After food rationing was introduced in 1940, and German U-boats began threatening merchant shipping bringing in essential foodstuffs, the Ministry of Agriculture decided something had to be done to make the kitchens of Britain more self-sufficient. The result was one of Britain’s most successful propaganda campaigns – Dig for Victory – encouraging every man and woman to turn their garden, or even the grass verge in their street, over to cultivating vegetables. By 1942 half the population were taking part, and even the Royal Family had sacrificed their rose beds for growing onions. Now, Daniel Smith tells the full story of this remarkable wartime episode when spades, forks and bean canes became weapons the ordinary citizen could take up against the enemy. It had tangible benefits for the war effort in that shipping could be reallocated for munitions instead of food imports, as well as for the health of the nation in encouraging a diet of fresh fruit and veg. The campaign threw up unexpected celebrities like C.H. Middleton, whose wartime BBC radio talks on gardening reached a vast audience, and it even sowed the seeds for the modern allotment movement. Ultimately it is a war story without fighting or killing, one that shows how even The Little Man with the Spade, in the words of the Minister for Agriculture at the time, did his bit for Victory.
See history as it happened - and experience the moments when events were in the balance and key players had to make crucial strategic decisions. This is history at its most immediate and gripping.
The true story of how Lord Boothby and Ronnie Kray almost brought down the Establishment ... and how the Establishment saved itself
The true story of how Lord Boothby and Ronnie Kray almost brought down the Establishment ... and how the Establishment saved itself
3 The family's main seat wasRenishaw in Derbyshire. 4 Quotedin www.bbc.co.uk/historyofthebbc/resources/in depth/gardening. 5 Catholic Herald,27 September 1935,p.13. 6 Quoted in Daniel Smith, The Spade as Mighty as the Sword, Aurum, ...
Despite being more than 120 years old, Sherlock Holmes remains unchallenged as the world’s preeminent fictional detective, with fans new and old continually delving into his files of baffling mysteries....
Marrows on the roof Vegetables thrived in window boxes, on the roof gardens of hotels and department stores, and on top of Anderson shelters. These were named after John Anderson, the man in charge of air-raid preparations.
Using a wide range of personal and public records – from diary writing and club minute books to government archives – this book breaks new ground in both the history of the British home front and the history of sport.
The Spade as Mighty as the Sword: The Story of the Dig for Victory Campaign. London, 2011. Summerfield, Penny. 'Gender and War in the Twentieth Century'. The International History Review. 19.1 (1997) 2–15. Summerfield, Penny.
Peter Donnelly, Harrap, 1979 Nicholson, Virginia, Millions Like Us: Women's Lives in War & Peace, 1939–1949, Penguin/Viking, 2011 Smith, Daniel, The Spade as Mighty as the Sword: The Story of the Dig for Victory Campaign, Aurum Press, ...
Smith, Daniel, The spade as mighty than the sword: the story of the Second World War 'dig for victory' campaign (London, 2011). Smith, Julia M. H., 'Old saints, new cults: Roman relics 284 Bibliography.