Tommy Atkins: The Story of the English Soldier

Tommy Atkins is the English soldier, who joking broke the cavalry of France at Minden, who singing marched with the Great Duke to the Danube, who grumbling shattered Napoleon's dreams at Waterloo, who sweating in his red coat tramped back and forth across Indis, who kept his six-rounds-to-the-minute at Mons, and who died in the mud at Passchendaele, the sands of the Western Desert, and the jungles of Burma. If his name has been eclipsed by his more illustrious commanders - Cromwell, Marlborough, Moore, Wolfe, Wellington, Allenby, Slim - they at least will accord him his rightful place beside them. They knew his worth. Tommy Atkins is his story - the story of this most versatile, most adaptable, most un-military soldier.

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Tommy Atkins: The Story of the English Soldier

Tommy Atkins is the English soldier, who joking broke the cavalry of France at Minden, who singing marched with the Great Duke to the Danube, who grumbling shattered Napoleon's dreams at Waterloo, who sweating in his red coat tramped back and forth across Indis, who kept his six-rounds-to-the-minute at Mons, and who died in the mud at Passchendaele, the sands of the Western Desert, and the jungles of Burma. If his name has been eclipsed by his more illustrious commanders - Cromwell, Marlborough, Moore, Wolfe, Wellington, Allenby, Slim - they at least will accord him his rightful place beside them. They knew his worth. Tommy Atkins is his story - the story of this most versatile, most adaptable, most un-military soldier.

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Tommy Atkins: The Story of the English Soldier

Tommy Atkins: The Story of the English Soldier

by John Laffin
Tommy Atkins: The Story of the English Soldier

Tommy Atkins: The Story of the English Soldier

by John Laffin

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Overview

Tommy Atkins is the English soldier, who joking broke the cavalry of France at Minden, who singing marched with the Great Duke to the Danube, who grumbling shattered Napoleon's dreams at Waterloo, who sweating in his red coat tramped back and forth across Indis, who kept his six-rounds-to-the-minute at Mons, and who died in the mud at Passchendaele, the sands of the Western Desert, and the jungles of Burma. If his name has been eclipsed by his more illustrious commanders - Cromwell, Marlborough, Moore, Wolfe, Wellington, Allenby, Slim - they at least will accord him his rightful place beside them. They knew his worth. Tommy Atkins is his story - the story of this most versatile, most adaptable, most un-military soldier.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780752466941
Publisher: The History Press
Publication date: 07/11/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 331 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

John Laffin (1922-2000) was an Australian military historian. In 1940 he enlisted in the 2nd Australian Imperial Force. After the war he wrote several books and novels. He travelled the Western Front extensively to research his work and wrote widely on the First World War.

Read an Excerpt

Tommy Atkins

The Story of the English Soldier


By John Laffin

The History Press

Copyright © 2011 The Estate of John Laffin
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-7524-6694-1



CHAPTER 1

The Paradox of Tommy Atkins


The character and the psychology of the English soldier first interested me when, as a boy, I avidly read the colourful and heroic military adventures by G.A. Henty and Escott Lynn, among others. The heroes of their stories were always dashing young officers, but in the background were English soldiers, the raw materials with which the enterprising and daring officers brought off their coups. And raw the common soldier was. He seemed to be illiterate and inarticulate and he spoke English abominably. Dull in appearance – if the book illustrations could be believed – he had little intelligence but immense dog-like devotion to his officers and was cheerfully prepared to give his life for them. Though short on some things, he was long on fortitude and doggedness and he carried out orders with undeviating rigidity.

Not that he could very well do otherwise, since the orders rarely called for any show of initiative or enterprise. This was specially so when the troops were in square – that 'impenetrable' British square, which was, in fact, occasionally penetrated, as by the Dervishes at Abu Klea on 17 January 1885.

When I began to read military history I could see that many of the traits given to Tommy Atkins by the fiction writers were true. What struck me most forcibly was that Tommy Atkins, while undoubtedly brave, seemed to be bone-headed stupid. Time and again he marched into the most obvious traps; he would charge, horse and foot, into the teeth of fire from every kind of weapon, from breech-loading cannon to machineguns. And, in his red coat, he was a fine target for the enemy.

It seemed to me nothing short of scandalous that the Charge of the Light Brigade should have been glorified while the Charge of the Heavy Brigade, on the same day, should have been almost unrecorded and forgotten. The first was a failure and the result of crass incompetence; the second was an astonishing success.

