was not thought to qualify for exemption.
  • '18? - you're too young to have a conscience,'
    said the chairman.
  • But not, apparently, too young to be sent to war.
  • A policeman came to his home to arrest him, and
    he was taken to Kingston Barracks.

66
  • A policeman came to his home to arrest him, and
    he was taken to Kingston Barracks.
  • When he refused to regard himself as a soldier,
    or obey military orders, he was court-martialled.
  • The sentence 6 months hard labour. In the end
    Harold spent nearly 3 years in prison.
  • Many COs were given what was called the 'cat and
    mouse' treatment at the end of their sentences
    in civilian prisons, they were released, taken
    back to barracks, arrested again for disobeying
    orders, and imprisoned once more.
  • The good thing, as Harold observed, was that each
    time someone was released, they had enough time
    before re-arrest to get hold of newspapers and
    information which they could then pass on
    covertly to fellow inmates. 'I remember there was
    great excitement when news of the Russian
    revolution came through. People thought this
    would make a great difference to the war.'
  • Harold made a difference himself.
  • He helped to get vegetarian food provided (though
    unappetisingly) by the prison kitchen, and
    additional nourishment (a mug of cocoa) supplied
    for men who worked overtime.
  • He also made friends with a few of the kinder
    warders - helping the daughter of one of them
    with her maths homework that particular warder
    died soon after the war, and Harold and some
    other ex-prisoners set up a fund to pay for the
    girl's secondary education.
  • Harold was also one of the men who together
    created a prison magazine written on thin brown
    sheets of toilet paper using the blunt end of a
    needle and the ink supplied for monthly letters
    home.

67
  • Just the one copy ('different people writing
    little essays or poems or humorous remarks,
    sometimes little cartoons or sketches') was
    passed secretly from one prisoner to another.
  • In Harold's prison this unique publication was
    called 'The Winchester Whisperer'.
  • The idea was widely copied.
  • Wandsworth COs, for example, produced their 'Old
    Lags Hansard', once with an apology for late
    publication 'owing to an official raid on our
    offices', the editor's cell.
  • A work camp attached to a stone-breaking quarry
    published 'The Granite Echo', with copies printed
    by a supporter in London.
  • Harold Bing left prison with his sight damaged by
    years of stitching mailbags in dim light, but
    also having taught himself German and French.
  • He wanted to teach, but he quickly found that
    many advertisements for teachers said 'No CO need
    apply'.
  • 'And if you did apply, you got turned down as
    soon as they knew you were a pacifist.'
  • But at last he found a sympathetic headmaster who
    was willing to employ him.
  • As well as teaching, Harold worked as a peace
    campaigner (often travelling abroad) for the rest
    of his life. He died in 1975.

68
AFTER THE WAR
  • No-one was in a hurry to release the COs -
    certainly not until the surviving soldiers were
    brought back from the front, which took months.
  • Some COs went on hunger strike in protest at
    their continued detention 130 were forcibly fed
    through tubes (as suffragettes had been) - so
    forcibly that many were injured by the treatment
    and had to be temporarily released.
  • Others went on work strikes and were brutally
    punished for it.
  • In May 1919 the longest-serving prisoners began
    to be released the last CO left prison in
    August.
  • Many found that no-one wanted to employ them.
  • Those who hadn't done alternative or
    non-combatant service were deprived of their
    votes for five years (though this wasn't always
    strictly enforced)

69
Planned Economies
  • What was planned economies?
  • An economy controlled by the government, for
    example, when European governments decided price
    of goods, wages of the people, and the rent
    people had to pay. They also rationed food and
    materials and controlled imports, exports,
    transportation and industries.
  • Where/ Who used planned economies?
  • Europe
  • When did these take place?
  • During WWI
  • Why were these used?
  • Planned economies were set up as a result of
    Total War and the high demands of the war.
  • What was the significance of planned economies?
  • The planned economies that the government set up
    had a large impact on the civilians at home and
    caused their support of the war

70
DORA
  • The Defence of the Realm Act
  • Introduced on August 8, 1914
  • Gave the government powers to control many
    aspects of peoples daily lives
  • The priority was to keep industrial production
    high, but other things were affected too
  • One of the first businesses it took over was the
    railways

71
DORA
  • Mines and railways were taken over by the
    government
  • The government had ultimate control over them
  • This meant production of coal, and the movement
    of trains, would be prioritised for the war
    effort

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73
DORA
  • Ministry of Munitions created in May 1915
  • Ministries of Labour, Shipping, and Food all
    created in Dec 1916
  • In ten years, from 1911 to 1921, the number of
    government employees doubled due to DORA

74
DORA
  • British Summer Time was introduced
  • The government move the clocks forward by an hour
    in the summer
  • This ensured factories had maximum daylight,
    meaning they could operate later

75
Impact on Industry Primary Source from Birmingham
in 1918
  • Jewelers abandoned their craftmanship and the
    fashioning of gold and silver ornaments for the
    production of anti-gas apparatus and other war
    materials old-established firms noted for their
    art productions, turned to the manufacture of an
    intricate type of hand grenade. Cycle-makers
    adapted their machines to the manufacture of
    cartridge clips and railway carriage companies
    launched out with artillery wagons, limbers,
    tanks and aeroplanes, and the chemical works
    devoted their energies to the production of
    deadly TNT.

