51 - 60 of 193 results

WOMEN IN THE WAR

Book number: 93178 Product format: Paperback Author: LUCY FISHER

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Sub-titled 'The Last Heroines of Britain's Greatest Generation', and with a foreword by Baroness Betty Boothroyd, the book tells the stories of 10 of the last surviving female members of Britain's greatest generation. Whether flying Spitfires to the front line, code breaking at Bletchley Park, plotting the Battle of the Atlantic, or working with Churchill, each of these women made crucial contributions to the conflict overseas, and helped to buttress the home front. Centenarian Christian Lamb, who served as a plotter in the Battle of the Atlantic, agrees that amid the horror and tragedy of the conflict, there were positive outcomes for her sex. Women were spared a great deal of burden she explains, and there was a certain amount of freedom to be had. Catherine Drummond, now aged 99, had volunteered as a wireless operator. Some of the ten women came from backgrounds of grinding poverty, while others enjoyed gilded childhoods before joining the war effort. Joy Hunter, now aged 95, had served as a secretary in Winston Churchill in the subterranean Cabinet War Rooms beneath Whitehall. 102-year-old Jaye Edwards had an airfield in Yorkshire as the base from which she worked as a pilot delivering Spitfires to the front line. The range of military roles that women were permitted to perform expanded as the war dragged on. And the war was in some ways a great level between classes as women of all social backgrounds were drafted in to help. The book opens with a story of Margaret Turner born 18th of May 1923, who, at the age of 16 when the war broke out, volunteered as a nurse in the Voluntary Aid Detachment and witnessed a lot in just the first 12 months. With a reporter's eye for detail, Lucy Fisher artfully weaves together interviews and wartime diaries and letters in a vivid oral history. 318 pages in paperback with 16 pages of colour and archive photographs of the women as youngsters and at the age they were interviewed.

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ISBN 9780008456146

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VOLUNTARY COVER PRICE BIBLIOPHILE CATALOGUE
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EDINBURGH AT WAR 1939-1945
Book number: 93220 Product format: Paperback Author: CRAIG ARMSTRONG
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FLY GIRLS
Book number: 92598 Product format: Paperback Author: KEITH O'BRIEN
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Book number: 93822 Product format: Unknown Author: ABRAMS NOTERIE & ANITA RUNDLES
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YOUNG H. G. WELLS: Changing the World
Book number: 93432 Product format: Hardback Author: CLAIRE TOMALIN
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FREE WORLD: Art and Thought In The Cold War
Book number: 93157 Product format: Hardback Author: LOUIS MENAND
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AIR POWER AND THE ARAB WORLD 1909-1955

Book number: 93208 Product format: Paperback Author: DAVID C. NICOLLE ET AL

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It is almost forgotten that it was an Andalusian inventor, physician and engineer who was the first person to undertake experiments in flying with any degree of success back in the 9th century AD. Nigh on a thousand years later, the Arab World's critical strategic location made it almost inevitable that these regions would be drawn into the imperial rivalries of the leading European powers, while the Ottoman Empire struggled to maintain its existing position in the area. This in turn meant that the first bombs to be dropped by military aircraft fell on Arab soil and as Arab countries slowly achieved their independence, they too wanted to have air forces. In 1948 the first such Arab air forces were thrown into battle in an ill-fated attempt to keep Palestine as a primarily Arab country. Chapters cover all of the colonial nations - Britain, France, Spain and the Ottoman Empire and the fledgeling Italians who had fought and taken control of Libya in 1912; he French invent aerial policing (1909-1914) and the Spaniards over the Rif (1909-1914) plus the First World War in Arab lands. There are aircraft used in war, airships and armoured cars and the chapter on Spain covers their part in combat with the local tribes during the period as they were neutral in the First World War. A concise expert text, colour illustrations and maps plus black and white photographs and high quality colour artworks providing fresh accounts of both well known and more esoteric aspects of the conflict in this part of the world since 1945. 88 large pages, 20.3 x 29.5cm.