Another intriguing aspect of British military history as printed was that the names of private soldiers, or even of NCOs were very rarely mentioned in despatches or accounts of actions. The only exception was when an NCO or private won a Victoria Cross (after its institution in 1855), but often enough the decoration was awarded not for action against the enemy but for the rescue under fire of a comrade, or more usually of an officer. Many officers were given the decoration for the same act, which, though brave, would scarcely merit a minor award from 1914 onwards.

To all intents and purposes the British Army, in its 'glorious' years – say from 1700 to 1900 – consisted of officers and human machines, the former manipulating the latter.

After a lot of reading, and much talking with old soldiers, I saw English troops in action. I admired their steadiness, their ability to take things in their stride; I was appalled by their inability to act decisively and vigorously after they had lost their leaders. What I did not realize at the time was that their helplessness was often due to officers not having passed on information.

My reading had been extensive but not intensive. When I really got down to studying and analysing military history and to writing about it, many mysteries about Thomas Atkins began to resolve themselves – though 'mystery' is too strong a word to apply to such an uncomplicated being as the English soldier. The real mystery lay in how England could produce soldiers fit to fight, and usually to win, in so many hundreds of capaigns and battles. This was a mystery because the English, people and parliament, press and pulpit, made life as difficult as possible for the soldier, a state of affairs remedied only in quite recent times.

It would be impossible to exaggerate the difficulties under which Tommy Atkins has laboured for so many years, the savagery with which some of his officers treated him, the crass thoughtlessness with which the Government used him, the spite with which the general public abused him. Starved, poorly housed and woefully equipped, mercilessly worked, over-loaded and grossly underfed and underpaid, his health neglected, his private and personal needs ignored, Tommy Atkins has nevertheless done his duty and allowed his commanders to win their battles.

One of the most frequently told stories about the army is that a commander – he is variously cited as Marlborough, Clive, Wellington, Campbell and others – asked a soldier – here again you may insert what regiment you will – how he would like to be dressed if he had to fight again at Blenheim, Plassey, Waterloo or Lucknow. There is no variation in the answer. The soldier says, 'In my shirt sleeves, sir.' The story, though plaintive, must be apocryphal, for surely nobody ever deigned to ask Tommy Atkins what he would like to wear – or eat or how he would like to be accommodated or what he needed in the way of recreation. He was not considered to be entitled to likes or dislikes.

In his mammoth history of the Regular Army from the time of the Restoration to 1870 Sir John Fortescue wrote of English soldiers: The builders of this empire ... were not worthy of such an army. Two centuries of persecution could not wear out its patience; two centuries of thankless toil could not abate its ardour; two centuries of conquest could not awake its insolence. Dutiful to its masters, merciful to its enemies, it clung steadfastly to its old simple ideals – obedience, service, sacrifice.

Crystallized here is the paradox of the English private soldier. How could he be so successful in so many countries and so many wars and campaigns and over such a long period and yet be so unappreciated in England? 'Unappreciated' is too mild a word. For many years he was reviled, mocked and detested. Even at the time when Kipling was glorifying Tommy Atkins the British public had little sympathy for him. At best he was a loyal but dull-witted oaf, at worst he was a repulsive fellow 'filled with beef, beer and lust'. Elderly ladies were apt to sack a maid caught in company with a redcoat, while a girl who married a serving soldier was generally regarded as having sunk about as low as possible. For many families it was a crowing disgrace to have a son who had 'gone for a soldier'. Even up to 1914 many a publican refused admission to men in uniform, as did theatre and music-hall managers. For decades Punch delighted in showing the soldier as a figure of fun or derision and the frequent good humour of its comment hardly softened the sting.

In 1945 Field-Marshal Wavell noted that for the first 250 years of his existence Tommy Atkins was treated with 'contempt, dislike and neglect'.

At varous times thoughtful people have asked why the English soldier fights well. In November 1898, The Navy and Army Illustrated went so far as to say that the British soldier 'has, as a rule, fought better than anybody else' and noted that the reason would be worth probing. The magazine editorial continued:

A reasoned answer might surprise some. The good old patriotic explanation that the 'Briton' is braver than other people has something in it, but not very much ... Besides, they have run away a good deal from one another at home, and on occasion they have run away abroad.

