Copyright © 2018 The Author. This article explores a key debate within the British Army of the power of the regimental system over the structure of the army. It will do so by focusing on the discussions undertaken between 1927 and 1931 on the issue of allocating vacancies to the two Staff Colleges at Camberley and Quetta. It will demonstrate that the regimental system of the British Army was so ingrained as to effect the reform of a structure that had stood outside the scope of regimental influence since its formalization in 1905. In doing so, it will be argued that the existence of the attitudes created by the regimental system in senior British officers had a significant impact on the British Army’s ability to recognize the n...
The period 1902-1914 was one of great change for the British army. The experience of the South Afric...
This article critically evaluates a course that was conceived and run at the LSE by Sir Halford Mack...
The British Infantryman of the First World War hated Staff Officers more than any other supporting o...
Copyright © 2022 The Author. Between 1919 and 1939, entry to the British Army Staff College was via ...
The historiography of the First World War lacks an assessment of the role that trained staff officer...
Between 1919 and 1939, entry to the British Army Staff College was via a dual process of competitive...
The British army officer commissioned from the ranks had become a rare and politically contested phe...
The British army's officer cadet colleges of the Royal Military Academy (RMA), Woolwich, and the Roy...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...
This article aims to show the Staff College at Camberley was an elite establishment for officer trai...
Casualties during the First World War were far higher than had been anticipated in pre-war planning....
This article investigates the role played by the Royal Air Force’s Army Co- operation Command in the...
The years between the fall of Sebastopol and the outbreak of war in South Africa in 1899 witnessed ...
Expansion of the British Army through Lord Kitchener’s New Armies has dominated the historiography o...
At the outbreak of the Crimean War in 1854, Britain had only one military academy which taught Milit...
The period 1902-1914 was one of great change for the British army. The experience of the South Afric...
This article critically evaluates a course that was conceived and run at the LSE by Sir Halford Mack...
The British Infantryman of the First World War hated Staff Officers more than any other supporting o...
Copyright © 2022 The Author. Between 1919 and 1939, entry to the British Army Staff College was via ...
The historiography of the First World War lacks an assessment of the role that trained staff officer...
Between 1919 and 1939, entry to the British Army Staff College was via a dual process of competitive...
The British army officer commissioned from the ranks had become a rare and politically contested phe...
The British army's officer cadet colleges of the Royal Military Academy (RMA), Woolwich, and the Roy...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...
This article aims to show the Staff College at Camberley was an elite establishment for officer trai...
Casualties during the First World War were far higher than had been anticipated in pre-war planning....
This article investigates the role played by the Royal Air Force’s Army Co- operation Command in the...
The years between the fall of Sebastopol and the outbreak of war in South Africa in 1899 witnessed ...
Expansion of the British Army through Lord Kitchener’s New Armies has dominated the historiography o...
At the outbreak of the Crimean War in 1854, Britain had only one military academy which taught Milit...
The period 1902-1914 was one of great change for the British army. The experience of the South Afric...
This article critically evaluates a course that was conceived and run at the LSE by Sir Halford Mack...
The British Infantryman of the First World War hated Staff Officers more than any other supporting o...