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DEATH IN THE AIR

Book number: 93014 Product format: Hardback Author: KATE WINKLER DAWSON

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Sub-titled 'The True Story of a Serial Killer, The Great London Smog, and The Strangling of A City', this is a book about a killer fog and a killer loose amidst it. London was still recovering from the devastation of World War II when another disaster hit. For five long days in December 1952, a killer smog held the city firmly in its grip. Day became night, transport ground to a halt, criminals roamed the streets and some 12,000 people died from the poisonous air. In the chaotic aftermath, another killer was stalking the streets using the fog as a cloak for his crimes. All across London women were going missing - poor women, forgotten women, whose disappearance has caused little alarm. Each had one thing in common - the misfortune of meeting a quiet, unassuming man named John Reginald Christie who invited them back to his decrepit Notting Hill flat during that dark winter. They never left. The eventual arrest of the Beast of Rillington Place caused a media frenzy. Were there more bodies buried in the walls, under the floorboards, in the back garden of this house of horrors? Was it the fog that cause Christie to suddenly snap and what role had he played in the notorious double murder that happened in the same apartment, building not three years before, a murder for which another probably innocent man was sent to the gallows? Journalist Kate Winkler Dawson braids three strands together in a taut, readable, true crime thriller about a man who changed the fate of the death penalty in the UK, and an environmental catastrophe with implications that still echo today. In the words of Simon Winchester, who became asthmatic at the age of seven as a result of the Great Smog "she is to be commended for telling a terrible tale memorably and brilliantly." Kate certainly includes much first-hand reportage and we feel we are there in blackout with bodies in the mist and a madman on the loose who strangled at least seven women and a baby. Illustrations, 341 pages.

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ISBN 9780316506861

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GWR ENGINEERING WORK 1928-1938
Book number: 92962 Product format: Hardback Author: R. TOURETT
Bibliophile price £6.00
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HISTORY OF GIBBETING
Book number: 91580 Product format: Hardback Author: SAMANTHA PRIESTLEY
Bibliophile price £8.00
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IMAGES OF THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES: Codebreakers
Book number: 92260 Product format: Paperback Author: STEPHEN TWIGGE
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ALL THE BEAUTIFUL LIES
Book number: 93556 Product format: Paperback Author: PETER SWANSON
Bibliophile price £4.50
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AUDACIOUS CRIMES OF COLONEL BLOOD
Book number: 91600 Product format: Paperback Author: ROBERT HUTCHINSON
Bibliophile price £2.50
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MOST NOTORIOUS HIGHWAYMEN
Book number: 92143 Product format: Hardback Author: CAPTAIN CHARLES JOHNSON
Bibliophile price £7.00
Published price £20

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BRIEF HISTORY OF LONDON

Book number: 93076 Product format: Paperback Author: JEREMY BLACK

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With plentiful literary references, quotations from visitors and boxes covering topics such as Jack the Ripper, Black analyses the pivotal moments in history that make London what it is today. From the influence of the Romans on the main roads, to the long, arduous battles for both royal and political leadership, from Shakespeare's influence on the written word to the impact of the Swinging Sixties, from the influx of those who arrived in the city by ship in the 1950s to the riots that set about change in the 1980s, the book is as much about economics and culture as it is about politics and society. It deals with migration, communications, empire and cultural energy. London's earlier period is covered, but the principal focus is on the last half millennium, the period during which London became a major trader with the trans-oceanic world, the ruler of trans-oceanic colonies, and the English language became an increasingly important cultural medium. Travel through history and jump on to the Tube to discover the tales of our great capital. 260pp, paperback.

