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Secret Warriors

Page 48

by Taylor Downing

North West Frontier, 273

  nuclear physics, 14, 149–50, 155, 353, 357

  Nulli Secundus (airship), 56

  Nuttall, J.M., 153

  nylon, 338

  The Observer, 25

  O’Gorman, Mervyn, 63, 64, 71, 342–3

  oil industry, 98, 123, 349

  Oliver, Henry Francis, 101, 109, 115, 118, 119, 120, 121–2

  Omdurman, Battle of (1898), 218

  omnibuses, motor, 29–30, 356

  operational research, 352, 353

  Ordnance Board, 155, 162

  Orford Ness, Suffolk, 344, 347, 351

  Oriel College, Oxford, 346

  Osborne Naval College, 102

  Ostend, 197

  Ostwald, Friedrich, 20

  Otto, Nikolaus, 27

  Ottoman Turks, 97, 98, 117, 138

  Owen, Wilfred, 258–9

  Oxford University, 35, 127, 225, 247, 283, 285, 288

  science at, 10, 33, 186, 344–5, 346, 348–9

  pacifism, 278, 280, 319

  Page, Dr Walter Hines, 143–4, 145, 146

  Palestine, 97–8, 311, 324–5

  Pan American Airways, 338

  Panhard et Lavassor, 27, 45

  Pankhurst, Christabel, 274

  Para Mantois optics company, 87

  Paris, 23, 207–8, 234

  Parkes, Alexander, 19

  Parsons, Sir Charles, 154

  Pathé, 291–2

  Pear, Tom, 244, 255

  Pearse, Padraig, 132

  Peddie, William, 349

  Pemberton Billing, Noel, 90, 399

  penicillin, discovery of, 338–9

  pensions, state, 13

  Perkin, William, 19

  Pershing, General, 146

  Persia (Iran), 123

  Petavel, Joseph Ernest, 33, 59

  petroleum, 20, 27, 28, 31, 201

  Peugeot, Armand, 27

  Peugeot cars, 45

  pharmaceutical industry, 20, 21, 213, 219, 338

  phosgene, 185, 189, 354

  photographers, 11, 288, 292, 299, 323, 333

  photography, 20, 52, 83–5, 86

  aerial reconnaissance, 83–5, 86, 87–9, 91–3, 95–7, 98, 347

  box brownie cameras, 84, 300

  cameras used for aerial reconnaissance, 86, 87, 89, 91, 92–3, 98

  at the front, 298

  half-tone printing process, 25

  Imperial War Museum and, 332, 333

  optical lenses, 84, 86–7, 157, 299

  RFC School of Photography, 91–2

  X-ray films and plates, 21

  Physical Societies, 15

  physics, 5–6, 7, 8, 168, 344–5

  nuclear, 14, 149–50, 155, 353, 357

  quantum theory, 14, 353

  Pickford, Mary, 312

  pigeons, 163

  Planck, Max, 14, 341

  pneumatic tyres, 26, 28

  poison gas, 9, 173–4, 175–7, 179–90

  British development and use of, 179–80, 181–3, 184, 185, 188, 203, 219, 288, 337

  Chemical Warfare Committee, 188

  chlorine, 173, 175–8, 180, 181, 184, 189, 354

  first use of (April 1915), 173, 176–7, 288

  gas masks, 177, 181, 184, 185–6

  Geneva Protocol (1925), 403

  Hague Convention (1899/1907), 174, 175

  improvised protection against, 177–8

  Livens Projector, 187–8

  mustard gas, 186–8, 189, 190, 219, 354

  phosgene, 185, 189, 354

  tear gas experiments, 174–5, 188

  total casualties, 189–90

  World War Two, 403

  Pommern (German warship), 121

  Ponsonby, Arthur, Falsehood in Wartime, 333

  Poole, Lieutenant E.S., 265

  population growth, 22, 35, 38

  Porton Down, Salisbury Plain, 184, 354

  Portsmouth, 130, 347, 354

  Post Office, 1–2, 102, 106, 135, 336–7

  press and mass communications:

  advertising, 35

  allowed to report from the front, 288–9

  anti-German hysteria, 274–5, 276, 278, 282

  atrocity and barbarism stories, 274–5, 278

  censorship and, 11, 271–2

  debate on ‘shell shock’, 244, 247

  Defence of the Realm Act (DORA) and, 271–2

  developments in printing, 24, 25

  explosion of tabloid press, 25, 35

  in France, 288

  Harmsworth’s innovations, 24–5

  illustrated magazines, 272

  Lloyd George and, 322–4

  news agencies, 283–4, 316, 318

  patriotic fervour and, 75

  photographers, 288

  Press Bureau and, 271–3, 280, 287–8, 316

  quasi-correspondents (‘Eye-Witnesses’), 280–2

  reporting of Gillies’ work, 237

  speed of distribution, 24; see also entries for individual newspapers

  propaganda: Admiralty and, 294, 295–7, 316

  atrocity and barbarism stories, 274–5, 278, 330, 333

  The Battle of the Somme, 301–10, 314

  Britain Prepared, 294–8, 309

  British campaigns in neutral countries, 278–9, 280, 282–5, 286–7, 289, 316, 320–1, 324