76
Unions Reactions to DORA
  • April-May 1917 unofficial strikes broke out
  • Resulted in the estimated loss of 1.5 million
    working days
  • April-July 1918 Engineering Workers Strike in
    Leeds and Birmingham
  • Government ended the strike with the threat of
    conscriptions
  • Overall, between 1915-1918, there were 3227
    strikes involving 2.6 million workers
  • Estimated loss of 17.8 million working days

77
DORA
  • Licensing hours were introduced
  • Pubs could only open for 2 hours at lunchtime and
    3 hours in the evening
  • This made sure the workforce was awake and sober
    for factory work

78
DORA
  • Beer was diluted
  • The government allowed publicans to make beer
    weaker
  • This ensured the workforce didnt drink so much
    as to make them drunk or hung-over while at work

79
DORA Leisure and Pastime Changes
  • Prohibitions on public clocks chiming in between
    sunset and sunrise
  • No whistling for taxis between 10PM and 7AM
  • Restaurants and hotel dining rooms had to turn
    off lights at 10PM
  • All places of entertainment had to close at
    1030PM
  • British Summer Time was introduced in May 1916

80
DORA
  • Food was rationed
  • The government took over land and used it for
    farm production
  • This ensured there was enough food to feed the
    public and the army, despite German U-Boat
    attacks
  • During war, average household spent 75 of income
    on food, fuel, and housing

81
DORA
  • Pubs were to close by 10PM
  • Weakening of the spirits and watering down beer
  • We are fighting the Germans, Austrians, and
    Drink, and so far as I can see the greatest of
    these deadly foes is Drink. was said by Prime
    Minister David Lloyd George
  • Spectator sports continued until 1915
  • Football or soccer was targeted
  • So was hunting and horse-racing
  • People still went to the beach but now there was
    barbed wire along the beaches and some piers were
    cut in half as precautions against invasion

82
  • American jazz and ragtime became popular
  • 150 night clubs operated in Central London by
    1915 with illegal liquor sold in coffee cups
  • Soho was very popular
  • Cinema became very popular---20 million tickets
    sold per week
  • War Exhibitions were created to communicate
    public information on health and hygiene
  • Examples War Exhibits on Houseflies and
    Exhibits on Lice
  • Church attendance declined

83
Homefront Food Administration
  • Assure the supply, distribution, and conservation
    of food during the war,
  • Facilitate transportation of food and prevent
    monopolies and hoarding, and
  • Maintain governmental power over foods by using
    voluntary agreements and a licensing system.

84
The Home Front
  • Brings changes in hair length and fashions
  • World War I innovations
  • --Chanel 5
  • --Spam
  • --Deodorant
  • Impact on language and culture
  • -- Dud
  • -- Lousy
  • -- Rats!
  • -- Gas Attack

85
Rationing
  • In April 1917, German U-Boats were sinking one in
    every four British merchant ships
  • Britain was running out of food

86
Rationing
  • In 1917 voluntary rationing began, led by the
    royal family
  • In 1918 compulsory rationing began
  • Sugar
  • Butter
  • Meat
  • Beer

87
  • Efforts to control Food Consumption
  • Dec 1916 Lunches in public eating places were
    restricted to two courses and dinners to three
    courses
  • Fines were introduced for feeding pigeons and
    stray animals
  • Food Control Campaign of 1917
  • One Ministry of Food Leaflet introduced the
    public to Mr. Slice oBread proclaiming that 48
    million slices of bread were wasted every day

88
  • I am the bit left over the slice eaten
    absent-mindedly when really I wasnt needed I
    am the waste crust.
  • If you collected me and my companions for a whole
    week, you would find that we amounted to 9,380
    tons of good bread---Wasted.
  • It was similarly claimed that a teaspoon of
    breadcrumbs saved by every person every day would
    amount to 40,000 tons a year.

89
  • Government Bread
  • Reducing the amount of white flour and
    substituting other grain or potato
  • Long queues or lines for food led to people
    taking off from work to wait in line, crowds
    bordering on riots, changing clothes and
    appearance to try to get seconds, etc
  • Inflation skyrocketed 80 increase on wheat and
    40 on meat just within the first year of the war

90
  • Diets of ordinary families changed throughout the
    war
  • 1914 oatmeal was the cheapest
  • 1915 beans and rice
  • 1916 lentils and oatmeal
  • By 1918 sorrel, dandelion leaves and nettles
    were substitutes for vegetables
  • Official Government Rationing
  • Began in 1917
  • Sugar rationed first
  • Then meats and fats
  • Weekly Ration 15oz beef, mutton, or lamb, 5 oz
    of bacon, 4 oz of fat, and 8 oz of sugar

91
  • Coal Rationing began in Oct 1917
  • 200 hundred weight a week for up to four rooms
  • 300 hundred weight a week for up to five or six
    rooms
  • The Total War led to many Welfare Programs being
    passed
  • Health of Munitions Workers Committee of the
    Ministry of Munitions provided for factory
    inspectors and 900 canteens created to feed the
    workers---sausage and mash, mince and mash,
    stewed fruit, and milk pudding

92
  • The Maternity and Child Welfare Act was passed in
    August 1918 to provide services for mothers and
    infants under the age of five
  • Extension of government provision of school meals
    for the needy for the whole calendar year
  • Rents and Mortgage or Rent Restriction Act of
    1915 eased the pressures of housing shortages
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