The real explanation of our uniform success, for really it all but amounts to that, lies in this, that no nation has enjoyed so fully the advantage of fighting with small and very highly-drilled corps.

If victories were ours, it is partly because an Englishman held the chief command (this was not the case at Minden) chiefly because the British troops present were 'the Old Guard' of the Army; in other words, the most drilled, the most carefully picked of all. The question why that should have been so is precisely what a good history of the British Army ought to explain.


English forces were certainly small or relatively small in the Middle Ages, at Crécy, at Poitiers, and at Agincourt, in Marlborough's wars, throughout the eighteenth century and in the Peninsula. The English were not commonly the majority even in the medieval battles. Gascons, who were monarchical subjects, and mercenary soldiers of all nations, swarmed in the armies of King Edward or King Henry. English-born soldiers were never more than about a fifth of any of Marlborough's armies. The proportion was 'greater in Wellington's armies; but even there the English were a minority, after deducting the German Legion, the Portuguese under English officers, and so forth.

A year later Navy and Army Illustrated was again seeking to explain Britain's martial prowess, this time with a back-handed compliment from 'a distinguished Frenchman'. Even if the magazine invented this Frenchman – why didn't they identify him? – the comments he made, or was supposed to have made, are interesting. Navy and Army commented that from his criticisms 'no truer explanation of Britain's military successes could be imagined'.

The British soldier is no better than any other, but he has won many battles by virtue of his insufferable conceit. Even when he has been handsomely beaten, this same has prevented him from acknowledging it and retiring from the field, as he ought to have done if he had played the game fairly. But what can you do with men who are so infatuated with conceit that every private soldier says to himself 'The British Army is the finest in the world, my regiment is the finest in the British Army, and I am the finest soldier in my regiment'? Clearly all argument, mental of physical, is lost on such people.


In fact, there is much truth in this. By all the customs and conventions of war English troops have been beaten on many occasions, but have refused to admit defeat and have either fought on to snatch incredible victory or have been wiped out in the trying.

As the 'distinguished Frenchman' implied, the regimental system has always been the backbone of English troops. 'A regiment is embodied tradition,' somebody wrote. 'It survives the changes and stress of fretting years.' More than that, because of the pride in which men held their regiment, it could survive the most savage blows of warfare. The well-being and honour of his regiment was the core of a good soldier's life – and I hope, making allowances for the modern soldier's wider range of interests, that this still applies.

It is rare indeed that an English regiment does not hold together. This indestructible cohesion – in Colonel Henderson's view the best of all the qualities that an armed body can possess – is based not merely on hereditary resolutions, but also on mutual confidence and respect. The men in the ranks have implicit and until recent times an almost childlike faith in their officers; the officers have a limitless belief in the staying power and discipline of their men.

For centuries only Tommy Atkins's endurance and courage kept him on his feet while actually in the throes of a serious illness – esprit de corps carried to extremes. Men have been known to march and fight while suffering from malaria, cholera, yellow fever, dysentery and typhoid – before the inevitable collapse. Field-Marshal Slim, commanding in Burma, found health 'his second great problem'.

In every campaign – as distinct from battles – in which a British force has taken part disease has claimed more victims than has the enemy. This applied even to World War II, despite the many advances in medicine, hygiene and surgery up to 1939.

Dr Johnson, who had shrewd ideas about most things, had some pertinent observations about the English soldier and pithily expressed some of his contradictions. He stated that 'the qualities which commonly make an army formidable are long habits of regularity, great exactness of discipline, and great confidence in the commander'. But he claimed that English soldiers were in no way regular, that their discipline was indifferent, that they had no reason to be confident in their commanders – yet they were, without doubt, 'the bravest soldiers in Europe'. The explanation lay, said the Doctor, in the independence of character of the Englishman, who called no man his master.

The Doctor was off target, for most Englishmen of his day and for long after were forced to call somebody master. I think that 'sturdiness of character' could be better substituted for 'independence of character'.

The class structure of British society has been perhaps the most important factor in determining the character of the British Army. Critics of the British Army and its system have alleged consistently that one of its main drawbacks is its lack of democratic flexibility. The charge is true enough, although those who refute the charge bring up the same few outstanding private-to-general examples. The point is, however, that it was no less democratic than many other armies and only at certain periods has it compared unfavourably with, say, the French.

