http://quizlet.com/join/rRdWFvNVk
Click on this link to join my class and share your resources.
Sawtry Community College History Blog
A blog for Year 12 students at Sawtry Community College studying Edexcel Unit 2 'The Experience of Warfare in Britain 1854-1929', and anyone else who is interested!
Thin Red Line
Friday, 6 March 2015
Sunday, 18 January 2015
Takeaway homework menu
I know some people have had difficulty opening the 'Takeaway homework' menu on the student gateaway, so I've included the same information here in image format. Directions are also below.
TAKEAWAY HOMEWORK GUIDELINES
· Your teacher will give you deadlines for when homework is due
· It is up to you to choose what task to complete
· The task should always be focussed on the topic we are currently studying (ask if unsure)
· These tasks are not assessments so will not affect your overall grade, but will help you to achieve more in your assessments
· Your homework grade will be based on the topic
· Where possible, please complete the work in your books, or print out in a format that can be put into your book
· Choose a task that is appropriate for you—but
remember, the more you push yourself, the better you will get at History!
remember, the more you push yourself, the better you will get at History!
Saturday, 3 May 2014
Winged Victory - V M Yeates
I've just finished reading this. I found it powerful - movingly written and gripping.
'Winged Victory', by V M Yeates, is one of the greatest books about First World War aviation - that oft mythologised aspect of the war, in which young men made up the rules as they went along about aerial combat and clashed with each other in machines made of wood and fabric. Although it could be argued that the horror of being an infantry soldier in the trenches was without equal, the life of a Western Front pilot was brutish and short, with more pilots dying in training than in combat, victim to a mode of warfare in technology that was barely a decade old.
The novel describes a few months in the life of a young pilot, Tom Cundall, during the final stages of the war in the Western Front, as the fledgling Royal Flying Corps morphs into the Royal Air Force. The novel is set against the final set piece battles, with Cundall taking part in suicidal ground-strafing missions during the Spring Offensive and the later battles of Amiens.
I grew up being fascinated with aviation in the Great War, and I was a keen reader of Biggles. However this novel is very different to the work of Captain W E Johns, where Biggles seems to treat the war as a great game and escapes all kinds of tricky situations by the skin of his teeth. In comparison, Cundall is a mess, as he tries to blot out the stress of ever-more dangerous missions with 'binges' in the mess that often result in him throwing up and having to complete missions with a hangover, or even in one instance, completing a sortie while 'tight' (drunk). Cundall is far from being a hero, and indeed his main pre-occupations are with avoiding unnecessary danger and staying alive, as one by one his friends disappear in a mess of flame and smoke around him.
What I found interesting about the novel was the sense of 'keeping up appearances'. Cundall clearly has had enough of the war, but appears to keep him motivated is not just the will to survive, but also not to appear 'windy' (cowardly) in front of his friends, particularly when Cundall repeatedly, but accidentally, crashes his Sopwith Camel, until he realises, with some mortification, that his comrades are suspicious that he is doing it on purpose. On one memorable occassion, Cundall is found out by a new C.O who sees through Cundall's avoidance of fighting, to his anger and shame.
The novel is clearly a thinly veiled autobiographical account of the author's own experiences. Yeates also flew Camels during the last year of the war on the Western Front, and was also invalided home. One can only speculate how many of the characters and incidents are based on real incidents that Yeates experienced. Unfortunately, the author died of tuberculosis while still in his thirties, his novel a commercial failure. I have to admit that I had never heard of it before. However, having read it, I now consider it to be one of the greats, not just of literature about those early days of aviation, but of Great War literature as a whole. I highly recommend it.
'Winged Victory', by V M Yeates, is one of the greatest books about First World War aviation - that oft mythologised aspect of the war, in which young men made up the rules as they went along about aerial combat and clashed with each other in machines made of wood and fabric. Although it could be argued that the horror of being an infantry soldier in the trenches was without equal, the life of a Western Front pilot was brutish and short, with more pilots dying in training than in combat, victim to a mode of warfare in technology that was barely a decade old.
The novel describes a few months in the life of a young pilot, Tom Cundall, during the final stages of the war in the Western Front, as the fledgling Royal Flying Corps morphs into the Royal Air Force. The novel is set against the final set piece battles, with Cundall taking part in suicidal ground-strafing missions during the Spring Offensive and the later battles of Amiens.
I grew up being fascinated with aviation in the Great War, and I was a keen reader of Biggles. However this novel is very different to the work of Captain W E Johns, where Biggles seems to treat the war as a great game and escapes all kinds of tricky situations by the skin of his teeth. In comparison, Cundall is a mess, as he tries to blot out the stress of ever-more dangerous missions with 'binges' in the mess that often result in him throwing up and having to complete missions with a hangover, or even in one instance, completing a sortie while 'tight' (drunk). Cundall is far from being a hero, and indeed his main pre-occupations are with avoiding unnecessary danger and staying alive, as one by one his friends disappear in a mess of flame and smoke around him.
