1. Legislation issued in response to the
war: e.g. DORA, Conscription Act,Rationing
16 000 conscientious
objector- only allowed if
could prove religious
membership i.e. Quakers
October 1915: Derby Scheme-
national register of everyone
aged 15-65 with job details and
age
January 1916: Conscription
for single men from 18-41
May 1916: Married men now the same
April 1918: All men 18-51
DORA 8th August 1914: Licensing hours introduced to pubs,
newspapers and radio broadcasts censored, food
rationed, beer was diluted, BST introduced, mines
and railways taken over by the government
The government took over land and used
it for farm production. This ensured
there was enough food to feed the public
and the army, despite German U-Boat
attacks.
Seemed like people generally accepted
DORA but others see it as very
dictatorial
Was a governmental response to
the issue of internal enemies and
spies and as a way of getting
everyone behind the war effort
5. Impact of war in terms of casualties/deaths, impact
upon the economy, social changes e.g. women in the
workplace, industrial agitation during the war (and
government response) i.e. impact on trade unionism
745 000 killed, 1.6
million seriously
injured
Society had to organised so
that all resources were
channeled into the war effort
Back in Britain, 1413
killed in air raids
Britain incurred debts equivalent to 136% of its gross
national product, and its major creditor, the USA,
began to emerge as the world's strongest economy
Britain more democratic- before, under-represented
groups such as women and working class became better
organised and more powerful during the war which
encouraged the growth of less deferential attitudes, as
did the cross-class experiences of the trenches
High percentage of casualties among the landed classes, and the strict class hierarchy of
Edwardian Britain disappeared in the immediate post-war years. Although the working class
became a more powerful political force, it shrank numerically. Growing numbers of the working
population in inter-war Britain were employed in 'white collar' jobs (professional, managerial,
or administrative work)
The First World War thus marked an important
staging post on the road to 'modern' British society
The government worked with
the trade unions to prevent
strikes
Civilian casualties - 57
zeppelin bombing raids
after 1915, and the
German navy shelled
Hartlepool, Whitby and
Scarborough
2. Suffragettes and suffragist movement campaigns
and attitudes towards war
July 1915: WSPU organised a massive
rally to demonstrate that women now
support the war effort
Due to the rally, Mrs Pankhurst
met with DLG (minster of
munitions) to demand a fuller
part in the war
Agreements reached: WSPU would suspend their
demand for female suffrage for the time being, women
would be allowed into virtually all forms of
unemployment including munitions production, fair
minimum wage rates would be set, on certain types fo
work where pay was determined by output- women
would receive equal pay to men
Women's Land Army set up due to
severe shortage of labour, approx
80 0000 women took part
Paved the way for more equal rights for women, including more women
working after the war and even the first female MP in the early 1920s
3. Reasons why the ROPA of 1918 was passed and to what
extent this represented a move towards universal
suffrage-likely effects?
Need for franchise reform anyway-
regarding living conditions which would
leave returning soldiers disenfranchised
DLG in power- more
sympathetic than Asquith
Coalition government
removed worries about
political gains
Greater pressure to follow
the international trend
ROPA increased electorate to
about 21 million- 8.4 million
were women
Britain shocked by Russian
Revolution violence- could it risk such
a social disorder here? If the
suffragettes restarted thier
campaign, where would it end?
General assumption is that the act was a ‘reward’ for the vital
work done by women during World War One. Before the war,
society had been suitably angered and horrified by the acts of the
Suffragettes – arson, vandalism, attacking politicians, the Derby of
1913 etc.
4. Impact of the Spanish flu 1918
Not caused by WW1 but
thought that it was
spread by soldiers
returning home from
trenches in N. France
Spread from railway stations to
centre of cities to suburbs to
countryside
Hit the UK hardest at end of WW1
20-30 year olds
particularly affected
disease struck and progressed
quickly in these cases
50 million died worldwide and 1/4 of
British Empire affected. British Death
toll 228, 000