Peace Through Play

  • ABOUT US
  • MEDIA
  • PEACE FIELD PROGRAMME
    • 10th ANNIVERSARY
    • INTERNATIONAL (PFPs)
    • BRITAIN (PFPs)
    • CRICKET AND PEACE
    • FOOTBALL MAKES OUR SHARED HISTORY NORTHERN IRELAND
    • FOOTBALL & PEACE PROJECT (F&PP)
    • GLOBAL PEACE GAMES
    • INTERNATIONAL DAY OF PEACE
    • FESTIVALS OF PEACE (Ideas)

The Recruitment Drive To Get Volunteers by Hannah, Phoebe Zoe

Posted on March 6, 2014 by MD Posted in Swadelands School .

Chapter 1: The recruitment drive to get volunteers.

Recruitment posters:

Recruitment posters where put up LL OVER Britain in the first world war as a way of getting men to join the army, they where encouraged by a sectary of war named Lord Kitchener, one of the most popular posters being of him pointing at the viewer with the caption “Britons, join your country’s army , god save the king”. It was coloured with nothing but red, white and black on an orange background. Some propaganda posters had very deep meanings and made the people think about how joining the army may benefit them in the future while others had no hidden meaning and simply stated what they where put up to say being ‘join the British army today and help protect those who need you’. The propaganda posters where very successful at first but after a while men stopped signing up for the front line thus the government introduced black and white propaganda;

~Black propaganda was designed to make the Germans look bad and to create a stronger hatred towards them amongst the British civilians and to hopefully encourage men to sign up for the army again and to get people that weren’t allowed to join the army such as women to encourage their husbands, brothers, sons etc. to sign up for them.

~White propaganda was mostly innocent, the posters that where categorised as white propaganda didn’t say or present anything that would make the Germans look bad- they simply said something along the lines of ‘sign up for the British army, your comrades need your help’ or anything else that didn’t imply that either country was evil, although this wasn’t as effective as Black propaganda it still worked and helped to recruit men for the front line and trenches.

Palls battalions:

Palls battalions where also introduced by Lord Kitchener as a way of getting men to sign up to the British army. Palls battalions where made up of a group of men that where all acquainted with one another and where perhaps too scared to go to war alone so they where given the ability to sign up in groups of friends with the promise that they would be kept together in the trenches, They where mainly developed from men that where in the same sports teams such as football, rugby, cricket and tennis while others where just groups of friends, neighbours and possibly even work colleagues. Although this seemed like a good idea at the time few men from each group survived leaving one or two members to return to their family’s in a mental state that couldn’t be helped by therapy, more than often the whole of the battalions where wiped out leaving no identification as to who they where or were they had come from. Those who did survive the palls battalions would be recruited again for world war two even if they hadn’t recovered from their earlier traumas.

After reports of many men returning home in a physically and mentally unstable state from watching as their friends died around them palls battalions where banned and weren’t introduced again until late in world war two where the exact same problems occurred and once again they where banned, only this time the ban was permanent.

White feather campaign:

The white feather campaign was formed by women who wanted to help recruit men for the British army, they would carry around a basket of white feathers and give one to every man they saw walking around the streets of Britain that looked fit to join the army but wasn’t wearing an army uniform as a way of shaming them into signing up. This worked very well for a majority of the first world war but once word broke out about what was really taking place on the front lines the women themselves where shamed by their actions and soon stopped handing out feathers with the realisation that they had latterly been sending thousands of young men to their deaths. In a sense this could be taken as a form of bullying since practically everyone at the time knew what the white feather represented and to have it place on your clothing where everyone could see it must have been humiliating witch is why not every woman in Britain agreed with this method and decided to stay well clear of it.

The promise that it would be ‘over by Christmas’:

The government made a false promise to the civilians of Britain by giving their word that the war would be over in time for Christmas and that the men that where currently on the front lines would be allowed to return to their family’s and the children that where evacuated would be brought back so that they could all spend Christmas normally. Even though this was a promise it didn’t hold, by the time Christmas had come around the troops where still out on the front lines fighting for their country and the evacuees where still scattered around the countryside with their foster families, this came as a shock to many people as they thought that they could trust the governments every word thus they spent Christmas and new year with an incomplete family.