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ISBN 9781912866434

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SECOND WORLD WAR ILLUSTRATED: The Second Year
Book number: 92973 Product format: Paperback Author: JACK HOLROYD
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JANE AUSTEN COVER TO COVER: 200 Years of Classic Covers
Book number: 93290 Product format: Hardback Author: MARGARET C. SULLIVAN
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ANTS OF BRITAIN AND EUROPE: A Photographic Guide
Book number: 94648 Product format: Paperback Author: CLAUSE LEBAS ET AL
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OCCULT, MAGIC & WITCHCRAFT: An Exploration of Modern Sorcery
Book number: 94373 Product format: Paperback Author: CHARLES OLLIVER
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Book number: 94348 Product format: Paperback Author: MARC HARTZMAN
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ON THE WESTERN FRONT DVD AND MAGAZINE COLLECTION
Book number: 94392 Product format: Unknown Author: DANANN PUBLISHING
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IMAGES OF THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES: Cold War

Book number: 93213 Product format: Paperback Author: STEPHEN TWIGGE

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The Cold War dominated international relations for the latter half of the 20th century from its beginnings in the rubble of a defeated Germany to its end with the collapse of the Soviet Union. It was a battle of ideology and power politics supported by military might and pitted the democratic capitalist West against the communist states of Eastern Europe and Asia, and resulted in a series of flashpoints that brought the world to the brink of nuclear war. The first chapter in this extraordinary photographic history examines international diplomacy, the creation of the United Nations, the consequences of the Marshall Plan on European Recovery, and the outbreak of the Korean War. Subsequent analysis focuses on the death of Stalin and the beginnings of peaceful co-existence. The dangers of the Cuban Missile Crisis and Britain's decision to purchase the Polaris missile systems are also discussed and the chapter concludes with the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the uprisings in Eastern Europe, and the collapse of the Soviet Union. Subsequent chapters cover Cold War military alliances, NATO and the Warsaw Pact, the unmasking of atomic spies Alan Nunn May and Klaus Fuchs, the significance of the Cambridge and Portland spy rings, and the role played by Soviet double agents. The second half of the book concentrates on civil defence, the protest movement, proxy wars in Africa and the popular culture, governments? plans for fighting and surviving a nuclear war, CND, Greenham Common, and conflicts that took place in the Congo, Angola, Mozambique, Zimbabwe and South Africa. Finally we look at films, books and pop songs and the fears and anxieties of growing up in the shadow of the bomb and now the new challenges facing the international community in the 21st century. The primary narrative of each chapter is told from a British viewpoint and is based on records held by The National Archives at Kew. It is based on previously secret government reports and papers and tells the compelling story of global conflict and superpower politics set against a backdrop of dramatic social and cultural change and written by a renowned historian in the field. 159pp in large softback, plentiful illustrations, maps and diagrams and letters reproduced, plus posters and propaganda.

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ISBN 9781526739902

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Book number: 92273 Product format: Hardback Author: GUSTAV MILNE
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BAT, BALL AND FIELD: The Elements of Cricket
Book number: 93151 Product format: Hardback Author: JON HOTTEN
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SHEFFIELD'S MILITARY LEGACY
Book number: 93254 Product format: Paperback Author: GERRY VAN TONDER
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CONSPIRACIES: History's Greatest Plots, Collusions
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Book number: 92165 Product format: Paperback Author: HELEN HOLLACK
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COMMANDO

Book number: 93214 Product format: Paperback Author: JOHN DURNFORD-SLATER

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The real and exciting story of one of the most important units of World War Two. The Commando Unit played an important role in Britain's successes and here Durnford-Slater gives his first hand and unique point of view on everything that happened. Brigadier Durnford-Slater raised and trained the first Commando Unit in 1940, created to harry opposition forces in raids impossible for regular army units. He led No.3 Commando on an exploratory operation in Guernsey in summer 1940 and never looked back. From there No.3 Commando orchestrated raids on the Losten Islands and Vaagso in Norway and Dieppe, as well as operations in Sicily, Italy, France and Germany. The Commandoes were so effective at creating destruction that Hitler personally ordered that all fighters captured during these missions be executed. Nevertheless their spirit remained undented and extremely high. From their inception as a raiding force to their ultimate development into a battalion-sized spearhead, and their important support in the D-day landings, this first-hand account is a unique portrayal of the Unit's exploits and the personalities of the men who wore the green beret. The book was originally published in 1953 when the memories were still fresh and be warned there are descriptions of many deaths and damage. Paperback edition, 217pp with lovely big line art maps and archive photos reproduced in black and white to the best quality possible given their age.

