Tea, Rum and Fags: Sustaining Tommy 1914-1918

Front Cover
The History Press, 2011 M11 8 - 192 pages
It is said that 'an army marches on its stomach', but histories of the First World War usually concentrate on its political and military aspects. The gargantuan task of keeping the British Expeditionary Force fed and watered is often overlooked, yet without adequate provision the soldiers would never have been able to fight. Tommy couldn't get enough tea, rum or fags, yet his commanders sent him bully beef and dog biscuits. But it was amazing how 2 million men did not usually go short of nourishment, although parcels from home, canteens and estaminets had a lot to do with that. Incredibly, Tommy could be in a civilised town supping beer, wine, egg and chps, and a few hours later making do with bully beef in a water-filled trench. Alan Weeks examines how the army got its food and drink and what it was like.
 

Contents

One Introduction Mutinous Mutterings
Three Tea and
Four Fags
Six Cookers
Eight Bread and Breakfast
Ten Parcels
Twelve Special Occasions
Thirteen On the Move Retreats and Advances
Fourteen On the Move Moving to and from the Trenches
Fifteen Egg and Chips in the Estaminets
Sixteen Beer and Wine
Eighteen Shops and Restaurants
Twenty Officers Food and Drink
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