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ISBN 9781472146717

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NAKED IN THE PROMISED LAND: A Memoir
Book number: 92681 Product format: Paperback Author: LILLIAN FADERMAN
Bibliophile price £2.50
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NOTHING IS REAL
Book number: 92464 Product format: Paperback Author: DAVID HEPWORTH
Bibliophile price £3.50
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MISSIONS TO MARS:
Book number: 93664 Product format: Hardback Author: LARRY CRUMPLER
Bibliophile price £8.00
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HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE 1990 ONWARDS: Haynes Manual
Book number: 92614 Product format: Hardback Author: David Baker
Bibliophile price £10.00
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PYRAMIDS OF GIZA: Facts, Legends & Mysteries
Book number: 93706 Product format: Paperback Author: JEAN-PIERRE CORTEGGIANI
Bibliophile price £4.00
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ANIMAL: The Definitive Visual Guide New Edition
Book number: 94152 Product format: Hardback Author: DAVID BURNIE
Bibliophile price £24.00
Published price £40

Browse these categories as well: Great Britain, Maps & the Environment, History

THAMES AT WAR: Saving London from The Blitz

Book number: 92273 Product format: Hardback Author: GUSTAV MILNE

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During the Blitz, the very familiar sinuous shape of the Thames under moonlight directed waves of bombers to valuable targets like warehouses, industries, power stations, offices, docks and the associated housing. From 1940 to 1945, the German Airforce (the Luftwaffe) inflicted 101 daylight and 253 night-time air raids on London causing more than 80,000 fatalities or serious injuries and extensive devastation. In all that mayhem caused by high explosives, incendiaries, parachute mines, rockets and fire storms, the city was also faced with the very real possibility of major flooding whenever bombing seriously breached the river wall and its defences. This superbly researched and illustrated book describes the vital role and unsung achievements of the London County Council Emergency Repair Team, ably led by Chief Engineer Thomas Peirson Frank. Three rapid response units were formed and in the event undertook repairs to over 100 breaches of the flood defences. We also learn of the fate of London's docks and bridges, and of the ships, boats and barges lost in the estuary and tideway and the fieldwork of the Thames Discovery Programme, the community-based archaeological team working on the foreshore. The book catalogues incidents dealt with by each of the four regional T-F depots, located on the Isle of Dogs, in Southwark, Battersea and Greenwich, the work of the Auxiliary Fire Service (AFS) later the National Fire Service. Some 80 years on the book pays tribute to the non-combatants who kept the major port running and saved London. 208pp, very well illustrated with hundreds of archive and modern images.

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ISBN 9781526768025

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SECOND WORLD WAR ILLUSTRATED: The Second Year
Book number: 92973 Product format: Paperback Author: JACK HOLROYD
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BAT, BALL AND FIELD: The Elements of Cricket
Book number: 93151 Product format: Hardback Author: JON HOTTEN
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IMAGES OF THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES: Cold War
Book number: 93213 Product format: Paperback Author: STEPHEN TWIGGE
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CRYOTRON FILES
Book number: 92124 Product format: Paperback Author: IAIN DEY & DOUGLAS BUCK
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MY TARGET WAS LENINGRAD
Book number: 93768 Product format: Hardback Author: PHILIP GOODALL
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LIFE OF A SMUGGLER: Fact and Fiction
Book number: 92165 Product format: Paperback Author: HELEN HOLLACK
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BEAK, TOOTH AND CLAW: Living with Predators in Britain

Book number: 93152 Product format: Hardback Author: MARY COLWELL

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From foxes and ravens attacking new-born lambs to weasels eating game-bird chicks, predators compete with us, putting them directly into the firing line. Buzzards, crows, badgers, seals, kites - Britain and Ireland's predators are impressive and diverse, and they capture our collective imagination, but some people may even consider them our enemies. Farming, fishing, sport and leisure industries want to see numbers of predators reduced, and conservation organisations also worry that predators are threatening some endangered species. So what do we do? Mary Colwell travels across the UK and Ireland to encounter the predators face to face and watches their lives in the wild and discovers how they fit into the landscape. She talks to the scientists studying them and the wildlife lovers who want to protect them and also meets the people who want to control them to protect their livelihoods or sporting interests. Hers is a thoughtful and reasoned analysis of the debates surrounding the human story of living with predators, already soaked in blood and passion. She touches on religion and the philosophy of predation, children's literature, Christianity and the necessity of killing to eat which has become a sign of humanity's sinfulness. 312pp, rather lovely illustrations.

