The Country House at War: 1914–1918 by Brian Williams

The Country House at War: 1914–1918

Brian Williams
The History Press
Oct 2014
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The changing face of the British country house in World War I, encapsulating the stories of upstairs and downstairs, men and women In many ways the country house symbolized Edwardian life, with its expensive elegance, social seasons, and sharp social contrasts. All key families owned country houses and millions of domestic and agricultural workers depended on the country house and its estates for their livelihoods. Yet when the shadow of war fell, the long, post Edwardian, tea-on-the-lawn summer came to an abrupt end. Used during the war as hospitals, convalescent homes, training camps, and for agricultural production, there is also the human side to the country house at war male workers conscripted, fathers losing all hereditary heirs, women taking roles as nurses, and the social barriers as they were challenged at home and on the front.

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