Norfolk Coast in the Great War focuses on the trials and joys, the
achievements and disappointments, the humor and the sadness of everyday
life in a region living on the edge of the country at the heart of the
Kings vast Empire. Everyone from the folk who went off to fight, to
scouts and schoolchildren, had a role to play in this coastline that
had, since the time of the Spanish Armada, been considered a likely
place for an enemy invasion. There were days of great tension, even
terror, such as on the day of the first bombardment of the coast by the
German Navy, and the day of Zeppelin attacks and dog fights out to sea
when the flimsy planes of a fledgling RAF took on the Red Baron and his
comrades.
This unique study is based largely on original archive material, much of
it never before published in book form. It is accompanied by many rare
and fascinating photographs that show the day-to-day life of the people
who lived in the many settlements on the coast and just inland. In
addition, this book also gives an itinerary for a walk along the 46 mile
stretch of the coast from Hunstanton to Cromer, taking in many of the
places discussed and giving views that are exactly the same as they were
100 years ago.