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ISBN 9780008354763

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PRING'S PHOTOGRAPHER'S MISCELLANY: Revised and Updated
Book number: 93667 Product format: Hardback Author: ROGER PRING
Bibliophile price £3.50
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MAYFLOWER ENTHUSIASTS' MANUAL:
Book number: 92616 Product format: Hardback Author: Jonathan Falconer
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JOAN BAEZ: The Last Leaf
Book number: 93023 Product format: Hardback Author: ELIZABETH THOMSON
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WHERE THE SEALS SING
Book number: 93177 Product format: Hardback Author: SUSAN RICHARDSON
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ACCIDENTAL COUNTRYSIDE: Hidden Havens
Book number: 93555 Product format: Paperback Author: STEPHEN MOSS
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INDIA
Book number: 93523 Product format: Paperback Author: K. SASSMANNSHAUSEN, T. SCHEU
Bibliophile price £12.00

Browse these categories as well: Nature/Countryside, Great Britain, Maps & the Environment, EXPLORE NATURE

CLUBLAND: How the Working Men's Club Shaped Britain

Book number: 93154 Product format: Hardback Author: PETE BROWN

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Brown is a brilliant master of ceremonies as he brings the history of these fine institutions to life and demonstrates their importance in working-class communities across the country. Blending vivid reportage and candid autobiography, he illuminates these arts centres, debating halls and palaces of carefree delight with love and care. The intoxicating history begins with the movement's founding by a teetotal social reformer to its booze-soaked mid-century heyday when more than 4 million Brits were members. Often dismissed as relics of a bygone age, Pete Brown reminds us that long before the days of Phoenix Nights 3000 seat venues routinely played host to stars like Shirley Bassey, Louis Armstrong, and the Bee Gees. Britain's best-known comedians made reputations through thick miasma of smoke from Sunniside to Skegness. For a young man growing up in the pit town of Barnsley, this was a radiant wonderland that transformed those who entered. They were a vehicle for social mobility and self improvement, run for working people by working people. Brown looks at the club and himself, the clubs as an institute, the pub, music hall, the radicals, the ups and downs, women, change and the future. A RADIO 4 BOOK OF THE WEEK, 290 pages.

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ISBN 9780008457549

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1000 RECORD COVERS
Book number: 93534 Product format: Hardback Author: MICHAEL OCHS
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FREDERIC CHURCH: A Painter's Pilgrimage
Book number: 91656 Product format: Paperback Author: KENNETH JOHN MYERS
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DERBY DAY
Book number: 92871 Product format: Paperback Author: D. J. TAYLOR
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SECRET HEART: John Le Carre: An Intimate Memoir
Book number: 93168 Product format: Hardback Author: SULIEKA DAWSON
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BEST OF BENN: Speeches, Diaries, Letters and Other Writings
Book number: 93444 Product format: Hardback Author: TONY BENN
Bibliophile price £9.00
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VICTORIA WOOD UNSEEN ON TV
Book number: 94108 Product format: Hardback Author: EDITED BY JASPER REES
Bibliophile price £8.00
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WHERE THE SEALS SING