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ISBN 9781784385606

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EL GRECO
Book number: 92418 Product format: Hardback Author: CHARLOTTE CHASTEL-ROUSSEAU
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FREEDOM: The Overthrow of the Slave Empires
Book number: 92419 Product format: Hardback Author: JAMES WALVIN
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LONG SHOT: My Life as A Sniper in the Fight Against ISIS
Book number: 92568 Product format: Paperback Author: AZAD CUDI
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Book number: 92275 Product format: Hardback Author: Unknown
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WHEN HARRY MET CUBBY
Book number: 93039 Product format: Hardback Author: ROBERT SELLERS
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CRIMEAN LETTERS FROM THE 41st (THE WELCH) REGIMENT 1854-56

Book number: 93217 Product format: Hardback Author: MAJOR-GENERAL WILLIAM ALLAN,

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The Crimean War of 1854-56 was the first of the 'modern' wars. The opening round at the Alma was a direct throwback to the Napoleonic campaigns of 50 years earlier, whereas the Siege of Sevastopol was a foretaste of the Great War more than 60 years later. Based upon the correspondence of Lieutenant William Allan, a young Scottish officer serving with the 41st (the Welch) Regiment throughout the campaign, these letters provide insight into the experiences of the officers both in action and in their day to day lives, the ravages of ill health and the incompetence of those in authority. As a young subaltern, Allan was amongst the first to arrive in Turkey and during the following 21 months he served in Varna and fought at the Battles of the Alma, Little Inkerman and throughout the Siege of Sevastopol. He corresponded regularly with his family in Scotland about his life at the Front. He published these letters in 1897 in a very limited edition intended for family use. Now the editor W. Alister Williams has supplemented Allan's letters with those from other officers of the regiment and provided a narrative background to the events described. A complete Crimean nominal roll of the officers, non-commissioned officers and the men of the 41st Regiment has been compiled in the appendix. 224pp, illustrated. 2011 first edition.

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ISBN 9781844940721

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Book number: 95217 Product format: Hardback Author: ANDREW HYDE
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EDINBURGH AT WAR 1939-1945

Book number: 93220 Product format: Paperback Author: CRAIG ARMSTRONG

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By April 1939, Edinburgh had 6,000 air raid wardens recruited and under training together with demolition squads, later renamed rescue squads, who had responsibility for demolishing structures which had been damaged and rendered dangerous and also in extricating those who had been trapped beneath rubble. Scotland was of grave strategic importance during the war because of its geographical position, and its capital was the location of a significant number of important military and civil organisations. Edinburgh Castle became the HQ of the Scottish Home Forces, whilst the Forth was a vitally important port and was heavily protected even before the start of the war. Its importance was marked by its attracting the first air raid of the war on mainland Britain, when a force of German bombers were sent to attack naval shipping on 6th October 1939. The raid was intercepted by the RAF which shot down at least two bombers, and the entire action was witnessed by many civilians on the ground. The raid also caused the first civilian casualties when two women were injured in Edinburgh, and two men machine-gunned in Portobello. Thousands lined the streets days later for the funeral of two of the Luftwaffe airmen. No member of the population of Edinburgh escaped the war and huge numbers came forward for service in the military or in roles such as the Home Guard, ARP Services, nursing, working in vital war industries, and struggling to maintain households under strict rationing and the stresses of wartime life, or children evacuated from the city to the rural areas of Scotland to escape the expected bombing. Edinburgh was also home to a sizeable Italian community which was badly affected by internment, and subsequent tight restrictions on movement and civil rights and was subjected to violent attacks when rioting mobs attacked their businesses throughout the city, although one family business was spared because they supported Hibs. The book poignantly commemorates the efforts and achievements of workers, fighters, and families divided. 216pp in well illustrated large softback.

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ISBN 9781473879638

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Book number: 93221 Product format: Paperback Author: DEREK TAIT
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ENGLAND'S MAGNIFICENT GARDENS
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OVER THE OCEAN
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EDINBURGH IN THE GREAT WAR

Book number: 93221 Product format: Paperback Author: DEREK TAIT

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What became known as the Great War began on 4th August 1914. It triggered a wave of patriotism. Scotland led the way with 320,589 men voluntarily enlisting before conscription began in 1916. Scots were in the forefront of many of the costliest battles and campaigns with the outcome that, per head of population, it is estimated by the University of Edinburgh that Scotland lost more men than all the belligerent nations apart from Turkey and Serbia. Anyone with a German sounding accent soon came under suspicion of being a spy. Railways were taken under government control and local businesses asked to supply motor vehicles for use by the Army or to supply horses, of which hundreds of thousands died during the conflict. 'Young men belonging to Edinburgh and the East of Scotland may enrol in the Edinburgh Battalion which is now being formed. All young men in the professional and commercial classes, university graduates, clerks, warehousemen, skilled artisans and athletes (between the ages of 19 and 35 inclusive), who are medically fit and whose height is 5ft 3" and upwards, with chest measurements of 34" at least, are invited to enrol their names now, and those of any friends who may wish to drill and train in the same battalion.' This book covers the historic city's involvement to the armistice in November 1914, describing in great detail what happened to the city and its people, their everyday lives, entertainment, spies and the internment of aliens living within the city. Edinburgh played a key role in supplying not only men but vital munitions and a role in caring for the many wounded soldiers returning from the Front. Of poor quality but nevertheless very interesting are dozens of archive photographs, including a procession of little girls in white dresses and tartan sashes parading along Princes Street carrying banners stating 'We are doing our little bit', a picture of the arrival of Christmas puddings at the Front, and a Shetland pony to be sold for the Red Cross, a sports day for wounded soldiers and the visiting American Ambassador. 141pp, large softback.