  British use of cinema, 294–8, 301–12, 314, 318

  Department of Information, 317–19, 320, 321

  directed at enemy countries, 318

  directed at Germany, 327–30, 333–4

  discredited in post-war Britain, 333, 334

  Robert Donald and, 316–17, 320

  Enemy Propaganda Department, Crewe House, 326–30

  German campaigns in neutral countries, 278

  German use of cinema, 292–3, 310

  Lawrence of Arabia and, 324–5

  Ministry of Information and, 322–4, 325–32

  National War Aims Committee (NWAC), 319–20, 330

  Nazi Germany and, 334

  recruitment posters, 269–71

  in Second World War, 334

  war artists and, 313, 318, 332, 333

  War Cabinet and, 316, 317, 320, 324, 327

  War Propaganda Bureau (Wellington House), 278–9, 280, 282–5, 286–7, 289, 294, 297–8, 309, 312–13, 316, 318, 320–1

  Prothero, George, 127

  Prussian military victories (1866–71), 38

  psychoanalysis, 14, 255

  psychology, 10, 23, 242–3, 244

  interpretation of dreams, 255, 256

  the libido and, 339

  Maghull Hospital and, 255–6

  William Rivers and, 242, 255–9

  the unconscious mind, 23–4, 339; see also shell shock

  psychotherapy, 23, 237, 255, 261

  public health: improved sanitation, 21–2

  industrial production and, 10, 171

  mass immunisation projects, 21–2

  Medical Research Committee established (1913), 22

  purification of water supplies, 21, 22

  the ‘TB Penny’, 22

  public opinion, 12, 273–4, 284, 288, 314

  attitudes to shell shock, 244, 265–6

  NWAC and, 330

  war-weariness and, 319, 322, 330

  Punch, 49

  HMS Queen Elizabeth, 295

  HMS Queen Mary, 109–10, 120, 130

  Queen Mary’s Hospital, Roehampton, 232–3

  Queen’s Hospital, Sidcup, 233, 237–9

  radar, development of, 350, 351–2, 353, 354–5, 357

  radio (wireless telegraphy): Admiralty and, 104, 105–6, 155, 163

  advances in during War, 10, 336–7

  broadcast services, 336–7, 338, 357

  closing of amateur radio stations, 105

  distress signals, 19

  electric telegraph and, 17

  German Navy and, 104–6, 108–9, 110–17

  improved signalling and reception, 105

  interception of diplomati
c cables, 110, 111, 125, 126–7, 131–2, 138, 139–44, 145–6

  interception of signals, 2, 8, 102, 103–6, 109–14, 116–17, 118–19, 121–3, 138, 163

