Background to war 1914 & 1915

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Background to war 1914 & 1915 The assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand by a Serbian nationalist in Sarajevo on the 28th of June 1914 started a chain of events that lead to the First World War. At that time Europe was, effectively, divided into two armed camps: the Central Powers consisting of Germany, the Austro-Hungarian Empire and Turkey on the one hand; and the Triple Entente France, Russia, and Great Britain on the other. Through a series of political manoeuvres, misjudgements, bluff, and brinkmanship on the 4th August 1914 Britain declared war on Germany when they had invaded Belgium. The general view was that this would be a short war - it'll all be over by Christmas.' In fact Britain had not fought on European soil since the battle of Waterloo, very nearly 100 years previously, and had retained only a small standing army by continental standards. The British Expeditionary Force (BEF), comprising about 125,000 men, was mobilised and sent across the channel to fight alongside the French armies. Lord Kitchener, who had been appointed Secretary of State for War, was a lone voice in insisting that it would be a long war he estimated at least three years in duration and called for men to volunteer. His face looked out from the Your Country Needs You posters and led to such an unexpected rush of volunteers that officialdom was initially unable to cope. These men would form the Kitchener Armies, but their time to fight lay in the future, after they had been trained. The BEF played its part in helping to stem the German advance through Belgium and France. Trench warfare developed as the advance and counter attacks of opposing forces failed to make any decisive breakthrough. By the end of September there existed from the Belgian coast to the Swiss border opposing lines of trenches, separated by no-man s land, stretching a distance of some 400 miles. 1915 saw the first attempts, principally by France, to dislodge the Germans from French soil. In April Germany employed chlorine gas for the first time on the Western Front. Britain's first set-piece attack took place at Loos in September but failed to pierce the German defences. By the end of 1915 the original British army, described at the time as the best trained and equipped ever to leave our shores, had effectively been wiped out. The Kitchener volunteers were increasingly being introduced to trench warfare. Elsewhere the allies opened a new front at Gallipoli, in an attempt to force Turkey out of the war and break the increasing stalemate on the Western Front. British Empire forces confronted the Turkish army in what was known as Mesopotamia (Iraq, parts of Syria, and Turkey), and in Palestine. They also fought campaigns in Africa. At sea Britain, using its overwhelming naval superiority, imposed a naval blockade on Germany and its allies. The blockade even included food as war contraband. On its part Germany introduced unrestricted submarine warfare with the identical aim of preventing the import of food and war materials. Unrestricted submarine warfare was fiercely opposed by the then neutral USA. The sinking of the SS Lusitania with the loss of 1198 people, 128 of whom were American citizens, changed the climate of opinion in the USA. By the autumn of 1915, in a move to keep America out of the war, Germany suspended unrestricted submarine warfare.!1

Bottesford & Muston Never Such Innocence Again 1914-1The Grantham Journal for the 8th August 1914, the first issue after the declaration of war, reported that the Grantham Territorials, mobilised for active service, were cheered by enthusiastic crowds. Prices rose and shops closed early after a run on sugar, tinned goods and bacon, while Post Offices opened until midnight to pay reservists. Bayonets and swords were sharpened at Ruston & Hornsby s. Bottesford Meanwhile, for Bottesford, the Journal recorded the Primitive Methodists day trip to Mablethorpe, the appointment of a new school caretaker, a local boy badly injured in an accident. Most space, however, was given to a report of the Cricket Club Gymkhana held on the 1st August. Amongst the boys and young men taking part several would find themselves in uniform within a year. Pre-war Sunday School Outing Courtesy of Mrs. Y. Honey Events included skittles for a live pig - winner T. Kirton; rings - winner T. Kirton (2 ducks); pillow fight - winner H. Welbourn; 3-legged race - winner C. Barrand; sack race - winner A. Taylor. Three of these four prize-winners fought and came home. Cyril Barrand did not. For most of the population of the villages in 1914, the gymkhana, providing a whole day of entertainment and relaxation, was a rare treat. Bottesford was a large, busy village with a population of around 1200 people living in about 320 houses. Muston, then a separate parish, had a population of around 250 people occupying 66 houses. Today the combined parish is about four!2

