This detailed case study of a part of London shows how both the
survivors and the bereaved sought to come to terms with the losses and
implications of the Great War.
The modern idea that the Great War was regarded as a futile waste of
life by British society in the disillusioned 1920s and 1930s is here
called into question by Mark Connelly. Through a detailed local study of
a district containing a wide variety of religious, economic and social
variations, he shows how both the survivors and the bereaved came to
terms with the losses and implications of the Great War. His study
illustrates the ways in which communitiesas diverse as the Irish
Catholics of Wapping, the Jews of Stepney and the Presbyterian
ex-patriate Scots of Ilford, thanks to the actions of the local agents
of authority and influence - clergymen, rabbis, councillors, teachers
and employers - shaped the memory of their dead and created a very
definite history of the war. Close focus on the planning of,
fund-raising for, and erection of war memorials expands to a wider
examination of how those memorials became a focus for a continuing need
to remember, particularly each year on Armistice Day.
Mark Connelly is Professor of Modern British Military History,
University of Kent.