Author name: Brett Holman

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

1940s, After 1950, Books, Cold War, Film, Nuclear, biological, chemical, Reviews

Abolishing the Taboo

Brian Madison Jones. Abolishing the Taboo: Dwight D. Eisenhower and American Nuclear Doctrine, 1945-1961. (Solihull: Helion & Company, 2011). I found Brian Jones’s Abolishing the Taboo interesting for two reasons. Firstly, the subject matter: the Cold War fear of nuclear war was the successor to the interwar fear of strategic bombing. Secondly, it’s the book […]

1940s, Civil defence, Periodicals, Pictures

Air raid precautions

MRS. MARY COUCHMAN, twenty-four-year-old warden in a small Kentish village, sat smoking a cigarette in the wardens’ post. She was resting between warnings. Suddenly the sirens sounded again. She saw her little boy, with two friends, playing some distance away. The cigarette still in her hand, Mrs. Couchman ran out of the post. Bombs began

1910s, Contemporary, Periodicals

Nothing more than an experiment

Today is the one-hundredth anniversary of the first use of an aeroplane for aerial bombardment. I’ve already written about the longer context of Libya’s history of bombing (to which can be added NATO’s air campaign, which coincidentally enough has just ended), but here’s where it all began, at Ain Zara on 1 November 1911: A

Acquisitions, Books

Acquisitions

Brian Madison Jones. Abolishing the Taboo: Dwight D. Eisenhower and American Nuclear Doctrine 1945-1961 (Solihull: Helion & Company, 2011). Argues that Eisenhower worked to normalise nuclear weapons in both the American arsenal and the American consciousness. This early period of the Cold War, when the bomb took over from the bomber as the threat to

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