Pen And Sword Military imprint: 1065 books

Isle of Thanet in the Great War

Broadstairs – Margate – Ramsgate

by Stephen Wynn
Language: English
Release Date: October 30, 2017

Because of the geographical location of the Isle of Thanet, it was always going to play a part in the First World War. For some wounded British and Commonwealth troops returning from the fighting in France and Belgium, it was their first sight of England in months. The Isle of Thanet just happened...

Secret Wartime Britain

Hidden Places That Helped Win the Second World War

by Colin Philpott
Language: English
Release Date: November 30, 2018

During the Second World War, thousands of sites across Britain were requisitioned to support the war efforts. Additionally countless others were built from scratch regardless of cost. Often the purpose of these locations was concealed even from those living close by. The author of Secret Wartime...
by Guus de Vries
Language: English
Release Date: January 30, 2016

During World War I, the picture postcard was the most important means of communication for the soldiers in the field and their loved ones at home, with an estimated 30 billion of them sent between 1914 and 1918. A Postcard from home offered the soldier in the trenches a short escape from their daily...
by J M Kneen, D J Sutton
Language: English
Release Date: October 30, 2017

The Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers (REME) provides the Army’s integral repair and recovery capability. Its soldiers are deployed at the front line and have to be capable of switching instantly from a technical role to fighting alongside those they support, as their many awards...
by Carol Lovejoy Edwards
Language: English
Release Date: March 31, 2015

The years 1914-1918 cost many lives in the trenches of France and Belgium. Those trenches and the battles that were fought from them are well documented. But back home in towns and cities up and down the United Kingdom death and desperation were also apparent. Those left behind to carry on suffered...

Visiting the Somme & Ypres Battlefields Made Easy

A Helpful Guide Book for Groups and Individuals

by Gareth Hughes
Language: English
Release Date: September 11, 2014

This splendid and timely book will be invaluable to those visiting the battlefields, sites, museums, memorials and cemeteries of France and Belgium. It is intended for those planning and leading school groups and similar parties but is also ideal for individual/family visitors.

Rather than list...

Fighting the Kaiser's War

The Saxons in Flanders 1914-1918

by Andrew Lucas, Jurgen Schmieschek
Language: English
Release Date: April 30, 2015

Personal accounts of the Great War experiences of British soldiers are well known and plentiful, but similar accounts from the German side of no man's land are rare. This highly original book vividly describes the wartime lives and ultimate fates of ten Saxon soldiers facing the British in Flanders,...
by Maurice Freedman
Language: English
Release Date: March 15, 2001

Seldom out of the news for long, code-breaking has had a bad time in the media so far, readers and viewers often finding it as perplexing as it is intriguing. As one of the greatest achievements of the century, code- breaking is a fascinating story, but all too often misunderstood and felt to be obscure....

Archie Bowman

Foot Soldier, German POW and League of Nations Man

by Hamish Ross
Language: English
Release Date: June 30, 2018

In 1915, Archie Bowman, a philosophy professor at Princeton, was granted leave of absence to join the British army. He served in the HLI and was captured at the Battle of the Lys. Prison camp, though, turned out not to be the living death he expected: he was fluent in German and became the...

An Extraordinary Italian Imprisonment

The Brutal Truth of Campo 21, 1942-3

by Brian Lett
Language: English
Release Date: November 30, 2014

This book tells the story of prisoner of war camp PG 21, at Chieti, Italy, between August 1942 and September 1943. It was grossly overcrowded, with little running water, no proper sanitation, and in winter no heating.

Conditions (food/clothing) for POWs were so bad that they were debated in the...

Send More Shrouds

The V1 Attack on the Guards' Chapel 1944

by Jan Gore
Language: English
Release Date: April 30, 2017

On Sunday 18 June 1944 the congregation assembled for morning service in the Guards’ Chapel in Wellington Barracks, St James’s Park, central London. The service started at 11 am. Lord Hay had read the first lesson, and the ‘Te Deum’ was about to begin, when the noise of a V1 was heard. The...
by Stephen Wynn
Language: English
Release Date: May 30, 2018

In the early months of the war, for most people Scarborough was just another town somewhere in northern England, where exactly, they weren't entirely sure. But all of that changed at 8 am on the morning of 16 December 1914, when three vessels of the Imperial German Navy positioned themselves about...
by Stephen Wynn
Language: English
Release Date: January 31, 2017

Chatham played a very important part in the nation's Great War effort. It was one of the British Royal Navy's three 'Manning Ports', with more than a third of the town's ships manned by men allocated to the Chatham Division. The war was only 6 weeks old when Chatham felt the affects of war for the...
by Stephen Wynn
Language: English
Release Date: June 30, 2019

The First World War was only a matter of days old when Barking placed itself firmly on the map, after Driver Job Henry Charles Drain of the 37th Battery, Royal Field Artillery, was awarded the Victoria Cross. He was born in Barking on 18 October 1895, and on 26 August 1914, the 18-year-old Drain was...
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