Wilson'S War by John Spencer, Hardcover, 9781912866274 | Buy online at The Nile
Departments
 Free Returns*

Wilson'S War

Sir Henry Wilson’s Influence on British Military Policy in the Great War and its Aftermath

Author: John Spencer and Gary Sheffield   Series: Wolverhampton Military Studies

Field-Marshal Sir Henry Wilson is one of the most controversial British officers of the Great War, condemned as much for what he wrote as for what he did. Making extensive use of primary sources, this new study sheds fresh light on Wilson’s Great War career.

Read more
Product Unavailable

PRODUCT INFORMATION

Summary

Field-Marshal Sir Henry Wilson is one of the most controversial British officers of the Great War, condemned as much for what he wrote as for what he did. Making extensive use of primary sources, this new study sheds fresh light on Wilson’s Great War career.

Read more

Description

Today, just as he was a century ago, Field-Marshal Sir Henry Wilson is an archetypal 'love him or hate him' character. An agile mind, a sharp, witty and sometimes wicked tongue, and the author of diaries full of the kind of coruscating remarks that a modern tabloid newspaper editor only dreams of. Wilson enjoyed hobnobbing with politicians as much as with his fellow soldiers, often to the chagrin of both 'frocks' and 'brasshats'. The former, so the accepted narrative goes, found him pliable, naive and ready to do their bidding. The latter, we are told, found him untrustworthy, mendacious and shallow. Yet in his lifetime Henry Wilson's many genuine admirers included leading figures in both the political and military establishments. Unlike many of his peers, Wilson was unable to present evidence in his own defence in the Battle of the Memoirs which followed the Great War. Soon after his death at the hands of Irish republican assassins his reputation was ruined by the publication of a biography based on his outspoken diaries. Wilson's enemies had their suspicions confirmed, his friends too often found themselves criticised in his late-night scribblings. More recent scholarship has examined Wilson's interventions in the cause of Irish Unionism and revealed a 'political soldier' willing and able to fight for this in the corridors of power. This study concentrates instead on Wilson's impact on the development and execution of British military policy during the Great War. Wilson's contribution to the British Army's preparations for war is familiar to military historians, his role in shaping policy in the final 18 months of the conflict deserve greater attention. In 1917 Wilson disagreed with the costly attritional strategy of both Sir Douglas Haig, the commander of the British forces in France, and Sir William Robertson, the government's principle military adviser at the War Office. It was a scepticism shared by British Prime Minister David Lloyd George who found Wilson's views refreshingly different. As a result, Wilson effectively put paid to a new British offensive in early 1918 and was instrumental in setting up the Supreme War Council, designed to better co-ordinate Allied military strategy. He then dominated the work of this body, setting its strategic priorities and putting in place structures which eased the adoption of unity of command on the Western Front. As this study shows, Wilson was neither the dupe of politicians, nor the hapless hand-maiden to greater military minds than his. Instead, his diplomatic skills helped preserve the brittle Anglo-French alliance, both in the early stages of the war and towards its end. His period as Chief of the Imperial General Staff from February 1918 saw him successfully walk the tightrope between politicians and military leaders and maintain fragile civil-military relations. In the aftermath of the conflict, Wilson helped shape Britain's imperial future, for better and for worse. 16 b/w photos & 1 b/w map

Read more

Critic Reviews

“"Read this and you will wonder how the war would have ended without Wilson's involvement."”

Read this and you will wonder how the war would have ended without Wilson’s involvement. Gun Mart 31/08/2021
…a major contribution to our understanding of the often–vilified Henry Wilson, his role in the Great War and afterwards. […] This nuanced and highly original work recalibrates the view of Wilson away from the one–dimensional figure established in the 1920s and from Jeffrey’s almost purely political analysis. […] It is a first–class piece of research and a pleasure to read. Stand to!
...an important contribution to the literature of the Great War. The NYMAS Review

Read more

About the Author

John Spencer is an internationally recognized military expert. A highly decorated combat veteran, John served over twenty-five years in the US Army as an infantry soldier. His careers spanned the jungles of Panama, two combat deployments to Iraq, instructor at the United States Military Academy, to a personal advisor to the US Army’s top general, the Chief of Staff of the Army. He currently serves as the Chair of Urban Warfare Studies at the Modern War Institute, a globally recognized research center at the United States Military Academy in West Point, New York. N/A

Read more

Product Details

Publisher
Helion & Company
Published
28th April 2021
Pages
224
ISBN
9781912866274

Returns

This item is eligible for free returns within 30 days of delivery. See our returns policy for further details.

Product Unavailable