🎉 Up to 70% Off Selected ItemsShop Sale
HomeStore

Miners and the Great War by Brian Elliott

Product image 1

Miners and the Great War by Brian Elliott

At the outbreak of the Great War in 1914, despite many difficulties and falling manpower, coalmining was the most important industry in Great Britain. It employed around a million persons in well over 3,000 pits ranging from small hillside drift mines with a few hands to substantial collieries with workforces and pit communities the size of villages and small towns. A few months into the conflict, Lloyd George in a patriotic speech to a coal conference proclaimed that coal was 'everything for us, the country's life and blood, its international coinage'. As well as digging coal for the war effort, often in dreadful and dangerous conditions, miners demonstrated 'their old work in a new guise' when serving in huge numbers during the Great War. Thousands voluntarily swapped the pit for what many thought would be a better and safer option, around a quarter of a million enlisting by 1915; and about one in five of all military volunteers came from the coalfields of England, Scotland and Wales, an astonishing proportion. The massive response to the Call for Arms was most obvious in industrial areas where the so-called 'Pals battalions' were established and it was these recruits who suffered so heavily during the disastrous Somme offensive of 1916. The sheer number and range of gallantry awards including several VCs - also testify to the immense contribution of former miners. The many thousands of pitmen who paid the ultimate price are inscribed on public war memorials in coalfield communities, often dominating the listings. Such was the response from large pits that many others are commemorated on memorials specially erected by colliery and coal companies, one the earliest in the village of Brampton in South Yorkshire on behalf of Cortonwood Colliery. Whether working below and above ground at collieries or as part of the armed forces, miners played a very significant role during the Great War of 1914-18, a total contribution that deserves to be told.
Binding: Hardback
At the outbreak of the Great War in 1914, despite many difficulties and falling manpower, coalmining was the most important industry in Great Britain. It employed around a million persons in well over 3,000 pits ranging from small hillside drift mines with a few hands to substantial collieries with workforces and pit communities the size of villages and small towns. A few months into the conflict, Lloyd George in a patriotic speech to a coal conference proclaimed that coal was 'everything for us, the country's life and blood, its international coinage'. As well as digging coal for the war effort, often in dreadful and dangerous conditions, miners demonstrated 'their old work in a new guise' when serving in huge numbers during the Great War. Thousands voluntarily swapped the pit for what many thought would be a better and safer option, around a quarter of a million enlisting by 1915; and about one in five of all military volunteers came from the coalfields of England, Scotland and Wales, an astonishing proportion. The massive response to the Call for Arms was most obvious in industrial areas where the so-called 'Pals battalions' were established and it was these recruits who suffered so heavily during the disastrous Somme offensive of 1916. The sheer number and range of gallantry awards including several VCs - also testify to the immense contribution of former miners. The many thousands of pitmen who paid the ultimate price are inscribed on public war memorials in coalfield communities, often dominating the listings. Such was the response from large pits that many others are commemorated on memorials specially erected by colliery and coal companies, one the earliest in the village of Brampton in South Yorkshire on behalf of Cortonwood Colliery. Whether working below and above ground at collieries or as part of the armed forces, miners played a very significant role during the Great War of 1914-18, a total contribution that deserves to be told.
Binding: Hardback
$40.81
Miners and the Great War by Brian Elliott—
$40.81

Description

At the outbreak of the Great War in 1914, despite many difficulties and falling manpower, coalmining was the most important industry in Great Britain. It employed around a million persons in well over 3,000 pits ranging from small hillside drift mines with a few hands to substantial collieries with workforces and pit communities the size of villages and small towns. A few months into the conflict, Lloyd George in a patriotic speech to a coal conference proclaimed that coal was 'everything for us, the country's life and blood, its international coinage'. As well as digging coal for the war effort, often in dreadful and dangerous conditions, miners demonstrated 'their old work in a new guise' when serving in huge numbers during the Great War. Thousands voluntarily swapped the pit for what many thought would be a better and safer option, around a quarter of a million enlisting by 1915; and about one in five of all military volunteers came from the coalfields of England, Scotland and Wales, an astonishing proportion. The massive response to the Call for Arms was most obvious in industrial areas where the so-called 'Pals battalions' were established and it was these recruits who suffered so heavily during the disastrous Somme offensive of 1916. The sheer number and range of gallantry awards including several VCs - also testify to the immense contribution of former miners. The many thousands of pitmen who paid the ultimate price are inscribed on public war memorials in coalfield communities, often dominating the listings. Such was the response from large pits that many others are commemorated on memorials specially erected by colliery and coal companies, one the earliest in the village of Brampton in South Yorkshire on behalf of Cortonwood Colliery. Whether working below and above ground at collieries or as part of the armed forces, miners played a very significant role during the Great War of 1914-18, a total contribution that deserves to be told.
Binding: Hardback

You may also like

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

HiGee Chemical Separation Engineering by Youzhi Liu

$198.67

$69.53

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Therapy Resistance in Prostate Cancer : Mechanisms and Insights Volume 20 by Hisham M.D. Bahmad

$182.34

$63.82

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Gaspard's Christmas by Zeb Soanes

$12.23

$4.28

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Wonders of the Wild by Brian Fitzgerald

$24.48

$8.57

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Lead From The Heart : Transformational Leadership For The 21st Century by Mark C. Crowley

$20.40

$7.14

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Go Cookbook : Expert Solutions for Commonly Needed Go Tasks by Sau Sheong Chang

$87.07

$30.47

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Massimo Listri. The World's Most Beautiful Libraries. 45th Ed. by Massimo Listri

$34.02

$11.91

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Football Legends 2024 by David Ballheimer

$17.68

$6.19

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Chromatin Readers in Health and Disease : Volume 35 by Olivier Binda

$186.42

$65.25

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Cannabis Use, Neurobiology, Psychology, and Treatment by Vinood B. Patel

$265.34

$92.87

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Handbook of Thermal Management Systems : e-Mobility and Other Energy Applications by Edwin Geo Varuvel

$238.13

$83.35

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

The House of Whispers : The thrilling new novel from the bestselling author of The Clockwork Girl! by Anna Mazzola

$20.40

$7.14