ABSTRACT

Britain’s vast losses of men in the first world war produced a revulsion against conscription. Originally published in 1972, Peter Dennis here describes how conscription was introduced once more in 1939, when pressure from within Britain and from France forced the British Government to reverse its position.

With the use of original sources, Peter Dennis explores the development of British military policy between the wars, from the period of readjustment and realignment immediately after the first world war, up to the breakdown of the Chamberlain government’s pledge not to introduce conscription in peacetime. He points out that the politicians and the public were not afraid of conscription itself, but of conscription in peacetime as the forerunner of continental military adventures in alliance with France. He shows how the battles over conscription had a marked effect on the indecision of military thinking, and how, in 1939, conscription finally became the crucial issue in Britain’s preparation for war.

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|18 pages

Readjustment and realignment 1919–28

chapter 2|32 pages

The breakdown of Locarno 1929–35

chapter 3|28 pages

The debate on defence 1935–6

chapter 5|15 pages

Limited liability 1937

chapter 10|22 pages

Does Britain mean business? March 1939

chapter 11|21 pages

The introduction of conscription April 1939