The dramatic story of the men who fought a new and terrifying
kind of war amidst the carnage of the trenches in World War I: the
British pioneer volunteers who were the first tank-men into
battle.
Inspired by a visit to northeast France to witness the
excavation of a remarkably intact First World War tank from beneath
a suburban vegetable plot near the town of Cambrai, Christy
Campbell then defence correspondent of the Sunday Telegraph began
to piece together the little-known story of the young men who
formed the British Tank Corps.
Very few of them had been professional soldiers; they were
motoring enthusiasts and mechanics, plumbers, motorcyclists, circus
performers and polar explorers. One officer declared: 'I have never
seen such a band of brigands in my life.' They had trained in
conditions of great secrecy in the grounds of a mock-oriental
stately home in East Anglia and were originally known as the 'Heavy
Branch, Machine Gun Corps'. The word 'tank' itself was deliberately
chosen to mislead.
Men in tanks saw the face of battle at its most brutal. Their
task was to crush and burn the enemy out of his fortifications, and
to carve a path for the infantry so they could finish the job with
bayonet and grenade. Captured tank crews were beaten up or
sometimes shot out of hand by the Germans. They fought in their
stifling armoured boxes packed with petrol and explosives, aware
that at any moment a shell-hit might incinerate them all.
Christy Campbell has combed contemporary diaries and letters and
later recollections to tell properly for the first time the robust
yet harrowing story of how the first men in tanks went to war. The
time frame is 1916-18, with a coda on how German blitzkrieg ideas
developed from an English root."
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