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ISBN 9781473828100

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FARMER, SOLDIER AND POLITICIAN

Book number: 93223 Product format: Hardback Author: DAVID PRETTY

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Sub-titled 'The Life of Brigadier-General Sir Owen Thomas, MP, Father of the Welsh Army Corps'. Owen Thomas was a farmer and land agent from Llanbadrig, Anglesey, and an enigmatic character throughout his life. Never wishing to break ties with his birthplace, he carved a career for himself as a soldier and agriculture advisor in Africa, and as a pioneer rural Labour Member of Parliament, propelled by a vital and supportive local trade union movement. He is best remembered however as the man responsible for the formation of Lloyd George's Welsh Army Corps, raised in response to Kitchener's appeal for volunteers at the outbreak of the Great War. He persuaded many thousands of his countrymen to join his colours, and when his 'army' marched away from North Wales to face its destiny as the 38th (Welsh) Division, at Mametz Wood on the Somme, he was left behind, a frustrated and deeply hurt man. This biography provides a story full of adventure and promise but which resulted in anguish and pain. Owen Thomas's personal story offers a valuable insight into British colonial expansion in Africa, the response to military recruitment, the first stirrings of a political Labour movement in a rural county and although there is proof that he kept a diary while in East Africa, all his personal papers have been lost and only a handful of private letters have survived. The book is therefore dependent on contemporary newspapers, manuscript sources and official papers. The Welsh author gives due weight to the Anglesey background. 207pp, illus. and maps.

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ISBN 9781844940752

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FIGHTING FOR THE NEWS

Book number: 93224 Product format: Hardback Author: BRIAN BEST

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Sub-titled 'The Adventures of The First World War Correspondents from Bonaparte to the Boers', it is not two centuries since a newspaper conceived the idea of sending a reporter overseas to observe, gather information and write about war. The first Special Correspondent was Henry Crabb Robinson who in 1807 was sent by the proprietor of The Times John Walter II to act as their 'Man in Germany', ostensibly to follow and report on the movements of Napoleon's Grande Armée. Robinson was a 32 year old lawyer. He was almost arrested, but escaped from the Continent in disguise, the first of many exploits and adventures of this bold group of individuals who included William Russell in the Crimean War, whose reports helped bring down the government, and perhaps most famous of all Winston Churchill who reported on conflicts in Cuba, the Indian frontier, Sudan and the Boer War. Also includes reportage from Balaklava, the American Civil War, Prussia on the march, into Africa's dark centre, the Zulu War, and Egypt and the Sudan. 236pp, eight pages of photos including William Russell writing in his tent in the Crimean War winter 1854-55 and Felice Beato, the first photographer to capture the reality of war (WARNING - dead bodies at Taku Fort 1860).

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ISBN 9781848324374

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GRIMSBY IN THE GREAT WAR

Book number: 93225 Product format: Paperback Author: STEPHEN WADE

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Grimsby and Cleethorpes were among the most vulnerable and exposed British towns in August 1914 when the Great War broke out. Situated on the North Sea and facing the German Baltic fleet, their vessels were to face the mines and the U-boat torpedoes as the war progressed. Written into the story are the achievements of the Grimsby Chums and other regiments containing Grimsby men, and the amazing story of the home front experience, from the local shell factory staffed largely by women, to the War Hospital Supply Depot and the Women's Emergency Corps. There were the great fish docks, run by the Great Central Railway and sometimes as many as eight daily express trains to London and other cities distributing the fish. Around the docks there were 587 steam trawlers and a number of sailing smacks, perhaps about 20. Grimsby provided about 8,000 men for the various military and naval units. For the most part these joined the 10th and 11th Lincolns raised by Lord Kitchener's appeal, the 5th, 2/5 5th and 3/5 5th Lincolns, the 1st North Midland Brigade Royal Field Artillery and the Lincolnshire Yeomanry. These various units appear in the pages as events unfold. The shoreline was a priority, mainly for the gun batteries in place, and when the airship attacks began, the volunteers were the men to work with the guns and the searchlights. 128 page large paperback, archive photos.

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ISBN 9781473834262

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51 - 60 of 193 results