The Boer War took place between 1899 and 1902, just 15 years before the
start of the First World War. Some 180,00 Britons, mainly volunteers,
traveled 6,000 miles to fight and die in boiling conditions on the veld
and atop 'kopjes'. Of the over 20,000 who died more than half suffered
enteric, an illness consequent on insanitary water.
This book will act as an informative research guide for those seeking to
discover and uncover the stories of the men who fought and the families
they left behind. It will look in particular at the kind of support the
men received if they were war injured and that offered to the families
of the bereaved. Some pensions were available to regular soldiers and
the Patriotic Fund, a charitable organization, had been resurrected at
the beginning of the conflict. However for those who did not fit these
categories the Poor Law was the only support available at the time.
The book will explore a variety of research materials such as:
contemporary national and local newspapers; military records via
websites and directly through regimental archives; census, electoral,
marriage and death records; records at the National Archives including
the Book of Wounds from the Boer War, the Transvaal Widows' Fund and
others.