  international agreements, 19

  Marconi and, 18

  radio companies, 18–19, 336–7, 338

  Royal Navy on-board radios, 104, 155, 163

  Royal Society War Committee and, 7

  Russian, 103–4

  thermionic valves, 18, 336

  use of at sea, 6, 18, 19

  Watson-Watt and, 349–50

  radiology, 21

  railways, 37, 78, 224, 226, 228, 230, 231, 232, 253, 356

  Ramsay, Sir William, 174

  Ransome & Rapier, 161–2

  Rawlinson, General, 229–30

  Rayleigh, Lord, 5–7, 33, 35, 59, 150, 382

  reconnaissance, military: The Art of Reconnaissance (army manual), 70

  cavalry and, 5, 81

  ‘sound ranging’, 151–3, 206

  see also aerial reconnaissance

  Red Cross, 234, 324

  Rees, Sir Milsom, 234

  Regensburg (German warship), 121

  Reith, John, 337

  Repington, Colonel Charles à Court, 66, 287

  Reuters, 28–4, 316, 318

  Reynolds, Osborne, 33

  Rheims Cathedral, 274

  Richardson, Captain, 106–7

  Richthofen, Manfred von (the ‘Red Baron’), 94

  Rivers, William, 242, 255–9, 382–3

  Roberts, David, 196

  Robertson, Miss, 128

  Robey & Co., Lincoln, 196

  Robinson, Harold, 151, 153

  Rochester, Kent, 72

  rockets and flares, 163

  Roddam, Miss Olive, 128

  Roe, Alliott Verdon, 46–8, 55

  Roger, Alexander, 155–6

  Rolland, Romain, 278

  Rolls, Charles, 43, 44, 45–6, 62

  death of (1910), 62–3, 84, 281

  Rolls-Royce, 45–6, 281

  Romania, 74

  Röntgen, Wilhelm, 21, 149

  Roosevelt, Franklin D., 298

  Rosyth, 114, 119

  Rothschild, Lord, 62

  Rotter, Charles, 108–9

  Rotterdam, 136–8

  Rows, Ronald, 255

  Royal Air Force (RAF), 332, 334, 335, 355

  aerial reconnaissance and, 96–7

  Allied counter-offensive (July 1918) and, 97, 208

  creation of (1 April 1918), 95

  ‘declinist’ view of inter-war Britain, 353–1

  openness to scientific ideas, 355–6

  Royal Aircraft Establishment, 355

  Royal Aircraft Factory (formerly Balloon Factory), 71, 73–4, 90–1, 342–3, 350

  Royal Army Medical Corps (RAMC), 217, 221

  College at Millbank, 186, 215, 216

  dramatic improvements during war, 239

  formation of (1898), 215

  Medical Research Committee and, 226–7

  numerical strength of, 239

  opens Queen’s Hospital, Sidcup, 237–8

  shell shock and, 244, 246–7, 252

  Royal Artillery, Inventions Branch, 159

  Royal Automobile Club (RAC), 45

  Royal Commission on Awards to Inventors, 160, 209–10

  Royal Engineers, 52, 180, 187, 194, 347

  Royal Flying Corps (RFC): aerial photographic unit, 86

  ‘Bloody April’ 1917, 95

  Brabazon joins, 84

  casualties during Somme, 93

  crossing to Amiens (13 August 1914), 2–5, 78–9

  established (April 1912), 69–70

  film cameramen with, 296

  Flying School, 69, 347

  hospital at Hampstead, 257–8

  inner tubes as lifebelts, 3, 4

  life expectancy of pilots, 95

  Lindemann and, 343–4

  mobilised (August 1914), 78

  photography and, 84–5, 87–9, 91–3

  reconnaissance flights, 72, 80–3, 87–8

  roundel identification mark, 82

  School of Photography, 91–2

  structure of Military Wing, 70

  support vehicles, 79

  Tizard and, 347–8

  Trenchard becomes commander, 89

  wartime expansion of, 89, 93

  Royal Horse Artillery, 151

  Royal Institution, 346

  Royal Marines, 197

  Royal Naval Air Service (RNAS), 72–3, 95, 197, 354

  Royal Navy: Churchill and, 67–9

  as conservative-minded, 35

  ‘declinist’ view of inter-war Britain, 353–4

  dreadnought battleships, 38, 119

  film cameramen with, 294, 295–7

  Fisher reforms, 102

  Hall’s reforms, 109–10

  move from coal to oil, 68, 123

  North Sea patrols, 112

  officers and ‘other ranks’, 36–7

  on-board radios, 104, 155, 163

  patriotic pride in, 75

  Portland Naval Review (1912), 68

  Reserve, 197

  size of, 38

  Voluntary Service, 127; see also Admiralty

  Royal Society, 5–7, 59, 102, 156, 157, 168–9, 184, 186, 188, 216, 242, 342, 352

  War Committee of, 7–8, 86, 156, 179, 180, 181, 219, 349

  Royce, Frederick Henry, 45

  Russell, Bertrand, 14, 150, 278

  Russia, 15, 74, 75, 77, 175, 309

  The Battle of the Somme shown in, 309–10

  capture of the Magdeburg, 107–8, 116

  cinema industry, 291

  departure from war (1918), 95, 207, 321–2

  February 1917 revolution, 309–10

  machine guns and, 192