Book number: 93177 Product format: Hardback Author: SUSAN RICHARDSON

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"A recently born seal pup. It's mother, resting a few meters away, is ignoring it, pebble and kelp surrounds also smeared with blood. Another few meters further on, a mob of grey black-backed gulls attacks the afterbirth, pulling it out of its steak-like shape into a stringier form, gorging torn off scarlet strands, then tug-of-warring with the remains. The pup appears to make an attempt towards its mother, but only manages to flop on to its side, exposing a pink inch of umbilical cord worming from its belly fur... Once familiar with its smell and henceforth assured of recognising it, she strokes its head with her clawed front flipper. Willing her on, I watch her finally assume a feeding position..." There are fewer grey seals in the world that endangered African elephants, and the British Isles host almost half of this global population. Every year, these charismatic animals with their expressive eyes, and whiskers more sensitive than our fingertips, haul out on our shores to breed and raise their pups. Susan Richardson has always been entranced by seals. They comforted her as an anxious child and brought joy when she began to spread her wings as a writer and helped her find her way after the loss of her mother. Now she sets out to trace the rhythm of their lives, travelling the coast clockwise from Cornwall to Norfolk, in line with the autumn pupping season. She explores the myths surrounding seals, from the shape-shifting selkie skins to the claims that they decimate fish populations, and she discovered that the greatest dangers they face come from humankind. Her book is a lyrical tale of memory, rescue and rehabilitation, and the recurring theme is the human-seal connection. She sees the life of the sea as a mirror of ourselves and vice versa. 376 pages.

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ISBN 9780008404543

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LOOKING AT BIRDS: An Antidote to Field Guides
Book number: 91584 Product format: Hardback Author: JOHN BUSBY
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CHRISTOPHER HITCHENS: Set of Three
Book number: 94536 Product format: Paperback Author: CHRISTOPHER HITCHENS
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SUMMER PUZZLE PAD
Book number: 91946 Product format: Paperback Author: KIRSTEEN ROBSON
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NATIVE UNIVERSE: Voices of Indian America
Book number: 94412 Product format: Paperback Author: GERALD MCMASTER
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PARADISE BLOCK
Book number: 92213 Product format: Hardback Author: ALICE ASH
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LAST GIANTS: The Rise and Fall of the African Elephant
Book number: 92425 Product format: Paperback Author: LEVISON WOOD
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EDINBURGH AT WAR 1939-1945

Book number: 93220 Product format: Paperback Author: CRAIG ARMSTRONG

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By April 1939, Edinburgh had 6,000 air raid wardens recruited and under training together with demolition squads, later renamed rescue squads, who had responsibility for demolishing structures which had been damaged and rendered dangerous and also in extricating those who had been trapped beneath rubble. Scotland was of grave strategic importance during the war because of its geographical position, and its capital was the location of a significant number of important military and civil organisations. Edinburgh Castle became the HQ of the Scottish Home Forces, whilst the Forth was a vitally important port and was heavily protected even before the start of the war. Its importance was marked by its attracting the first air raid of the war on mainland Britain, when a force of German bombers were sent to attack naval shipping on 6th October 1939. The raid was intercepted by the RAF which shot down at least two bombers, and the entire action was witnessed by many civilians on the ground. The raid also caused the first civilian casualties when two women were injured in Edinburgh, and two men machine-gunned in Portobello. Thousands lined the streets days later for the funeral of two of the Luftwaffe airmen. No member of the population of Edinburgh escaped the war and huge numbers came forward for service in the military or in roles such as the Home Guard, ARP Services, nursing, working in vital war industries, and struggling to maintain households under strict rationing and the stresses of wartime life, or children evacuated from the city to the rural areas of Scotland to escape the expected bombing. Edinburgh was also home to a sizeable Italian community which was badly affected by internment, and subsequent tight restrictions on movement and civil rights and was subjected to violent attacks when rioting mobs attacked their businesses throughout the city, although one family business was spared because they supported Hibs. The book poignantly commemorates the efforts and achievements of workers, fighters, and families divided. 216pp in well illustrated large softback.

