How Britain Went to War in 1914
When Britain declared war on Germany in August 1914 there was no outbreak of jingoism and no immediate rush to enlist.
When Britain declared war on Germany in August 1914 there was no outbreak of jingoism and no immediate rush to enlist.
Anthony Fletcher pays tribute to the great historian of English protestantism, who ventured far and wide in the academic world.
The messages sent by British soldiers of the First World War to their loved ones back home have long been valued for what they tell us about daily life in the trenches. But their authors were often at pains not to reveal too much of the horror they endured. Anthony Fletcher considers what these documents reveal about the men’s inner lives.
Anthony Fletcher delves into the diaries of teenage girls in the Georgian and Victorian eras to explore the little-changing constraints, punishments and occasional delights of being brought up a girl in upper-class Britain before the Great War.
Anthony Fletcher uses the papers of his artistic great-aunt, who, as a young nationalist, wrote an eyewitness account of the Easter Rising, to explore her youthful patriotism and vigorous activism.
Anthony Fletcher reads his grandfather’s correspondence from the Western Front to see how he maintained morale and developed his leadership.
Anthony Fletcher outlines the Victoria County History's exciting plans for a new century.