  October 1917 Revolution, 95, 207, 319, 321–2

  poison gas casualties, 189

  population growth, 38

  radio communications, 103–4

  Russo-Japanese War (1904–5), 38, 116, 161, 194, 295

  Soviet state, 324

  Rutherford, Ernest, 14, 149, 151, 155, 157, 352–3, 383–4

  Saltpetrière hospital, Paris, 23

  salvarsan, 21

  Samson, Lieutenant Charles, 67, 68, 69

  Sandhurst Royal Academy, 36

  sanitation, 21–2, 214, 215

  Military Hygiene and Sanitation for Soldiers (1908 manual), 216

  Santos-Dumont, Alberto, 42, 49, 50

  Sargant, Mr Justice, 209, 210

  Sargent, John Singer, 313

  Sassoon, Siegfried, 160, 257–8, 259

  Sayonara steam yacht, 130–1

  Scapa Flow, 107, 111–12, 114, 119, 288, 295

  Scarborough, 112, 113

  Scheer, Admiral Reinhard, 118, 119, 120–1

  Schlieffen Plan, 77

  School of Military Engineering, Chatham, 53

  science: achievements and

  breakthroughs during War, 9–10, 335–40

  biophysics, 352

  common view of role in War, 9

  ‘declinist’ view of inter-war Britain, 353–4

  education system and, 32–3, 34–5, 36

  fluid mechanics, 33

  genetics, 14

  neurology, 22–3, 252–3

  see also shell shock; physiology, 10, 168, 181, 261, 352

  public sector in inter-war period, 354, 355

  pure versus applied, 10–11

  revolution in early twentieth-century, 14–15

  ruling class as biased against, 32–3, 34–5, 36

  vocational training in, 33–1; see also physics; psychology; radio (wireless telegraphy)

  scientists, 5–9

  Board of Invention and Research, 154–5

  ‘boffin’ term, 11, 340

  ‘Census’ of in Britain (1916), 168

  French, 178

  German, 341–2

  ‘H Department’ at Farnborough (‘Chudleigh Mess’), 342–3, 350

  links with govern
ment and industry, 10, 11, 154–7

  Munitions Inventions Department, 156

  Second World War boffins, 11, 340–53, 356

  Trench Warfare Department, 155–6, 162, 200; see also chemists

  Scotland Yard’s Special Branch, 130

  Seacole, Mary, 215

  Seale Hayne Hospital, Devon, 254–5

  seaplanes, 69, 72

  design and building of, 72–3

  Second World War, 123, 153, 186, 209, 334, 339, 357

  area bombing during, 346

  Battle of Britain, 351, 353

  Chain Home system, 351–2, 353

  Great War science and, 340–53, 356

  Secret Intelligence Service (SIS, MI6), 125

  Secret Service Bureau, 125

  Selfridges, Oxford Street, 51

  Sennett, Mack, 291

  Seton-Watson, Robert, 326, 384–5

  Seydlitz (German warship), 115

  Shackleton, Sir Ernest, 311, 318

  Shaw, George Bernard, 133, 278, 280

  Shaw, William Napier, 59

  Sheffield, Gary, 264–5

  shell shock: as affecting anyone, 245–6

  anxiety and stress of trench warfare, 243–4, 246–7, 248, 249, 258, 261

  army categorisation of, 247–8, 253

  army’s attitude to, 244–6, 250–2, 253, 261, 264–6

  ‘Aviators’ Neurasthenia’, 257–8

  Battle of Passchendaele (1917) and, 253

  Battle of the Somme (1916) and, 250–2, 253, 264–5

  coining of term, 243

  debate over causes of, 244, 246–8, 249–50, 253–5, 261–2

  early cases, 241–2

  electric shock treatment, 259–60, 262, 263

  evacuations to England, 241–2, 248, 252, 254–5, 258, 259

  executions for cowardice or desertion, 264–6

  as ill-chosen term, 249–50

  Samuel Myers and, 243, 244, 246, 248–50, 252, 254–5

  ‘nervous and mental shock’ diagnoses, 241–2

  neurasthenia category for officers, 245, 248, 257–8

  paralysis and ‘the shakes’, 241, 243, 245, 254, 260

  posthumous pardons for men

  executed, 266

  principle of ‘proximity’ and, 248–9, 252, 261

  public attitudes to, 244, 265–6

  William Rivers and, 256–8

  suspicion of malingering and, 246

  treatments for, 244, 248–9, 252, 254–9, 262–3

  Shephard, Ben, 250

  Shepherd, Ernest, 177

  shipbuilding, 55

  Short Brothers, 44–5, 46, 55, 62, 67, 70, 72, 336

  Signal Corps, US Army, 312

  Silvertown factory explosion, 171

  Simon, Lieutenant, 130

  Sinn Fein, 129–30, 131–2

  Skoda, 161

  Slade School of Fine Arts, 235

  Sligo, Lord, 131

  Sloggett, Sir Arthur, 217–18, 227, 228, 229–30, 252, 253

  Smith, George Albert, 295

  Smith, Grafton Elliott, 255, 385

  Snagge, Sir Harold, 324

  social class: Max Aitken and, 281

  cavalry and, 151

 

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