The Great War produced many innovations, in particular the spectacular
development by the British and French armies of motor transport.
The age-old problem of moving soldiers and their supplies was no
different in 1914 than it had been some 2,400 years ago, when the great
Chinese military thinker Sun Tzu informed his readers that the further
an army marched into enemy territory, the more the cost of transport
increased, even to the point that more supplies were consumed by the
transportation of men and their horses than was delivered to the
troops.
Using many previously unpublished illustrations, including artists'
impressions, this book tells the story of the men and women who made
motor transport [MT] work for the victorious British Army on the
Western Front, so that in 1918, the humble lorry did indeed help propel
the British Army forward 'On the Road to Victory'.