Flowers of the Forest
On the brink of the First World War, Scotland was regarded throughout the British Isles as 'the workshop of the Empire'. Not only were Clyde-built ships known the world over, Scotland produced half of Britain's total production of railway equipment, and the cotton and jute industries flourished in Paisley and Dundee. In addition, Scots were a hugely important source of manpower for the colonies. Yet after the war, Scotland became an industrial and financial backwater. Emigration increased as morale slumped in the face of economic stagnation and decline. The country had paid a disproportionately high price in casualties, a result of huge numbers of volunteers and the use of Scottish battalions as shock troops in the fighting on the Western Front and Gallipoli--young men whom the novelist Ian hay called 'the vanished generation'. There was a sudden crisis of national self-confidence, leading the poet Edwin Muir to suggest in 1927 that 'the Scots are a dying race'. In the book, Trevor Royle provides the first full account of how the war changed Scotland irrevocably by exploring a wide range of themes -- the overwhelming response to the call for volunteers; the performance of Scottish military formations in 1915 and 1916; the militarisation of the Scottish homeland; the resistance to war in Glasgow and the west of Scotland; the boom in the heavy industries and the strengthening of women's role in society following on from wartime employment. One of the historical ironies of the period is that a Scottish home rule bill had passed its second reading in May 1914 but failed to find sufficient support in the post-war years. -- Inside jacket flap.