« The Recruitment Drive To Get Volunteers by Baily & Dion (pt2)
Recruitment by Luke & Elliott »

Leave a comment

Leave a comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Time limit is exhausted. Please reload CAPTCHA.

Recent Posts

  • SPONSORED PEACE WALK
  • BENGALURA PEACE FIELD PROJECT
  • SIERRA LEONE
  • CALL FOR 2025 GLOBAL PEACE GAMES
  • 2024 PEACE FIELD PROJECT REPORT & GLOBAL PEACE GAMES FILM

Recent Posts

  • SPONSORED PEACE WALK
  • BENGALURA PEACE FIELD PROJECT
  • SIERRA LEONE
  • CALL FOR 2025 GLOBAL PEACE GAMES
  • 2024 PEACE FIELD PROJECT REPORT & GLOBAL PEACE GAMES FILM

Recent Comments

    Archives

    Categories

    Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries feed
    • Comments feed
    • WordPress.org

    Pages

    • Borden Grammar School
    • Herne Bay High School
    • High Weald Academy
    • Oasis Academy Isle of Sheppey
    • Swadelands School
    • 10th ANNIVERSARY
    • Abbey School
    • ABBEY SCHOOL’S 1000 POPPIES REMEMBRANCE DAY
    • ABOUT US
    • ACTIVITIES
    • ALL SAINTS CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL
    • All Saints Primary School
    • ARGENTINA
    • ARSENAL IN THE COMMUNITY
    • BARBADOS
    • BARROW CELTIC JUNIORS FOOTBALL CLUB
    • Beauchamps High School
    • BEESLACK COMMUNITY HIGH SCHOOL
    • Belgium
    • Benenden CofE Primary School
    • Bishops Down Primary School
    • Bobbing Village School
    • Bosnia & Herzegovina
    • Boughton Primary School
    • Brenchley & Matfield Primary School
    • BRIDGE INTEGRATED PRIMARY SCHOOL
    • BRIDGE INTEGRATED PRIMARY SCHOOL
    • BRIDGE INTEGRATED PRIMARY SCHOOL
    • BRITAIN
    • Bryntirion Comprehensive School
    • BUILDING BRIDGES COMMUNITY BOXING CLUB
    • Bysing Wood Primary School
    • Canada
    • CANTERBURY DISTRICT FIRST WORLD WAR TIMELINE
    • Capel Primary School
    • CEDAR INTEGRATED PRIMARY SCHOOL
    • Chailey School
    • Chantry Primary School
    • CHARLTON ATHLETIC COMMUNITY TRUST
    • CIRENCESTER TOWN FOOTBALL CLUB
    • Co ANTRIM
    • Co ARMAGH
    • Co DOWN
    • Co FERMANAGH
    • Co LONDONDERRY
    • Co TYRONE
    • Cobham Primary School
    • Colliers Green Primary School
    • COMMUNITY FOOTBALL CLUBS
    • Cranbrook Primary School
    • Cranbrook School
    • Cregagh Primary School
    • Cregagh, Belfast
    • CRICKET AND PEACE
    • CROATIA
    • CYPRUS
    • CZECH REPUBLIC
    • D R Congo
    • Darenth Community P S
    • Davington Primary School
    • Delivery Partners
    • DENIS LAW LEGACY TRUST
    • DERRY CITY FOOTBALL CLUB
    • DRUMRAGH INTEGRATED COLLEGE
    • EAST SUSSEX
    • Eastling Primary School
    • Elementary school “Fran Krsto Frankopan ” Krk – Branc school Baška
    • Elliott Park School
    • ENNISKILLEN PEACE PITCH
    • ESSEX Junior Schools
    • Ethelbert Primary School
    • F C BRUGGE
    • F&PP RESOURCES
    • F.C BASRA a club with a vision focused on children
    • FEEDBACK
    • FESTIVALS OF PEACE
    • First ICFA Peace Field
    • FMOSH REPORT 2023
    • FOOTBALL & PEACE
    • FOOTBALL AND PEACE
    • FOOTBALL CLUBS
    • FOOTBALL MAKES OUR SHARED HISTORY
    • FORELAND FIELDS SCHOOL
    • FORELAND FIELDS SCHOOL
    • FOYLE DOWN SYNDROME TRUST
    • Frittenden CofE Primary School
    • Gateways To The First World War
    • Germany
    • Gesamtschule
    • Ghana
    • Global Peace Games
    • GLOBAL PEACE GAMES 2014
    • GLOBAL PEACE GAMES 2017
    • GLOBAL PEACE GAMES 2017 Belgium
    • GLOBAL PEACE GAMES 2018
    • GLOBAL PEACE GAMES 2019
    • GLOBAL PEACE GAMES 2020
    • GLOBAL PEACE GAMES 2024
    • GLOBAL PEACE GAMES 2025
    • GLOBAL PEACE GAMES MAY 2022
    • Global Peace Games Press Release
    • GLOBAL PEACE GAMES SEPT 2022
    • GLOBAL PEACE GAMES SEPTEMBER 2023
    • Goudhurst & Kilndown School
    • Graveney C of E Primary School
    • Graveney Primary School
    • Greensted Junior School
    • Halfway Houses Primary School
    • Hampton Primary School
    • HARRY GREGG FOUNDATION
    • Hawkhurst CofE Primary School
    • Herne Bay High School Local Memorial
    • Herne Bay Infants
