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Philip
Gibbs (left), noted war correspondent, writing
in Realities of War in 1920 was concerned about how men who had
lived through the horrors of trench warfare would adapt to the supposed normality of
peacetime, civilian life:
They were subject to queer moods,tempers,
fits of profound depression, alternating with a restless desire for pleasure. Many were
bitter in their speech, violent in opinion, frightening ... Our men living in holes in the
earth like ape-men were taught the ancient code of the jungle law, to trap down human
beasts in No Mans Land, to jump upon their bodies in the trenches, to kill quietly,
silently ... It is apt to become a habit of mind. It may surge up again when there are no
Germans present, but some old woman behind an open till...
And there certainly were fears, especially among
the better-off members of society, and particularly as unemployment grew amongst
ex-soldiers, that there would be a surge in violence and lawlessness.
The figures hardly bear that out: there were
around 273 recorded crimes per 100,000 of the population in 1921 compared to 269 in 1911.
But with a circulation war raging amongst popular newspapers, some of the pre-war
restraints in reporting had been abandoned, and lurid headlines were the order of the day,
especially where murder was concerned.
Crimes of the Times aims to
look at some of the most high-profile cases, giving attention to those which appeared
then, or seem now, with hindsight, to have some kind of association to the events of
1914-1918.
The prime suspect in The
Green Bicycle Mystery (illustration, right) was an ex-serviceman who had been demobilised suffering from
shell-shock, with the murder (if murder it was) allegedly commited with a service
revolver.
A very different kind of crime
was committed by Horatio Bottomley - the soldier's
friend. When the British government issued Victory Bonds in 1919 to
help pay for the costs of the war at £5 each they were too expensive for
most people, so the flamboyant MP for South Hackney set up a club to
enable everyone to purchase a fifth share of a bond for £1. It was
essentially a swindle and those who suffered most in the end were the
returned (and now unemployed) ex-soldiers Bottomley was claiming to be
helping.
Notes: Philip Gibbs' Realities of War
was published in the USA under the title Now it Can be Told; crime figures from
John Stevenson, British Society 1914-45 (1984)
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