Shot at Dawn (Hardback)
Executions in World War One by Authority of the British Army Act
Imprint: Pen & Sword Military
Pages: 304
ISBN: 9780850526134
Published: 16th March 1998
Last Released: 27th March 2017
(click here for international delivery rates)
Order within the next 1 hour, 15 minutes to get your order processed the next working day!
Need a currency converter? Check XE.com for live rates
Other formats available - Buy the Hardback and get the eBook for free! | Price |
---|---|
Shot at Dawn ePub (14.0 MB) Add to Basket | £6.99 |
Based on years of painstaking research, Shot at Dawn, here fully revised and updated, was the first book to give complete details of all these executions, including names of victims; their 'crimes'; the circumstances, dates and places of executions, and of burial (where known); names of regiments and other units; and victims' personal histories and private circumstances (where known).
By demonstrating the ineptness and unfairness of the British court martial system at the time, the authors can claim to have prompted successive governments to review the tragic cases of these most unfortunate men. They reveal how frequently condemned men (from almost every regiment and corps in the Army) were proved to have been formerly brave soldiers who had cracked under extreme pressure, and who were judicially murdered as a lesson to others. In the event, many of the victims went to their deaths with unbelievable courage and dignity eyewitness accounts show. Shockingly next-ofkin of executed men were led to believe that their men had died in action many were unrepresented at their trials, which were all too often cursory.
This ground-breaking work remains the most authoritative on a highly controversial issue that remains a deep blemish on our national conscience.
GoodReads, Kristin Davison
As featured in
Nottingham Post
As featured in
Stand To! Western Front Assc No.110
About Julian Putkowski
Julian Putkowski is a university lecturer residing in Hackney and a member of the Scientific Committee of the In Flanders Fields Museum, Ieper. Since 1978 his research about the British Army during the Great War has featured in many radio and TV programmes, including The Monocled Mutineer (BBC); Going Home (Opix), and Mutiny (Sweet Patootee). Julian writes authoritatively about mutinies and military misdeeds, and with Julian Sykes he co-authored Shot at Dawn and supported the campaign to secure posthumous pardons for the executed men.
WWI: First British soldier executed for desertion
8th September 1914
Private Thomas Highgate became the first British soldier to be executed for desertion during the war on 8th September 1914.