Grimsby in the Great War
By Stephen Wade
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About this ebook
Stephen Wade
Stephen Wade is a biographer and social historian, usually associated with crime and law, but here he turns his attention to a place he has known for forty years, as he has lived and worked in Scunthorpe all that time. His most recent books have been "Going to Extremes", "The Justice Women" and three volumes in the "Your Town in the Great War" series (all Pen & Sword), and :No More Soldiering" (Amberley).
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Grimsby in the Great War - Stephen Wade
Introduction
On 29 June 1914, Wilfred Scawen Blunt wrote to his friend: ‘There has been another assassination, this time of the heir of the Austrian Emperor. I do not quite know how it affects the political situation.’ Blunt was not alone in that ignorance. The event was to trigger a massive world war, and the towns on Britain’s east coast were to experience some of the results of that event, just as much as the great cities of Europe were to do. In one sense, something far more significant than the ‘political situation’ was the result – the death of almost 10 million fighting men from all participant armies and more than 956,000 British dead.
There are so many different ways to see and try to understand the Great War and how and why it began, but perhaps there is something in Austrian writer and journalist Stefan Zweig’s opinion, as he wrote his memoirs in 1940:
If today, thinking it over calmly, we wonder why Europe went to war in 1914, there is not one sensible reason to be found, nor even any real occasion for the war. … I can explain it only, thinking of that excess of power, by seeing it as a tragic consequence of the internal dynamism that had built up during those forty years of peace, and now demanded release.
Whatever the truth or validity of such arguments put forward by people who were alive at the time of the war, the fact is that Europeans, and indeed people of the former British Empire from all over the globe, are left with family memoirs, pictures and oral history relating to that great conflict. There may be a mass of evidence and memorabilia, and stories have been handed down in their millions, but essentially, the strongest material is that of the home and the locality. The Great War might have been a global conflict but it was also a conglomeration of local history stories, every place having its own heroes, its own sacrifices and its own memorials, from the photos in the attic to the lists of those who died chiselled into stone monuments.
During the first twelve days after the announcement that Britain had declared war on Germany, the diarist W.N.P. Barbellion wrote just three entries: ‘All Europe is mobilising. … Will England join in? … We all await the result of a battle between two millions of men. The tension makes me physically sick.’ Normally, he had a lot to write in his diary, but like almost everyone in Britain after that declaration of war on 4 August, he could think of nothing else, and he imagined something on a huge scale – a war that was encroaching on every area of life. It was to be called the Great War, and as I write this, a century has passed since that fateful beginning, yet the memorials and the ceremonies keep that massive conflict in our minds with a mix of horror and pride.
On that 4 August, the Daily Mail front-page headline stated the fact boldly: ‘GREAT BRITAIN MOBILISES TODAY’. King George V stood on the balcony at Buckingham Palace and waved to a crowd of 10,000 people, and those people remained there all day. From that point on, there was violent and widespread ill feeling expressed against Germany, and in consequence there was a rising tide of anti-German opinion that led to attacks on shops owned by Germans or those that may only have had a German-sounding name.
The professional army at the outbreak of war was organized in terms of an army in India and one at home; the result of military reforms in the late Victorian years. The army at home had a strength of 138,000 men, with another 146,000 in the Reserves. In addition, there was the Territorial Force of about 251,000 men. Britain’s supremacy throughout the nineteenth century had been in her navy, and there had been an intensifying rivalry between the British and German navies since the unification of Germany in 1870. But Britain had developed the feared Dreadnought class of battleships, and had twenty-nine of those in 1914, along with another forty active older class of battleships, and large numbers of cruisers, small cruisers and destroyers.
The Great Central Railway steamers – some of which were taken and held in Germany at the outbreak of war. Grimsby Central Library.
Grimsby, as had always been recognized, was in an ideal position with regard to travel to and from Europe, yet it also had what we would now call a global reach. A handbook from 1890 states: ‘From Grimsby docks to Hamburg, Rotterdam, and Antwerp, vessels depart every Wednesday and Saturday evening. … Three large steamships are regularly engaged in trading between this port and the West Indies.’ That geographical position, together with that old seafaring tradition and expertise, made Grimsby a place of special importance in 1914.