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ISBN 9781473879638

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EDINBURGH IN THE GREAT WAR
Book number: 93221 Product format: Paperback Author: DEREK TAIT
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WOMEN IN THE WAR
Book number: 93178 Product format: Paperback Author: LUCY FISHER
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FOURTH SHORE
Book number: 89747 Product format: Paperback Author: VIRGINIA BAILY
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MOST DANGEROUS BOOK: The Battle for James Joyce's Ulysses
Book number: 93294 Product format: Paperback Author: KEVIN BIRMINGHAM
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SIBANDA AND THE DEATH'S HEAD MOTH
Book number: 89757 Product format: Paperback Author: C. M. ELLIOTT
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NO TRADESMEN AND NO WOMEN
Book number: 93296 Product format: Hardback Author: MICHAEL COOLICAN
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EDINBURGH IN THE GREAT WAR

Book number: 93221 Product format: Paperback Author: DEREK TAIT

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What became known as the Great War began on 4th August 1914. It triggered a wave of patriotism. Scotland led the way with 320,589 men voluntarily enlisting before conscription began in 1916. Scots were in the forefront of many of the costliest battles and campaigns with the outcome that, per head of population, it is estimated by the University of Edinburgh that Scotland lost more men than all the belligerent nations apart from Turkey and Serbia. Anyone with a German sounding accent soon came under suspicion of being a spy. Railways were taken under government control and local businesses asked to supply motor vehicles for use by the Army or to supply horses, of which hundreds of thousands died during the conflict. 'Young men belonging to Edinburgh and the East of Scotland may enrol in the Edinburgh Battalion which is now being formed. All young men in the professional and commercial classes, university graduates, clerks, warehousemen, skilled artisans and athletes (between the ages of 19 and 35 inclusive), who are medically fit and whose height is 5ft 3" and upwards, with chest measurements of 34" at least, are invited to enrol their names now, and those of any friends who may wish to drill and train in the same battalion.' This book covers the historic city's involvement to the armistice in November 1914, describing in great detail what happened to the city and its people, their everyday lives, entertainment, spies and the internment of aliens living within the city. Edinburgh played a key role in supplying not only men but vital munitions and a role in caring for the many wounded soldiers returning from the Front. Of poor quality but nevertheless very interesting are dozens of archive photographs, including a procession of little girls in white dresses and tartan sashes parading along Princes Street carrying banners stating 'We are doing our little bit', a picture of the arrival of Christmas puddings at the Front, and a Shetland pony to be sold for the Red Cross, a sports day for wounded soldiers and the visiting American Ambassador. 141pp, large softback.

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ISBN 9781473828100

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GRIMSBY IN THE GREAT WAR
Book number: 93225 Product format: Paperback Author: STEPHEN WADE
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LANCASTER IN THE GREAT WAR
Book number: 93233 Product format: Paperback Author: JOHN FIDLER
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NORTHAMPTON IN THE GREAT WAR
Book number: 93243 Product format: Paperback Author: KEVIN TURTON
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EDINBURGH AT WAR 1939-1945
Book number: 93220 Product format: Paperback Author: CRAIG ARMSTRONG
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RODIN AND THE ART OF ANCIENT GREECE
Book number: 92358 Product format: Hardback Author: CELESTE FARGE ET AL
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BIBLIOPHILE SQUIGGLE PEN
Book number: 61516 Product format: Unknown Author: Unknown
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BEAUTIFUL SPY: The Life and Crimes of Vera Eriksen
Book number: 93006 Product format: Hardback Author: DAVID TREMAIN
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HOME GUARD TRAINING POCKET MANUAL
Book number: 93020 Product format: Paperback Author: EDITED BY LEE JOHNSON
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FREE WORLD: Art and Thought In The Cold War
Book number: 93157 Product format: Hardback Author: LOUIS MENAND
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LANCASTER IN THE GREAT WAR

