Soldier Boy: The Militarisation Of Australian And New Zealand Schools For World War 1

Author: Maxwell N. Waugh

Stock information

General Fields

  • : $29.95 AUD
  • : 9781922129451
  • : Melbourne Books
  • : Melbourne Books
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  • : 0.412
  • : 30 September 2014
  • : 29.95
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  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Maxwell N. Waugh
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  • : Paperback
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  • : 270
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Barcode 9781922129451
9781922129451

Description

While 'voluntary' cadet training was a feature of Australian and New Zealand schools during the mid-nineteenth century, a form of 'compulsory' cadet training becam the norm from 1910 through to the 1920s, in both government and non-government schools. In this respect, Australia was 'more British than the British,' as there was no compulsory military training in the schools of Great Britain, or in any British Empire countries during this period. A large proportion of the over half a million Anzacs who served in the Great War did so willingly, because they had been trained for war in the schools of both countries. They soon found themselves serving as cannon fodder in the fields of Gallipoli and on the Western Front. Many of these former cadets were survivors who wrestled with their personal demons for the rest of their lives. This research shows how our schools were used by the respective governments to help prepare a ready-made army of well-trained, disciplined and patriotic young lads, glad to risk their lives in the terrifying, bloody and mindless conflict that was World War 1.