Bottesford & Muston Never Such Innocence Again 1914 times its size in 1914, with a population of nearly four thousand people living in about fifteen hundred houses. Bottesford has expanded, while the populations of Muston and the hamlets of Normanton and Easthorpe have fallen The 1911 census for Bottesford indicates that there were about 300 scholars or infants, about 200 women not in paid employment and around 100 people described as retired, pensioners or living on private means, leaving a workforce of around 600. Eighteen men described themselves as farmers and a large part of the population worked on the farms, about 100 as labourers, cowmen or wagoners, while about 75 women were in domestic service. Other employment opportunities for women were limited, though some worked in the Queen Street mill, others as teachers, nurses, seamstresses, shop assistants or in the post office. Of the remaining workers, about 40 were employed by the railway. The rest worked in a variety of jobs, some in specialised trades as blacksmiths, wheelwrights, cobblers, tailors, others in shops, the building trade, the postal service, as grooms or gardeners, as cottagers, quarrymen or coalmen. Many of these jobs involved long hours of work for low pay. Every week the Grantham Journal featured advertisements encouraging Cyclists at The Cross, Bottesford Courtesy of Nottingham Museums and Galleries NCM 1973-42 emigration and advertising cheap passages to Australia, New Zealand and Canada. Many rural workers, including a number from Bottesford, left in search of a better life. If emigration didn t appeal, there was always the army or the navy. Some men supplemented their income by joining the army reserves. The main road from Grantham to Nottingham ran through the middle of the village and was metalled with tarmac, though the rest of the streets were not. There would have been little motor traffic, perhaps the occasional car or a charabanc taking visitors on a trip to Belvoir Castle, which!3

Bottesford & Muston Never Such Innocence Again 1914 dominated the skyline to the south. Most traffic was horse drawn. Kelly s Directory for 1912 lists 20 farmers in the village; most were tenants of the Duke. It was a transport and commercial hub for the eastern end of the Vale of Belvoir. If you approached the Grantham Journal 1908 village from Grantham, on your right you might see a train steaming into Bottesford East station. There was a clear view over the fields, to St. Mary s. They were mostly pasture, there was much less arable then. At Bunker Hill you might see women from the Dorking Poor Cottages (the Bunker Hill Cottages) crossing the road with buckets to collect water from the Devon. Cattle would have been driven to the pens at the station or to the local butchers for slaughter, cows to the milking parlours, sheep to the dip at the Washdyke Bridge. After the harvest carts carrying corn to Easthorpe Mill might pass by or a party of cyclists on their way to Allen s Tea Room. There were three butchers and two bakers in the village. There were more than a dozen other shops spread between Market Street, Queen Street and High Street, including six grocers, one or two drapers, a china and glass dealer, two boot and shoe makers, a saddler, a tailor, a dressmaker, a cycle repair shop and an antique dealer. Transport, other than the Horse and carriage, Singleton s Farm, Chapel Street, Bottesford railway, was offered by two carriers and Singleton s cab and fly hire. A mile to the south a few barges still unloaded at Bottesford wharf, but canal traffic had declined since the coming of the railway in 1850. Two refreshment rooms provided for the visitors who came to Bottesford for Belvoir in addition to the five public houses. Two building firms, a carpenter, a plumber and gas fitter, two coal dealers and an insurance agent advertised their services. There were two nurseries sending produce to local markets and to Courtesy of Mrs B. Sutton Covent Garden. The post was delivered twice daily. The imposing police station in Queen Street was presided over by an Inspector and had accommodation for malefactors in two centrally heated cells, each with its own!4

Bottesford & Muston Never Such Innocence Again 1914 flush lavatory. Of the 300 or so houses in the village a few were newly built, like Dr. Glover s Beechwood with its surgery. Others were rather grand Georgian farmhouses like The Ferns.' Many were shoddily built tenements in yards put up to house low-paid workers, like The Nook and Retford s Yard.' A few were thatched cottages, single story with a ladder to the upper room, sometimes with mud walls; the sort of dwellings that had housed villagers for hundreds of years. There was no mains water or sewage, but there was gas for those who could afford to have it connected and the main streets were lit by gas lamps. About one hundred people lived in the hamlet of Normanton, over the hill beyond the station. There were seven or eight farmers, a cottager, a grazier and around a dozen agricultural workers and their families, living in the twenty or so farms, labourers houses and cottages that stretched along the road to Newark. Easthorpe in those days did not refer just to the hamlet of farms and cottages curving round the Manor House. It was the name of the whole of the eastern end of the village, with the boundary between Bottesford and Easthorpe running down Church Street. Now demolished Cottages, Green Lane, Easthorpe Courtesy of Mrs. G. Claricoats Muston Muston, one and a half miles from Bottesford, was an independent parish in 1914, with its own church and rector, its own United Methodist chapel, its own school, a post office, a public house, (The Wheatsheaf), a forge and two shops. Like Bottesford, it was one of the Duke s villages. The principal landowners are the Duke of Rutland, who is lord of the manor, and the trustees of the Bottesford alms-houses.' According to the 1911 census the population was 259, 143 female and 116 male. 75 of these were children under 14. The farms and cottages of Muston straggled down!5