“From this point the tourist should go on foot” – Experiencing the Somme, 1919 - 1939 with Professor Mark Connelly
16 Jan

Professor Connelly’s presentation will explore Battlefield Tourism to the Somme in the inter-war years. Professor Connelly shares, “For the many thousands of British people who crossed the channel to see the battlefields in the 1920s and 1930s, the experience was very much shaped by the specific section of the front they visited. Ypres was by far the easiest place to site to visit: close to the channel ports, quickly re-connected to road and rail communications, it presented no great logistical problem.

Things were very different on the Somme front. The battlefield was huge in terms of width and length, which at certain points meant a vast wasteland almost impossible to traverse. Those attempting to visit it had to be ready to face difficulties and challenges from first to last lest they find themselves seemingly marooned in this sea of devastation. As the years passed and reconstruction commenced, many places on the Somme appeared to be ghostly remnants of the past incapable of full rehabilitation.

Mark is Professor of Modern British Military History at the University of Kent and Director of Gateways to the First World War.

He has been our guest in the past, with talks on 'The Neuve Chapelle Memorial' (2023), 'Notes and Swearies: The Use of Blasphemy and Swearing in the BEF 1914-1918' (July 1919) and 'This Painful Sacrifice: The death of Prince Maurice of Battenberg, Princess Beatrice, and the burial of a royal body’ (June 2018).

Walthamstow Cricket Tennis & Squash Club, 48a Greenway Ave, London. E17 3QN
16 Jan 2025 19:30