A History of the British Merchant NavyPlunged into depression after a brief, post-war boom, the ships and men of the British merchant navy found themselves called upon to repeat their sacrifice to the menace of German hostility within twenty years of the end of the 'war to end all wars'. For over three years, until the Royal Navy bettered the German U-Boat, the merchant navy maintained the supply of food, raw materials and the sinews of war against appalling odds until victory ushered in a new age of peace and prosperity. It was not to last for long. Within a generation the merchant navy had all but vanished, its companies wound up, its men and women cast aside, its loss to the nation yet to be appreciated in one of the quietest yet most fundamental changes to affect this country at the end of the millennium. The final instalment in Richard Woodman's ground-breaking five-volume series is as richly illustrated as the previous four and draws to a conclusion this critically acclaimed study into the history and development of the merchant navy.

Author: Richard Woodman

Title: Fiddler's Green: The Great Squandering 1921-2010

Series: A History of the British Merchant Navy

First Published by: The History Press Ltd

Place:

Format: PB

Date: 30 October 2010

ISBN-10: 0752448226

ISBN-13: 9780752448220

amazoncoukamazoncom

© 2008-2024 David Hayes (Astrodene)