Insights of a War Correspondent

Following service in the British Army, brought to a premature end by injury and subsequent medical discharge, George Clarke Musgrave became a war correspondent and journalist, seeing action with British and American forces in West Africa, Cuba, South Africa, China and France. In a career which spanned some twenty five years he grew from a raw but determined neophyte of the media circus to a seasoned, brilliantly analytical and highly respected observer of war. But in the same twenty five years he also became a more frustrated, more discouraged and, ultimately, more troubled man.
While he had no hesitation in identifying and exposing the failings of those in authority, our author was never able to fully come to terms with the habitual inability of our politicians and our best generals to make clear, correct and courageous decisions; or with the ignorance and incompetence of officials at every level; or the foul stain of corruption that sucks the very lifeblood from the fighting man. And he lived with this through the five theatres of conflict in which he served. He suffered the brutality, the traumas and the evils of war tempered with an undying admiration for the men and women who lived and loved, suffered and triumphed in its fighting.
He was a committed and prolific writer whose work chronicles the often untold stories of those left behind to suffer the iniquities and atrocities of wars that others fought. He wrote a number of books which were readily published and well received by audiences on both sides of the Atlantic, as well as a wide-ranging portfolio of media articles and reports. To meet the commercial requirements of his publishers and editors, though, his books, newspaper articles and press reports were necessarily circumspect in terms of the deep-rooted issues and problems with which he struggled.
But he also kept diaries of his day-to-day experiences and used these as source material when viewing the broader sweep of his narrative. So, it is to his private and often unpublished essays, diary notes and letters that we must turn if we are to discover his fears and concerns, his judgments and opinions, his hopes and beliefs. This is where we will discover his insights; the insights of our war correspondent.

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Insights of a War Correspondent

Following service in the British Army, brought to a premature end by injury and subsequent medical discharge, George Clarke Musgrave became a war correspondent and journalist, seeing action with British and American forces in West Africa, Cuba, South Africa, China and France. In a career which spanned some twenty five years he grew from a raw but determined neophyte of the media circus to a seasoned, brilliantly analytical and highly respected observer of war. But in the same twenty five years he also became a more frustrated, more discouraged and, ultimately, more troubled man.
While he had no hesitation in identifying and exposing the failings of those in authority, our author was never able to fully come to terms with the habitual inability of our politicians and our best generals to make clear, correct and courageous decisions; or with the ignorance and incompetence of officials at every level; or the foul stain of corruption that sucks the very lifeblood from the fighting man. And he lived with this through the five theatres of conflict in which he served. He suffered the brutality, the traumas and the evils of war tempered with an undying admiration for the men and women who lived and loved, suffered and triumphed in its fighting.
He was a committed and prolific writer whose work chronicles the often untold stories of those left behind to suffer the iniquities and atrocities of wars that others fought. He wrote a number of books which were readily published and well received by audiences on both sides of the Atlantic, as well as a wide-ranging portfolio of media articles and reports. To meet the commercial requirements of his publishers and editors, though, his books, newspaper articles and press reports were necessarily circumspect in terms of the deep-rooted issues and problems with which he struggled.
But he also kept diaries of his day-to-day experiences and used these as source material when viewing the broader sweep of his narrative. So, it is to his private and often unpublished essays, diary notes and letters that we must turn if we are to discover his fears and concerns, his judgments and opinions, his hopes and beliefs. This is where we will discover his insights; the insights of our war correspondent.

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Insights of a War Correspondent

Insights of a War Correspondent

by Adrian Musgrave
Insights of a War Correspondent

Insights of a War Correspondent

by Adrian Musgrave

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Overview

Following service in the British Army, brought to a premature end by injury and subsequent medical discharge, George Clarke Musgrave became a war correspondent and journalist, seeing action with British and American forces in West Africa, Cuba, South Africa, China and France. In a career which spanned some twenty five years he grew from a raw but determined neophyte of the media circus to a seasoned, brilliantly analytical and highly respected observer of war. But in the same twenty five years he also became a more frustrated, more discouraged and, ultimately, more troubled man.
While he had no hesitation in identifying and exposing the failings of those in authority, our author was never able to fully come to terms with the habitual inability of our politicians and our best generals to make clear, correct and courageous decisions; or with the ignorance and incompetence of officials at every level; or the foul stain of corruption that sucks the very lifeblood from the fighting man. And he lived with this through the five theatres of conflict in which he served. He suffered the brutality, the traumas and the evils of war tempered with an undying admiration for the men and women who lived and loved, suffered and triumphed in its fighting.
He was a committed and prolific writer whose work chronicles the often untold stories of those left behind to suffer the iniquities and atrocities of wars that others fought. He wrote a number of books which were readily published and well received by audiences on both sides of the Atlantic, as well as a wide-ranging portfolio of media articles and reports. To meet the commercial requirements of his publishers and editors, though, his books, newspaper articles and press reports were necessarily circumspect in terms of the deep-rooted issues and problems with which he struggled.
But he also kept diaries of his day-to-day experiences and used these as source material when viewing the broader sweep of his narrative. So, it is to his private and often unpublished essays, diary notes and letters that we must turn if we are to discover his fears and concerns, his judgments and opinions, his hopes and beliefs. This is where we will discover his insights; the insights of our war correspondent.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940165012709
Publisher: Adrian Musgrave
Publication date: 09/03/2021
Series: Wars and Words
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 287 KB

About the Author

Following nine years service in the RAF, I qualified as a teacher and spent several years as a freelance teacher/trainer before setting up an internet service business. We sold this business in 2004 at which time me and my wife semi-retired, bought a property in Bulgaria and travelled around Europe, coming back to the UK in 2010. A year or so before we returned, my granddaughter had taken up an interest in genealogy and had constructed a family tree, revealing my great-uncle, George Clarke Musgrave. I worked with her on this and with relatively straightforward first stage research, we discovered that George Clarke was a war correspondent and journalist, seeing action with both British and American forces in West Africa, Cuba, South Africa, China, the Balkans and France. A further decade of more detailed research, including trips to most of the locations where he was an active correspondent, gave us entry to his entire library; press reports, essays, letters and diary notes. His articles from the conflicts that he experienced were published in many national and international journals such as: the Illustrated London News, the London Chronicle, the Daily Mail, Strand Magazine, Black and White Review and the New York Times. He also wrote a number of books which were readily published and well received by audiences on both sides of the Atlantic. Unfortunately, these are now out of print and first editions are rare and expensive. I believe, though, that his words should be read and, together with my granddaughter, I am now committed to bringing the library of George Clarke Musgrave back to life.

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