People in Grimsby were soon to feel that same mix of fear and excitement that Barbellion had reflected in his diary: by the second week of September that year the Grimsby Telegraph announced: ‘Important notice to athletes and others. A Chums battalion in Grimsby and district.’ The word ‘chums’ evoked in the young men of the town the kind of adventure and camaraderie they had read about since their boyhood in popular boys’ stories. In Denis Healey’s autobiography, he writes, ‘My love for the sentimental patriotism of Buchan and Newbolt was a natural legacy of the First World War, and was fed by the boys’ magazines I read – above all the enormous Chums annuals.’ There had been novels and picture stories about chums at war or at sea, across the great British Empire; now there were to be chums fighting shoulder to shoulder against the German army, across the Channel. Other adverts were even more direct. In one special publication the appeal was very direct, with these words: ‘Serve your country by joining the above battalion with your friends. You are wanted!! Enlistment for the war, age nineteen to thirty-five or forty-five in the case of ex-servicemen.’ There was even the added inducement of ‘A hutted camp is to be built near Grimsby and preliminary training will be carried out there.’
Grimsby, facing Europe, soon felt that it was close to the action. As early as 6 August, HMS Amphion was sunk in the North Sea, and by the end of that first month, there had been naval engagements at the Heligoland Bight. Barely had war been announced before this maritime importance was vividly brought home in Grimsby when two German spies were seen and pursued in the town. One press report described what happened after a sentry at the Admiralty wireless station at Waltham saw two men acting suspiciously:
They were apparently trying to cut the pipes supplying the current. The sentry immediately challenged them, whereupon both men ran away. The alarm was raised and the guard turned out. After an exciting chase one of the suspects managed to get away, but the other was caught. During the struggle Private Filbert was injured in the leg with a bayonet and was taken to Grimsby Hospital for treatment.
The captured spy was standing before the magistrate the next day.
As those first events of the war grabbed the attention, what was Grimsby like? A map of the town and the Humber published in 1908 shows how small Great Grimsby and Cleethorpes were compared to their expanse today. In the 1911 Census, the population was recorded as being 74,659. It was a boom town in many respects, as so many of the industries there were expanding, and there was a regular flow of emigrants from Europe, most on their way to Liverpool, partly as a result of the Russian pogroms against Jewish settlements and also from the natural desire for poor people in Europe to contemplate a new life in America.
It was going to be a case of ‘Greater Grimsby’ being together, finding a unity. Immingham, for instance, just a few miles away, was a recently developed dock of great importance. Sam Fay, later knighted, wrote, ‘Here on the Humber we have the case of two seaports which are practically sisters … if Grimsby has flourished, the only logical conclusion to come at is that Immingham must flourish too.’ The dock had 1,000 acres, and extended 2? miles by 1 mile. The graving dock was 740 feet long and 56 feet wide.
There had been an electric tramway since 1901, and there were a number of theatres and cinemas, so the Edwardians’ typical leisure activities were catered for: listening to bands, going for walks and cycle rides, watching the ‘silents’ at the picture house and drinking in one of the seventy-nine pubs in the town. The town also had two daily newspapers. In the months before war broke out, there had been the usual events such as musical programmes put on by the 1st Lincoln Artillery Volunteers or the Grimsby Railway Servants’ Band, and if you had a night at the theatre, there was ‘everything for the ladies’ at Fred Boyers’ shop, and even more at the vast retail premises of Albert Cook on 43–45 Grimsby Road, known as ‘The Grimsby Novelty House’.
There were the great fish docks, of course, run by the Great Central Railway; there were sometimes as many as eight daily express trains to London and other cities, distributing the fish, and around the docks there were 587 steam trawlers and a small number of sailing smacks, perhaps about twenty.
Then, of course, there was the Empire. In British schoolrooms one could see the evidence that England was the centre of a vast global empire, all imperial territory was painted pink on the school maps. In 1912 there was the great Empire Fair held at the Pavilion on Wintringham Road, which was staged to raise funds for the building of a new headquarters for the Unionist Party. The event reflected the dominant passion of the Edwardians: to join together and enjoy themselves. The Fair programme announced that ‘The Women’s League now numbers no fewer than 3,000 members, whilst the Unionist Association and Club are 6,000 strong.’
In 1914, Grimsby was undoubtedly a progressive, busy, confident place to live and work, but as with virtually all large towns and cities in Britain that had played a part in the huge upheaval we know as the first Industrial Revolution, there was an underbelly: there were concerns about pollution and about public health; there had been debate about the apprenticeship system for the fishing industry, and of course there were problems linked to labour relations. On the whole, when war broke out the town was seen, at least from the seat of government, as a valuable asset to have in the great test that was to come.
Chapter One
1914: Eager for a Fight
As Grimsby’s War Work – the post-war account of its involvement in the Great War – was to point out, the town made a massive contribution to arms and manpower:
Grimsby provided about