Freepedia
is a series of free encyclopaedias. We currently specialize in history
but we intend to branch out into other areas. This section is about
Ernest Swinton.
Ernest
Swinton was born in Bangalore, India in 1864. He joined the British
Army and by the outbreak of the First World War
had reached the rank of Lieutenant Colonel.
In August 1914 the British government established the War
Office Press Bureau under F. E. Smith.
The idea was this organisation would censor news and telegraphic reports
from the British Army and then issue it
to the press. Lord Kitchener decided
to appoint Swinton to become the British Army's official journalist
on the Western Front. Using the pseudonym,
Eyewitness, Swinton was instructed
to write articles about what was happening on the front-line.
Swinton's reports were first censored at G.H.Q. in France and then personally
vetted by Kitchener before being released to the press.
Swinton worked to strict guidelines. He was not allowed to mention place
names or soldiers' battalions, brigades and divisions. Swinton was told
that no article could be passed for publication if it indicated that
he had seen what he had written about. He was also instructed to write
about "what he thought was true, not what he knew to be true".
When observing early battles where machine-gunners were able to kill
thousands of infantryman advancing towards enemy trenches,
Swinton wrote that a "petrol tractors on the caterpillar principle
and armoured with hardened steel plates" would be able to counteract
the machine-gunner.
Swinton's proposal that the British Army
should build what he called a tank
were rejected by General Sir John French
and his scientific advisers. Unwilling to accept defeat, Swinton contacted
Colonel Maurice Hankey who took the idea
to Winston Churchill, the navy minister.
Churchill was impressed by Swinton's views and in February 1915, he
set up a Landships Committee to look in more detail at the proposal
to develop a new war machine.
The Landships Committee and the newly-formed Inventions Committee agreed
with Swinton's proposal and drew up specifications for this new machine.
This included: (1) a top speed of 4 mph on flat ground; (2) the capability
of a sharp turn at top speed; (3) a reversing capability; (4) the ability
to climb a 5-foot earth parapet; (6) the ability to cross a 8-foot gap;
(7) a vehicle that could house ten crew, two machine guns and a 2-pound
gun.
Eventually Lieutenant W. G. Wilson of the Naval Air Service and William
Tritton of William Foster & Co. Ltd. of Lincoln, were given the
task of producing a small landship. The first prototype landship, nicknamed
Little Willie, was demonstrated to Swinton
and the Landship Committee on 11th September, 1915.
After the First World War Swinton became Professor
of Military History at Oxford University (1925-39). He also wrote a
book, Eyewitness (1932) about his
experiences in the war. Ernest Swinton died in 1951.
Wikipedia:
Ernest Swinton
Ernest
Swinton:
Spartacus Biography
Ernest
Swinton: History Learning Site
Forum
Debates
War
Propaganda Bureau
Ernest
Swinton
(1)
In his book Eyewitness, Ernest Swinton explained how he became
the official reporter on the war.
Discontent
now became so great at the unnecessary state of ignorance in which the
nation was being kept that it was decided to compromise with a half-measure.
War correspondents were not allowed at the front, but their place was
to be taken by some appointed officer.
The principle which guided me in my work was above all to avoid helping
the enemy. They appeared to me even more important than the purveyance
of news to our own people. For home consumption - that is for those
who were carrying the burden and footing the bill - I essayed to tell
as much of the truth as was compatible with safety, to guard against
depression and pessimism, and to check unjustified optimism which might
lead to a relaxation of effort.
(2)
Ernest Swinton, official report distributed to the British press on
the offensive at Neuve Chapelle (15th March,
1915)
At
7.30 a.m. on the 10th the battle began with a bombardment by large numbers
of guns and howitzers. Our men in the trenches describe this fire as
being the most tremendous both on point of noise and in actual effect
they have ever seen or heard. The shrieking of the shells in the air,
their explosions and the continuous thunder of the batteries all merged
into one great volume of sound. The discharges of the guns were so rapid
that they sounded like the fire of a gigantic machine-gun. During the
35 minutes it continued our men could show themselves freely and even
walk about, in perfect safety.
Then the signal for the attack was given, and in less than half an hour
almost the whole of the elaborate series of German trenches in and about
Neuve Chapelle were in our hands. Except at one point there was hardly
any resistance, for the trenches, which is places were literally blotted
out, were filled with dead and dying partially buried in earth and debris,
and the majority of the survivors were in no mood for further fighting.