Book number: 93233 Product format: Paperback Author: JOHN FIDLER

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In the summer of 1914, Lancaster, the ancient county town of what is properly the County Palatine of Lancaster, remained essentially the market town it had been for centuries, having been granted a borough charter in 1193 by King John. A key town on the main road from London to Carlisle (the modern A6), the Lancaster Canal opened in 1797, the railway had come early to Lancaster, there was an ancient grammar school and the Royal Lancaster Infirmary. and since the 18th century the castle had been a prison. At the outbreak of the First World War panic buying led to price rises for sugar in particular and many grocers rationed their supplies. The first news of the war was referred to the 5th (Territorial) Battalion of the King?s Own Royal Lancaster Regiment, which was due to begin its annual training near Kirkby Lonsdale on 2nd August. Training was cancelled and all units recalled to base, directed to guard the docks and warships in Barrow-in-Furness. Then they were sent by train to Didcot to guard the GWR line between Reading and Didcot and moved on to Sevenoaks before they embarked for France in February 1915. All those serving in the first two years of the war were volunteers and they suffered quite disproportionate losses. The 1st Battalion of the King?s Own formed part of the initial British Expeditionary Force and was soon in action at Mons and Le Cateau. Among the first to lose his life was their Commanding Officer Lieutenant Colonel Alfred McNair Dykes, a veteran of the Boer War, along with three officers and 83 other ranks including Private John Carney of Ridge Street among many other Lancaster men. The town was out of range for shelling from the sea or aerial bombardment, but did experience an explosion at its munitions factory in 1917. Apart from this the Mayor and council endeavoured to continue with their primary duties as far as possible in running the town. The Lancaster men received many awards for gallantry. 116pp in large softback with many archive photos and posters.

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ISBN 9781473846111

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EDINBURGH IN THE GREAT WAR
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Book number: 93225 Product format: Paperback Author: STEPHEN WADE
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NORTHAMPTON IN THE GREAT WAR
Book number: 93243 Product format: Paperback Author: KEVIN TURTON
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NORTHAMPTON IN THE GREAT WAR
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CRYPTOGRAPHY: The Key to Digital Security
Book number: 93563 Product format: Hardback Author: KEITH MARTIN
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LEEDS'S MILITARY LEGACY

Book number: 93234 Product format: Paperback Author: PAUL CHRYSTAL

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The City of Leeds has a rich and varied military heritage and this book charts that heritage from Roman times to the end of the Second World War. The City came into its own in the English Civil War when it was a target for both Royalists and Parliamentarian armies and had a flirtation with the conflict of the 18th century Jacobite Uprisings and its regiments were mobilised in the industrial and social unrest caused by Chartism and Luddism. Leeds responded enthusiastically and the call to arms for volunteer regiments in the 19th century amid fears of French invasion and French-style popular revolution. Some of its most famous regiments find their origins at this time - Leeds Volunteers, Leeds Rifles and the 1st Leeds Yorkshire West Riding Artillery Volunteer Corps; 2nd West Yorkshire Royal Engineer Volunteers and the Yorkshire Hussars Yeomanry (Alexandra, Princess of Wales's Own). Local industry, not least brewers Joshua Tetley, supported this with a ready supply of horses and men. The Second Boer War saw Leeds Regiment serve with distinction, winning one VC, but it was in the First World War where Leeds men and women excelled themselves in patriotism and bravery and sadly sacrifice and slaughter. Military uniforms were made in their tens of thousands, while the heroines of the Barnbow Munitions Factory turned out even more munitions. 37 of the Canary Girls and two men tragically died working for their country in three fateful explosions. The Second World War was met by the people of Leeds with similar fortitude and regiments and an RAF squadron fought with distinction. Here are rare nostalgic archive photographs of RAF Yeadon (Leeds-Bradford Airport), the Blitz of 1941, 609 Squadron, Yeadon Lancaster factory, Leeds as a garrison city and current military research in Leeds. Also a look at conscientious objectors, agriculture, anti-Semitism, zeppelins and more. Packed with archive photos and a colour plates and map section. 128pp in softback.

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ISBN 9781526707666

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ANIMALS IN THE GREAT WAR: Rare Photographs
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EXOTIC VETTING: True Stories
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