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Saving the nation from starvation: the heroic age of food control, June 1917 to July 1918

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2019

John Martin*
Affiliation:
Centre for English Local History, University of Leicester
*

Abstract

The civilian food shortages and accompanying malnutrition that characterised the latter stages of the First World War were instrumental in fundamentally changing the course of European history. In Russia, food shortages were a key underlying factor in precipitating the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution, while in Germany, food shortages led to the so-called ‘turnip winter’ of 1917, which effectively helped to undermine commitment to the war effort and contribute to the country’s defeat. In spite of Britain’s precarious dependence on imported food, and the shipping losses inflicted by German U-boats, the population was less badly affected. This achievement has been attributed to the work undertaken by Lord Rhondda, the second food controller, whose actions were characterised as the ‘heroic age of food control’. This article uses evidence from official government reports, newspapers and diaries, memoirs and biographies to challenge the prevailing historiography about the success of food control measures in Britain during the First World War. It shows that the Ministry of Food under Lord Rhondda’s period of tenureship was not only indecisive, but that efforts to save the nation from malnutrition, if not actual starvation, were in large part the result of initiatives implemented at the local level.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2019 

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References

Notes

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48 TNA Public Record Office (hereafter PRO) MAF 60/557, S. P. Vivian to R. H. Hodgson, October 1936 (signed memorandum enclosed with letter), p. 3.

49 Tallents, Man and Boy, p. 241.

50 TNA PRO MAF 60/557, S. P. Vivian to R. H. Hodgson, October 1936 (signed memorandum enclosed with letter), p. 4.

51 TNA CAB 24/31 GT 2563, ‘Compulsory Rationing and Distribution of Essential Foods’, memorandum by Food Controller, 9th November 1917.

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78 The Times, 7th January 1918.

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86 Birmingham Daily Post, 7th January 1918.

87 Ibid.

88 Ibid. For a detailed critique of the extent of unrest in urban areas, see TNA CAB24/41 GT 3442, ‘The Labour Situation’, 23rd January 1918.

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100 The Times, 16th March 1921.