It has always been difficult to overcome the initial disadvantages under which the Englishman, as a potential soldier, labours. Colonel G.F.R. Henderson expressed it clearly in 1905: 'Life in the British Islands, except perhaps on the moors and forests of the north was, and is, no preparation for war whatever.'

The great bulk of the population had no incipient or latent martial quality, unlike those countries which could draw on mountaineers, stockmen, bushmen, shikaris, tribesmen. The average English private had no instinctive feeling for weapons or even for horses as mounts. Something had to counterbalance these deficiencies and that something was pride of race and a certain predilection for good order – which is nothing more than good fellowship.

Henderson: 'It is certain that the British officer is what Britain makes him. His natural qualities, be they virtues or defects, are those of his race, and it is the country, not himself, which is primarily responsible for the development of the one and the correction of the other.'

This is the social structure at work. The officer came from a ruling class and was instinctively able to take command, even without previous military training. The men, being of a follower class – though by no means a debased or servile one – just as instinctively obeyed. The exceptions on both sides only prove the rule, and gave some force to the dictum that the army (and the navy) was a case of 'the worst led by the best'.

There can be no doubt about the class Emerson was writing of in 1850, when he gave his impression of the most striking characteristic of the English. 'In every efficient man there is at first a fine animal. In the English race it is of the best breed – a healthy, juicy, broad-chested creature, steeped in ale and good cheer and a little overloaded by his flesh.'

Sir John Fortescue, writing in 1950, said that the War of Dutch Independence had made the modern English soldier. 'It was, in fact, the school of the modern British Army,' he said, though I think this is too broad a statement. 'Moreover, there is with us a famous corps which dates its birth from those stirring times, and is, indeed, a standing memorial of the Army's prentice years.'

He was referring to the Buffs – Royal East Kent Regiment. On the outbreak of war between England and the Dutch in 1665, the descendants of the volunteers who had gone there in 1572 were still in Dutch service and were required to take the oath of allegiance to the Dutch Republic or be cashiered. Dismissal from the service meant ruin for the officers and misery for the men, but they refused the oath and were turned adrift. They made their way to England and were formed into the Holland Regiment and became third line regiment in seniority.

'So the Buffs remain the unique relic of British volunteers in the Low Countries,' wrote Fortescue. 'It has the longest pedigree of any corps in the service, and represents the original model of that sorely tried institution, the British Army.'

Yet, so sorely tried, English soldiers in their hundreds of thousands went all over the world to fight and suffer and often to die. Those who came after must have known what they were in for; they must have realized that when their army days were over – if they were lucky enough to live so long – they could make a living only by begging. Yet the army usually managed to find enough men, mostly volunteers, to fill its ranks. Despite their frequently gross maltreatment English soldiers were never bitter. They complained, as all soldiers will, but only rarely was their loyalty soured or their patience fretted. Their whole history is underscored by their steadiness and by their acceptance of whatever conditions happened to apply at any given time.

Occasionally, when trouble was in the offing or immediately after a victory, Tommy Atkins would be showered with verbal confetti; otherwise he would be reviled, as Kipling discerned.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Tommy Atkins by John Laffin. Copyright © 2011 The Estate of John Laffin. Excerpted by permission of The History Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

'Tommy Atkins',
Three Centuries of Opinion,
1 The Paradox of Tommy Atkins,
2 1642–1700 The New Model Army and Its Influence,
3 1701–42 Marlorough's Men,
4 1743–70 Battles Glorious, Health Notorious,
5 1771–1800 Very Active Service,
6 1800–8 'These Are Defects but He Is a Valuable Soldier',
7 1808–15 (1) Iron Men of the Peninsula,
8 1808–15 (2) Heroes at Albuhera; Hoodlums at Badajoz,
9 Punishment: 'Europe's Most Barbarous Martial Laws',
10 1815–59 (1) Some of Those Finest Hours,
11 1815–59 (2) The Sarah Sands; The Crimea; The Mutiny,
12 1860–1902 The Glorious Years,
13 1900–18 (1) The Proud Professionals,
14 1900–18 (2) Bloodbath for the Zealous Volunteers,
15 1918–45 (1) The In-Between Years,
16 1939–45 (2) Seven Actions of World War II,
17 1945 Ubiquitous Mr Atkins,
Acknowledgements and Bibliography,

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