    • Herne Bay Junior School
    • Hernhill C of E Primary School
    • Hertford Junior School
    • Hertford Juniors School
    • Higham Primary School
    • HOLLANDIA SOCCER CLUB
    • Holy Trinity CofE Primary School
    • HONG KONG
    • Horsmonden Primary School
    • ICFA Peace Fields Projects
    • India
    • India’s First Peace Field
    • INTERNATIONAL
    • International Day of Peace
    • INTERNATIONAL DAY OF PEACE
    • International Peace Day
    • International Peace Day Kicks Off Peace Fields Projects
    • ITALY
    • Iwade Primary School
    • JAPAN
    • Joy Lane Primary School
    • JUNIOR FOOTBALL CLUBS
    • JUNIOR SCHOOLS
    • KILLYLEAGHY INTEGRATED SCHOOL
    • Kings Farm Primary School
    • Lamberhurst St Mary’s CofE Primary School
    • LAUNCH
    • Lee Chapel Primary School
    • LIMESTONE UNITED
    • LINKS
    • Lisnasharragh Primary School
    • LOSTOCK HALL JUNIORS FOOTBALL CLUB
    • LOUGH VIEW INTEGRATED PRIMARY AND NURSERY SCHOOL
    • Luddenham School
    • MAGHERAFELT HIGH SCHOOL
    • Maidstone Grammar School for Boys
    • MAIDSTONE UNITED FOOTBALL CLUB
    • MAKO SOCCER CLUB
    • MARIST BROTHERS HIGH SCHOOL, SUVA, FIJI
    • Mascalls School
    • MEDIA
    • Minister for Sport
    • Minster in Sheppey Primary School
    • NEW BRIDGE INTEGRATED COLLEGE
    • NEWS
    • NORTHERN IRELAND
    • Oasis Academy Peace Field Ceremony
    • Ospringe C of E Primary School
    • Our Lesson on Walter Tull 11th March 2014
    • Paddock Wood Primary School
    • PEACE FIELD PROJECTS
    • PEACE LETTER TO STORMONT
    • PEACE PLAYERS
    • Peace Village 10 Year Anniversary
    • Pent Valley Tech College
    • PRESS RELEASE
    • PRIMARY SCHOOLS
    • Prime Minister Supports Football and Peace Projects
    • PROJECTS
    • QUB LECTURE
    • Queenborough School
    • Raynehurst Community Primary School
    • Reculver Primary School
    • Red Barn Primary S
    • Resource Pack
    • RESOURCES
    • Richmond Academy
    • Riverview Junior Primary School
    • Rose Street Primary School
    • RUSHALL OLYMPIC FOOTBALL CLUB
    • Rye Community P S
    • Sandhurst Primary School
    • Secondary Schools
    • SECONDARY SCHOOLS
    • Selling C of E Primary School
    • Sheldwich Primary School
    • Shorne Primary School
    • Singlewell Primary School
    • SIR TOM FINNEY PRESTON SOCCER CENTRE
    • Sissinghurst CofE Primary School
    • SK SLAVIA PRAHA
    • SLOVENIA
    • SOCCER CENTRES
    • SOCCER CENTRES
    • SOCCER CENTRES
    • SOCCER CENTRES
    • SOUTHLAND FOOTBALL
    • SPAIN
    • SPECIAL EDUCATION SCHOOLS
    • SPERRIN COLLEGE
    • St Alpege Infant School
    • St Bernard’s Primary School
    • St Edwards Catholic Primary School
    • St Georges Primary School
    • St Joseph’s College (Marist Brothers) Apia, Samoa
    • St Mary of Charity P School
    • St Mary of Charity P School
    • ST PAUL’S HIGH SCHOOL
    • SUNNYDOWN SCHOOL
    • Swale Cliffe Community Primary School
    • SWINDON TOWN FC COMMUNITY FOUNDATION
    • Thamesview School
    • The First Peace Field
    • The First Peace Field Project Plaques Unveiled
    • THE FIRST PEACE PITCH IN POLAND
    • The First Peace Pitch School, Chennai, India
    • The First School Peace Pitch in Chennai, India
    • The First Twinning in the U.S.A
    • The Peace Field Project Film
    • THE WYVERN SCHOOL
    • THIS COUNTRY v THAT COUNTRY T-SHIRTS
    • Three Steps to a Peace Field
    • TOM FINNEY SOCCER CENTRE
    • Tool Kit
    • TOOL KIT
    • Trip to see War Horse
    • Tymberwood Primary School
    • United States of America
    • UNIVERSITIES
    • UNIVERSITY OF KENT
    • UNVERSITIES
    • Vange Primary School
    • VIKINGS FOOTBALL CLUB
    • Visit from Living History Group
    • Wa Senior High School
    • Wales
    • Wales (Welsh language)
    • West Minster Primary School
    • Westcourt County Primary School
    • Westmeads Infant School
    • Whitehill Primary School
    • Whitstable Endowed Junior School
    • Whitstable Junior School
    • Women’s football after the Great War
    • Woodlands School
    • Wrotham Road Primary School

