Dr. Campbell-Begg - For Five Shillings a Day - Personal Histories of World War II

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An amazing collection of eyewitness accounts of the British experience in World War II. First-hand narratives are drawn from every rank of the army and every corner of the conflict to create a moving and illuminating story of the greatest war of this century.Fascinating, moving, frightening, sometimes comic, this selection of eyewitness accounts has been edited into chronological order to form a magnificent oral history of the British and Commonwealth forces at war.We follow some 60 interviewees from the Army, RAF and Navy from 1939 to the Battle of Britain, the Desert War, the fall of Singapore, the Italian campaign, D-Day, to the occupation of Germany and the war in Burma. We hear from fighter pilots, nurses, gunners, commandos, Chindits and paratroopers. Their experiences on land, sea, in the air…and in some cases as prisoners of the Germans or Japanese are unique testimony from some remarkable men and women.

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Dedication Dedication Foreword Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter 1 The - фото 1 Dedication Dedication Foreword Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter 1 The - фото 2

Dedication Dedication Foreword Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter 1: The ‘Phoney War’ in France and its aftermath Chapter 2: The Battle of Britain and the Blitz Chapter 3: The war at sea – North Sea, Channel and Arctic Chapter 4: North Africa to the eve of El Alamein Chapter 5: Greece Chapter 6: Crete Chapter 7: Malta and the war in the Mediterranean Chapter 8: North Africa from El Alamein to Tunisia and overall victory Chapter 9: Italy: Sicily to Cassino Chapter 10: Italy: Cassino northwards Chapter 11: A new assailant: Japan and the war in South East Asia Chapter 12: Hitting back by sea and air Chapter 13: The second front: D-Day and beyond Chapter 14: The campaign in North West Europe and final victory Chapter 15: Prisoners of war in Italy and Germany Chapter 16: Operations in South East Asia and Japanese defeat in Burma Chapter 17: The war in the Pacific: with the Americans, fashioning victory from defeat Chapter 18: Prisoners of war in the Far East Appendix: The contributors Index Copyright About the Publisher

Dedicated to those who served but did not live to tell the tale

Contents

Cover

Title Page

Dedication Dedication Dedication Foreword Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter 1: The ‘Phoney War’ in France and its aftermath Chapter 2: The Battle of Britain and the Blitz Chapter 3: The war at sea – North Sea, Channel and Arctic Chapter 4: North Africa to the eve of El Alamein Chapter 5: Greece Chapter 6: Crete Chapter 7: Malta and the war in the Mediterranean Chapter 8: North Africa from El Alamein to Tunisia and overall victory Chapter 9: Italy: Sicily to Cassino Chapter 10: Italy: Cassino northwards Chapter 11: A new assailant: Japan and the war in South East Asia Chapter 12: Hitting back by sea and air Chapter 13: The second front: D-Day and beyond Chapter 14: The campaign in North West Europe and final victory Chapter 15: Prisoners of war in Italy and Germany Chapter 16: Operations in South East Asia and Japanese defeat in Burma Chapter 17: The war in the Pacific: with the Americans, fashioning victory from defeat Chapter 18: Prisoners of war in the Far East Appendix: The contributors Index Copyright About the Publisher Dedicated to those who served but did not live to tell the tale

Foreword

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Chapter 1: The ‘Phoney War’ in France and its aftermath

Chapter 2: The Battle of Britain and the Blitz

Chapter 3: The war at sea – North Sea, Channel and Arctic

Chapter 4: North Africa to the eve of El Alamein

Chapter 5: Greece

Chapter 6: Crete

Chapter 7: Malta and the war in the Mediterranean

Chapter 8: North Africa from El Alamein to Tunisia and overall victory

Chapter 9: Italy: Sicily to Cassino

Chapter 10: Italy: Cassino northwards

Chapter 11: A new assailant: Japan and the war in South East Asia

Chapter 12: Hitting back by sea and air

Chapter 13: The second front: D-Day and beyond

Chapter 14: The campaign in North West Europe and final victory

Chapter 15: Prisoners of war in Italy and Germany

Chapter 16: Operations in South East Asia and Japanese defeat in Burma

Chapter 17: The war in the Pacific: with the Americans, fashioning victory from defeat

Chapter 18: Prisoners of war in the Far East

Appendix: The contributors

Index

Copyright

About the Publisher

Foreword

byVincent Orange BA, PhD, MRAeSReader in History, University of CanterburyChristchurch, New Zealand

How often have we heard someone say, ‘Oh, how I wish Uncle Bob was still alive. He used to tell us kids such tales of his life and when he was in the war, but I can’t remember details now, and, to be honest, in those days I wasn’t really interested about his life – I was more interested in my own !’ As for Bob’s letters and papers: ‘Well, they used to be in an old cardboard box in the garage roof, but after he died the house was sold, we had a grand clear-out and I’m afraid they went to the dump.’

Fortunately, Peter Liddle has devoted the best part of his life to catching the numerous Uncle Bobs in many parts of the world while they are still with us. He and his associates have recorded their memories and collected their various letters and memorabilia, which are now stored in the Liddle Collection at Leeds University and at the Second World War Experience Centre, also in Leeds. There they are available as a permanent and lasting record of personal service and experience in both world wars for the benefit of this and future generations.

The impressions of those at the ‘sharp end’ of great events are an essential part of history, just as salt and pepper are to a boiled egg. How pleased we would be if, for example, one of Peter’s ancestors had acquired for us an account of all the hassles involved in getting Hannibal’s elephants over the Alps, or if a later ancestor had left us an interview with one of Henry V’s archers at Agincourt. Peter, of course, set his sights on all those who survived the crucible of world war experience: on all services, all ranks, civilian and pacifist experience, and indeed on those who served in opposing forces or endured enemy occupation. Until now his books have had the First World War as their focus. This book marks an advance into what is for him, in published work, new terrain.

Like his namesake, Peter is a fisherman and has thrown out many lines during the last umpteen years. In Richard Campbell Begg he caught a whopper! Richard is a New Zealand-born doctor, now retired, who also had a lively time of it in the Royal Navy during the Second World War, as you will read within. In 1993 Richard visited Peter Liddle in Leeds and, being most impressed with what he was doing, presented him with his memoirs, letters, etc, and was duly taped. Then, quite forgetting the immortal words known to all servicemen in all ages – ‘never volunteer’ -Richard did just that and, inevitably, found himself hard at work. Peter asked him to tape Commander Hickley. One interview led to another and Richard ended up with well over 50 personal accounts of experiences of war on land, at sea and in the air. Enough for a book – as Harper Collins readily agreed.

But this book is not merely a written record of what appears on the tapes. It is a history of the Second World War from the beginning to the end, covering many theatres of conflict and seen from the personal perspective of individuals who took part, using the relevant extracts from their accounts. Its 18 chapters are supported by illustrations of the contributors and the events described, and in each there is a short introduction by the editors giving background details of that particular campaign or operation. Biographical notes on the contributors appear in the Appendix. The language, grammar and idiom used by the contributors in talking of their experiences are largely reproduced in the written account in the book. All this tends to give the reader the feeling of being right alongside the raconteur as he or she relives the experiences of long ago.

For the general reader with an interest in the Second World War, I can think of no better starting point from which to grasp the huge scale of the conflict and yet its dimension in terms of the individual. For the specialist reader there are countless personal insights into what will, of course, be a more familiar story.

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