What I found interesting about the novel was the sense of 'keeping up appearances'. Cundall clearly has had enough of the war, but appears to keep him motivated is not just the will to survive, but also not to appear 'windy' (cowardly) in front of his friends, particularly when Cundall repeatedly, but accidentally, crashes his Sopwith Camel, until he realises, with some mortification, that his comrades are suspicious that he is doing it on purpose. On one memorable occassion, Cundall is found out by a new C.O who sees through Cundall's avoidance of fighting, to his anger and shame.
The novel is clearly a thinly veiled autobiographical account of the author's own experiences. Yeates also flew Camels during the last year of the war on the Western Front, and was also invalided home. One can only speculate how many of the characters and incidents are based on real incidents that Yeates experienced. Unfortunately, the author died of tuberculosis while still in his thirties, his novel a commercial failure. I have to admit that I had never heard of it before. However, having read it, I now consider it to be one of the greats, not just of literature about those early days of aviation, but of Great War literature as a whole. I highly recommend it.
Friday, 2 May 2014
Revision quiz
Hodder education have a number of revision quizzes specifically focussed on each aspect of the course. Well worth a look to help you identify areas of weakness
http://www.hodderplus.co.uk/myrevisionnotes/a-level-history/the-experience-of-warfare/index.asp
Wednesday, 8 January 2014
Year 10 book review 'Alone in Berlin'
This isn't connected to the usual topic of this blog, but i was so impressed with this I thought i'd put it on here anyway. I'm really keen on encouraging reading amongst History students, and recently I gave a reading list of books to my GCSE group. Emily Moody, a Year 10 student, read 'Alone in Berlin', in my mind one of the greatest books ever written about life in Nazi Germany, written by someone who had actually experienced it's horrors. I doubt many people of Emily's age have read anything like 'Alone in Berlin', let alone written such a mature review of it!
Alone in Berlin is a novel by Hans Fallada, inspired by a
true story. It follows the story of a
working class couple in Nazi Germany, in Berlin (as suggested by the title),
who quietly start to oppose Hitler after they learn that their only son has
fallen in the taking of France. The novel was one of the first anti-Nazi books
to be printed in Germany after WWII. Its first English release was in 2009,
where it became popular almost instantly.
Alone In Berlin – Book Review by Emily Moody
The story mainly follows a working class couple, Otto and
Anna Quangel, in Berlin under Nazi control, struggling to keep afloat within
all the chaos that has divided the German society. We learn, within the very
first chapter, that their only son, Otto Quangel, has died in the war, as a
telegram is delivered to them. This greatly upsets and troubles Otto and Anna,
as well as Trudel, dead Otto Jr.’s fiancée. Otto and Anna quietly begin to
oppose Hitler, blaming him for the death of their only son. They drop
postcards, in crowded buildings with messages like ‘Mother! The Führer has murdered our son. Mother! The Führer will murder
your sons too. He will not stop till he has brought sorrow to every home in the
world.’ Otto knows that even this small bit of resistance could cost both
of them their lives, but he continues to drop the postcards.
This scheme soon turns into a cat and mouse game, with Inspector
Escherich of the Gestapo, who attempts to catch the mysterious postcard writer.
We see Escherich as an intelligent detective who is able to make clever
inferences based on the smallest of clues. It seems that Otto is soon going to
be found out, yet each time he manages to escape Escherich. Otto also refuses
to join the ‘Party’ at work, even though it costs him a promotion, refusing any
connotation to the Nazis, who ‘murdered’ his son.
There are also other little plots going on within the book,
although all of the protagonist take residence, or have connections, at 55
Jablonski Strasse. There are lots of different characters that live in the
range of apartments, from Baldur Persicke, a Hitler Youth Leader who puts
Hitler and the Nazis before his own family, to Enno Kluge, who is determined to
stay out of the army on health grounds, to Frau Rosenthal, an old Jewish woman
whose husband has been dragged off by the Gestapo. A mix of all types of people, 55 Jablonski
Strasse is an allegory to Nazi Germany, and how the Nazis had split even the
tightest of communities.
Alone in Berlin is based upon the true story of Otto and
Elise Hampel, who started opposing due to the loss of Elise Hampel’s brother.
They started committing deeds of civil disobedience, like writing leaflets and
postcards, and dropping them in crowded areas and post boxes, despite knowing
that this was a capital offense. They
worked for a year, until they were betrayed, and arrested. They were tried by a
Nazi and sentenced to death. Soon after they were executed in Plötzensee
Prison.
