The Lion and the Poppy: British Veterans, Politics, and Society, 1921-1939
By (Author) Niall Barr
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th August 2005
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Social groups: clubs and societies
305.906970941
Hardback
248
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
510g
An illuminating study of the British veterans' movement, which explains how the British Legion became a national institution In the years following World War I, the British Legion became a symbol for service, tradition, and stability in British life. In the war's aftermath, many veterans' organizations on the continent became violently politicized. However, the competing groups in Britain came together in 1921 to form the unified and overtly non-political British Legion. Its mission and identity was founded upon its members' experience of the Great War. The Legion's belief that the comradeship of the trenches could transcend all barriers of rank and class was a reflection of the starting changes stirred by the Great War. Instead of succumbing to bitterness and alienation, the British Legion became a positive social force in the 1920s. Based on extensive original research, this is the first modern work to take an objective and analytical view of the British Legion. By examining each major facet of the British Legion in turn, Barr draws a convincing picture of this organisation that became a national institution. Through its branches and clubs, fund-raising activities, political pressure, and work for peace, the British Legion became part of the fabric of British life and exerted a powerful and profound influence upon British society and politics. A better understanding of the legion and its social impact fills a real gap in our understanding of British life and society during the inter-war years. Assesses the influence of the British Legion on UK society between the wars Compares the British veterans' organisations to their more politicised continental counterparts
Unlike earlier historians of the organization, he draws extensively on correspondence of members and leaders, and focuses on the local branches - the grass roots of the Legion - rather than merely the official records at the national level. * Reference & Research Book News *
Examines the political fund-raising, and other activities of the British Legion, an organization founded in 1921 by once-competing veteran's groups. * The Chronicle of High Education *
NIALL BARR is a Senior Lecturer in Defence Studies at the Defence Studies Department, King's College, London, based at the Joint Services Command and Staff College.