From Downing Street to the Trenches
First-hand Accounts from the Great War, 1914-1916
9781851243938
Distributed for Bodleian Library Publishing
From Downing Street to the Trenches
First-hand Accounts from the Great War, 1914-1916
As we look back on World War I on the occasion of its hundredth anniversary, we do so with the benefit of hindsight and the accumulated wisdom of a century of writing and thought. But what was it like to experience firsthand those first few years of war—to see an aerial view of the famous Battle of the Somme? How did key political figures make the difficult decision to go to war? And what did young men of the time believe their role ought to be?
From Downing Street to the Trenches gathers eyewitness accounts and photographs that vividly convey this lived experience. The letters of Prime Minister H. H. Asquith show the strain of wartime leadership and shed light on his later downfall, while letters home from the young Harold Macmillan are suffused with his experiences in the trenches and mark the beginning of his road to Downing Street. Although it was forbidden to record cabinet discussions, Secretary of State Lewis Harcourt’s unauthorized diary provides a window into the government of the time, complete with character sketches of some of the leading figures, including Winston Churchill. In addition to political figures, the book draws on many local records, including the diary of an Essex rector, written to record the impact of the war on his community and parish.
Filled with fear and sorrow but also suffused with hope for the future, the accounts collected here paint a highly personal and immediate picture of the war as it was happening to real people of the time.
From Downing Street to the Trenches gathers eyewitness accounts and photographs that vividly convey this lived experience. The letters of Prime Minister H. H. Asquith show the strain of wartime leadership and shed light on his later downfall, while letters home from the young Harold Macmillan are suffused with his experiences in the trenches and mark the beginning of his road to Downing Street. Although it was forbidden to record cabinet discussions, Secretary of State Lewis Harcourt’s unauthorized diary provides a window into the government of the time, complete with character sketches of some of the leading figures, including Winston Churchill. In addition to political figures, the book draws on many local records, including the diary of an Essex rector, written to record the impact of the war on his community and parish.
Filled with fear and sorrow but also suffused with hope for the future, the accounts collected here paint a highly personal and immediate picture of the war as it was happening to real people of the time.
304 pages | 16 color plates and 20 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2014
History: British and Irish History, Military History

Reviews
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Foreword by Sir Hew Strachan
Introduction
Short Biographies of Key Figures
Letters and Diaries, 1914
Letters and Diaries, 1915
Letters and Diaries, 1916
Notes
Further Reading
Manuscript Sources
Image Sources
Index
Foreword by Sir Hew Strachan
Introduction
Short Biographies of Key Figures
Letters and Diaries, 1914
Letters and Diaries, 1915
Letters and Diaries, 1916
Notes
Further Reading
Manuscript Sources
Image Sources
Index
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