Saturday, 16 November 2013
The ghosts of the past..
I spent a lot of my time daydreaming about how places looked in the past. I'm pretty obsessed by it. I find old pictures fascinating, especially when the scene they depict hasn't changed much. It's almost as if the ghosts of the past are near enough to touch.
I've seen a few people superimpose images of the past over modern day images and they've really captured my imagination, so I thought i'd have a go at it. Today I borrowed an amazing book from the library - 'The Great War: A Photographic Narrative'. It's a fascinating collection of images, some very familiar, some i've never seen before. I heartily recommend having a leaf through it.
Anyway, included in the book was the image below, from the Imperial War Museum archives.
The picture was taken in September 1914 on Agar Street, at the site of the Charing Cross Hospital in London (now a police station). It shows some of the first wounded being brought back from early clashes of the First World War. It's an interesting image - particularly the policemen holding back the crowds. Obviously this sight was something of a novelty at that stage of the war - depressingly less so later on.
I had a look on Google Streetview and tried to locate the same point today. Here it is:
I don't have Photoshop, but with a little bit of tweaking on Powerpoint i've managed to produce the following image:
It's not perfect, but hopefully good enough to create that sense of the past lapsing into the present that I find so fascinating. Almost 100 years ago now..
I've seen a few people superimpose images of the past over modern day images and they've really captured my imagination, so I thought i'd have a go at it. Today I borrowed an amazing book from the library - 'The Great War: A Photographic Narrative'. It's a fascinating collection of images, some very familiar, some i've never seen before. I heartily recommend having a leaf through it.
Anyway, included in the book was the image below, from the Imperial War Museum archives.
The picture was taken in September 1914 on Agar Street, at the site of the Charing Cross Hospital in London (now a police station). It shows some of the first wounded being brought back from early clashes of the First World War. It's an interesting image - particularly the policemen holding back the crowds. Obviously this sight was something of a novelty at that stage of the war - depressingly less so later on.
I had a look on Google Streetview and tried to locate the same point today. Here it is:
I don't have Photoshop, but with a little bit of tweaking on Powerpoint i've managed to produce the following image:
It's not perfect, but hopefully good enough to create that sense of the past lapsing into the present that I find so fascinating. Almost 100 years ago now..
Sunday, 10 November 2013
World War One Centenary Visit last month
Early in October, I was lucky enough to be included in the second batch of teachers and students to take part in the WW1 Centenary Project, which is aiming to provide the opportuntiy for two students from every Secondary school in the country to visit the battlefields of the First World War. I've been meaning to update but haven't got round to it yet, but I thought i'd share a few of the pictures to give you a flavour of what it was like.
This is us at Vimy Ridge - see me somewhere on the right...
Vimy Ridge is on the site of an important German stronghold in the war which dominated the surrounding area, and which was successfully captured in a textbook assault by the Canadians, working together as an army rather than invidivually for the first time. The site has enormous importance for the Canadians, and today is the site of their memorial to the missing.
From Vimy, you can also get an excellent view of the 1915 Loos battlefield, which is still dominated by the twin 'crassiers' (slag heaps). My great-grandad started his war here, joining his unit the Royal Fusiliers shortly after their blooding in the battle.
Here we are at the Theipval memorial to the missing, which contains 70,000 names of British and Commonwealth soldiers who fell in this area but have no known grave.
I was drawn to this shaft of light that seemed to be shining on these names...
I paid a visit to a local man of mine - Herbert Nobbs of March, who is commemorated on my local war memorial. I stood opposite his name today during the ceremony.
Near Sheffield memorial park - part of the 'Iron Harvest' that is still being recovered from fields almost 100 years later.
Sheffield memorial park - the ditch near the fence is the former front line trench, from which the Pals battalions (who are commemorated here) advanced from on the 1st day of the Somme, and met with such terrible losses in their attempts to capture Serre.
View towards their objective - Serre, and the former site of No Man's Land.
Touching memorial to the 'Acrington Pals'
Shell crater behind Sheffield memorial park
Railway Hollow cemetery, behind Sheffield memorial park. A beautiful little site - so called because of the narrow gauge railway that ran up to the former British front lines.
I find the inscriptions on many of the graves especially moving.
Ulster Tower, Somme - site of the German stronghold 'the Schwaben redoubt', and one of the few successes on the 1st July 1916. Look closely in the field to the right of the tower, and you can see a thin chalky line in the field - this is the remains of the German front line.
Tyne Cot cemetery, in the early morning mist. I've visited several times but i've never seen it look so striking.
Add caption |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)