The Conscientious Objector’s Wife

Letters Between Frank and Lucy Sunderland, 1916-1919

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Last edited by ImportBot
December 29, 2021 | History

The Conscientious Objector’s Wife

Letters Between Frank and Lucy Sunderland, 1916-1919

The Conscientious Objector’s Wife, edited by Kate Macdonald, is the letters of Frank and Lucy Sunderland, written during the First World War. They were English pacifists and fervent supporters of Labour politics and the Garden City movement, and loved their Letchworth home. In 1916 Frank gave himself up for arrest after refusing to join the army when military service became mandatory for his age group.

Publish Date
Publisher
Handheld Press

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Cover of: The Conscientious Objector’s Wife

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Book Details


Classifications

Library of Congress
DA574

Contributors

Editor
Kate Macdonald

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL32751674M
ISBN 13
9781999881368

Source records

Better World Books record

Work Description

The Conscientious Objector’s Wife, edited by Kate Macdonald, is the letters of Frank and Lucy Sunderland, written during the First World War. They were English pacifists and fervent supporters of Labour politics and the Garden City movement, and loved their Letchworth home. In 1916 Frank gave himself up for arrest after refusing to join the army when military service became mandatory for his age group.

While Frank was in prison, Lucy looked after their three children in Letchworth, and earned enough to keep the family afloat. She kept hens, collected insurance premiums and took in sewing. Her story is a struggle of single parenthood on the domestic Home Front, and her sturdy upholding of moral principles against war. Their letters are a compelling narrative of English working-class life, and an important record of the First World War.

The Conscientious Objector’s Wife gives contemporary evidence of events on the Letchworth Home Front: spotting airships, food rationing, hearing the London air-raids, the arrival of ‘Spanish flu’ in 1918, and the sufferings of the European civilian populations immediately after the war. It’s an enthralling book of social history. The introduction and notes explain its significance for the history of the British civilian experience of the First World War, British politics, the Garden City movement, feminism and women’s emancipation, adult and workers’ education, Quakerism and pacifism.

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December 29, 2021 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
July 7, 2021 Edited by Handheld Edited without comment.
July 7, 2021 Edited by Handheld Added new cover
July 7, 2021 Created by Handheld Added new book.