Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter One A Tale of Temperance and Drink 1870–1914
- Chapter Two Vodka, Absinthe and Drunkenness on Britain's Streets in 1914: A Tale of Fear and Exaggeration?
- Chapter Three Best Laid Plans? Lloyd George and the Drink Question
- Chapter Four Restrictive or Constructive? The Early Stages of the Central Control Board
- Chapter Five The Carlisle Experiment: Lord D'Abernon's ‘Model Farm’
- Chapter Six ‘Helping our weaker sisters to go straight’: Women and Drink during the War
- Chapter Seven Reforming the Working Man
- Chapter Eight State Purchase and the Waning of the Central Control Board
- Conclusion: The End of the Central Control Board
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Introduction
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter One A Tale of Temperance and Drink 1870–1914
- Chapter Two Vodka, Absinthe and Drunkenness on Britain's Streets in 1914: A Tale of Fear and Exaggeration?
- Chapter Three Best Laid Plans? Lloyd George and the Drink Question
- Chapter Four Restrictive or Constructive? The Early Stages of the Central Control Board
- Chapter Five The Carlisle Experiment: Lord D'Abernon's ‘Model Farm’
- Chapter Six ‘Helping our weaker sisters to go straight’: Women and Drink during the War
- Chapter Seven Reforming the Working Man
- Chapter Eight State Purchase and the Waning of the Central Control Board
- Conclusion: The End of the Central Control Board
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
A JOURNALIST WRITING IN 1916, in the midst of the First World War, on the subject of ‘Belligerents, Neutrals and the Drink Problem’ observed that ‘the historian of the future whose concern with the Great War is chiefly its contemporary social life will find some of its most wonderful phenomena centred round the drink problem.’ As the battle of the Somme raged, why did contemporaries concern themselves with what people were drinking?
A pint of beer in the First World War was a controversial thirst quencher. Attacked by temperance critics, whilst being the livelihood of those involved in the trade, drink was the subject of much acrimonious debate throughout the tumultuous years of 1914–18. Lloyd George wrote in his war memoirs that ‘during the first five months of the war drink became a serious element in the struggle to avert defeat … on the home front alcoholic indulgence shared with professional rigidity the dishonour of being our most dangerous foe’. Sir James Crichton-Browne, a leading British psychiatrist, noted in 1915 that ‘when the history of the present great and terrible war comes to be written, it will be found that alcohol has had a not inconspicuous part, both actively and passively, in its progress and final issue.’ The war politicised the issue of drink and drinking, polarising society. For some a liking for beer became symbolic of the nation's drift to defeat whilst to others it remained one of life's pleasures, a quiet respite from the strains of war at home.
As shells fell in Northern France, politicians argued about pints being pulled in Portsmouth. In 1915 industrial manufacturing could not keep up with the military requirements on the Western Front and attention focused on how the home front was letting down soldiers on the front line. This disparity of sacrifice created a great deal of moral consternation as drinkers at home continued to imbibe despite the seriousness of war. To some, drinking alcohol symbolised a questionable commitment to the war effort and a moral failure. Concern about the management of leisure and what workers, women, soldiers and the young were consuming became an increasingly contentious issue.
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- Pubs and PatriotsThe Drink Crisis in Britain during World War One, pp. 1 - 13Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2013