    Archives

    • April 2025
    • March 2025
    • December 2024
    • November 2024
    • October 2024
    • September 2024
    • August 2024
    • July 2023
    • June 2023
    • April 2023
    • March 2023
    • April 2022
    • March 2022
    • November 2021
    • October 2021
    • September 2021
    • September 2020
    • July 2020
    • June 2020
    • April 2020
    • March 2020
    • December 2019
    • June 2019
    • May 2019
    • April 2019
    • February 2019
    • January 2019
    • December 2018
    • November 2018
    • July 2018
    • June 2018
    • May 2018
    • April 2018
    • March 2018
    • February 2018
    • January 2018
    • December 2017
    • November 2017
    • September 2017
    • April 2017
    • February 2017
    • October 2016
    • September 2016
    • August 2016
    • July 2016
    • June 2016
    • May 2016
    • April 2016
    • March 2016
    • January 2016
    • December 2015
    • November 2015
    • October 2015
    • September 2015
    • August 2015
    • May 2015
    • April 2015
    • December 2014
    • September 2014
    • August 2014
    • June 2014
    • April 2014
    • March 2014
    • February 2014
    • January 2014
    • December 2013

    Categories

    • Borden Grammar School (5)
    • Editor (1)
    • Herne Bay High School (22)
    • High Weald Academy (3)
    • International (26)
    • Isle of Sheppey Academy (2)
    • News (13)
    • Peace Fields Project (3)
    • Primary Schools (66)
    • Schools (5)
      • Junior Schools (4)
    • Secondary Schools (11)
    • Swadelands School (13)
    • Uncategorized (73)
    • United Kingdom (4)

    WordPress

    • Log in
    • WordPress

    CyberChimps WordPress Themes

    © Copyright 2008 National Children's Football Alliance. Represented by Hart Brown Report any website problems to National Children's Football Alliance Registered in England and Wales under Company No 9964451 Registered Charity No 1182641