Author name: Brett Holman

Brett Holman is a historian who lives in Armidale, Australia.

Keep Calm and friends
1930s, 1940s, Blogging, tweeting and podcasting, Ephemera, Pictures, Publications, Radio

The story behind the terror behind Keep Calm And Carry On

Earlier this week I had my first article published in The Conversation, on the actual original context for the Keep Calm And Carry On poster, as opposed to the assumed original context. The Conversation is a great platform for academics to get their work and ideas out to the public, and to provide expert analysis […]

Acquisitions, Books, Music

Acquisitions

Michael North and Davy Burnaby. ‘Lords Of The Air’. Sydney: D. Davis & Co., 1939. Thanks, Bart! Frank H. Shaw. Outlaws of the Air. Glasgow: The Children’s Press, 1927. Thanks again, Bart! Shaw was a former naval officer who was also a prolific writer of war stories and science fiction aimed primarily at boys. This

Acquisitions, Books

Acquisitions

Garry Campion. The Battle of Britain, 1945-1965: The Air Ministry and the Few. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 2015. The Battle as propaganda during the war (most of the book) and memory afterwards. Includes such topics as the ‘battle of the barges’ and Churchill’s ‘The Few’ speech (Campion still thinks The Few referred to Fighter Command but

1910s, Australia, Periodicals

Australia and the airship — II

The Australian airship of New Zealander Alban Roberts seems to have had only three outings, all in 1914. The first of these was a tethered test at the Sydney Agricultural Showground on 23 June, in which the envelope was filled with hydrogen, united with the nacelle, and ‘dragged into an open space, to undergo its

Acquisitions, Books

Acquisitions

Simon Bradley. The Railways: Nation, Network and People. London: Profile Books, 2015. A social history of the British railway. Trains ain’t planes, but I’ve heard a lot of good things about this book. Keith Lovegrove. Airline: Style at 30,000 Feet. London: Laurence King, 2013. A fun little book about 20th century airline design, from advertising

Acquisitions, Books

Acquisitions

Paul K. Saint-Amour. Tense Future: Modernism, Total War, Encyclopedic Form. New York: Oxford University Press, 2015. One of those books that does that worthwhile thing of looking at familiar works in unfamiliar ways. For most readers that will probably mean Virginia Woolf or James Joyce, but in my case it’s more the airpower prophets I

zeppelin+rumour, daily, normalised, smoothed
1910s, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Plots and tables, Tools and methods

The airship panic of 1915 — VI

So I half-promised a final post in this series about the airship panic of 1915. There are a couple of methodological points I’d like to make. The first point is that this is an unusually well-attested panic. There are panics with more sources, but not with so many different kinds of sources. Here, there are

1910s, Grants, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Publications, Rumours

On the utility of rumours in wartime

Rumours have a bad reputation, especially in wartime. They are at best unreliable, at worst flat-out lies. They are distractions from the war effort, if not actually undermining it. They can create unreasoning suspicion and fear or equally unjustified hope and optimism. In short, nothing good comes from them. Unless you’re a historian, of course.

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