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A Bradford Pal: 'It was Simply Heart Breaking' - From Mill Town to the Battlefields of France

Hardback

Main Details

Title A Bradford Pal: 'It was Simply Heart Breaking' - From Mill Town to the Battlefields of France
Authors and Contributors      By (author) John Broadhead
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:208
Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 172
Category/GenreFirst world war
ISBN/Barcode 9781911604945
ClassificationsDewey:940.48141
Audience
General
Illustrations 26 Illustrations, unspecified

Publishing Details

Publisher Unicorn Publishing Group
Imprint Uniform Press
Publication Date 15 April 2019
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

In 1914 the City of Bradford was the world's leading manufacturer of fine woollen goods. On the outbreak of war, at the urging of the city's wealthy industrialists, thousands of young men rushed to join the colours and within a matter of months two volunteer Pals Battalions were formed. Author John Broadhead, the son of a Bradford Pal, tells the story of the battalions and the part played by his father, George William Broadhead, a Town Hall clerk from Batley. The author's research was inspired by his father's diary of 1916 which he handed to the author shortly before his death in 1980 saying, 'Here lad you might be interested in this'. Like many old soldiers he rarely spoke about the war but the diary and the author's use of official records, newspaper reports and memoirs reveal the stark horror of what faced the nation's youth. Few of the original Pals survived the war but George Broadhead's luck held. In 1918 he married a French girl, then worked for eighteen years with the Imperial War Graves Commission in France before returning to his home town to resume his earlier career. This is a story of an ordinary soldier but a quite remarkable person.

Author Biography

John Broadhead was born in 1945 and brought up in Batley. He attended Batley Grammar School and aft er joining the Ministry of Defence in 1963 took a First Class degree in Modern European History with the Open University. He served in Northern Ireland, Hong Kong, the Middle East and spent most of his later career as a senior civil servant in Whitehall. His keen interest in military history was infl uenced by his father's service with the Bradford Pals. On retirement he has been researching the events recorded in his father's diary and retracing those footsteps on the battlefi elds of France.