Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The War at Home & Food Shortages
- Defence of the Realm Act (DORA) - August 1914
- Two aims:
- 1) Make sure the country had
enough resources to fight the war
- 2) Make sure British people were in a
fit state to fight/support the war effort
- The law allowed the government to:
- Introduce conscription
- Take control of vital industries
- Take over 2.5 million
acres of land and buildings
- Bring in British Summer Time (more
daylight = more working hours)
- Control drinking hours and alcohol strenght
- Stop people talking about the
war or spreading rumours
- Censor newspapers
- Enforce rationing
- Volunteering
- Men rushed to volunteer - they
thought it would be 'over by
Christmas' and an adventure
- By 1915, causalities went up
while volunteers went down
- Not enough soldiers!
- A feeling of unfairness began to grow about
some men avoided military duty in Britain
- Conscription introduced - 1916
- All single men aged 18-40 had to fight
- When there weren't enough soldiers,
married men had to sign up too
- Conscientious Objectors - people
who didn't believe in fighting
- Sent to prison and seen as traitors
- Some agreed to non-violent war work
- Women did 'Men's Jobs'
- Shortage of workers in heavy industries, like coal mining
- Women took over to help!
- German U-boats
- Britain imported food from the United States and Empire countries
- Germans used U-boats (submarines) to attack shipping
around Britain, making it impossible to import food
- Lloyd George took three steps to
solve the food shortage:
- 1) Navy Convoys
- Before the convoy system, 25% of merchant
ships coming into Britain were sunk
- Convoy system - merchant ships
travelled in groups and were escorted
by Royal Navy ships as protection
- U-boats couldn't attack as easily
- 2) Compulsory Rationing - 1918
- Was previously voluntary
- Rationing coupons - were handed over
when buying beer, butter, sugar or meat
- Some hoarded food out of fear
and increasing prices
- Black market - sold later on
- No-one starved
- The government had never been this
involved in people's daily lives before
- 3) Britain grew more food
- Farmers encouraged to buy more land = more food
- Women's Land Army - 1917
- Big labour force available to work on the farms