Drawing upon personal recollections, contemporary Mass Observation reports, newspaper articles and advertisements, personal and archive photographs, Mike Brown and Carol Harris look at each wartime Christmas on the British Home Front, from 1939 to 1944. Life in Britain changed dramatically as the war progressed; the annual celebration of Christmas provides fascinating yearly 'snapshots', illuminating the changes over six years of conflict. What was the weather like? What was on the wireless? What were the popular records and sheet music of the time? What films were showing at the cinema? What about the pantomimes, shows and concerts? Parties, decorations and trees? Gifts and food are discussed with a look at the presents available, and in vogue. As shortages really took a hold, the various make-do-and-mend solutions are described, and insights are gained into how people adapted food recipes to cope.
Mike Brown looks at each wartime Christmas in Britain, from 1939 to 1945. He uses a selection of newspapers articles, adverts, antecdotes and first-hand accounts (and the like) to illustrate the hardships faced by Britons during this wartime period. Yet in true British fashion, people strove to enjoy the festive period (which was much shorter than it is now) and often came up with creative ideas for food and presents due to rationing.
I really enjoyed this book and a recommended read for anyone interested in this period of history.
Drawing upon personal recollections, contemporary Mass Observation reports, newspaper articles, advertisements, and personal and archive photographs, Mike Brown looks at each wartime Christmas on the British Home Front, from 1939-1944.
I enjoyed the journey of going through each year of the war and following the everyday existence of how it was. The craft and recipes, gifts of a bar of soap, a soft toy made from an unravelled sweater or the humble orange were highly prized and thought-provoking.
A very interesting read which went through the war looking at the experience of Christmas amongst the civilian population. With a combination of anecdotes, advertisements, figures and social history nearly every page has an interesting insight. Well worth a read for any social historians in particular.
Much interesting information with recipes and information on how christmas decorations, even Christmas trees, were devised. My family certainly has wartime Christmas pudding with mock marzipan in their future. Perhaps because the topic was so limited, each chapter was fleshed out with all the sporting news for Christmas Day each year, who played whom, where, how many attended, and who won. Quite a bore that, but easy to skip over.