Thousands of British soldiers lie in cemeteries clustered around the battle sites of the First World War. Many of these volunteered for war, not realising trench warfare would be far from a grand adventure, nor that they would never return home. But not all of these were killed by the enemy. Over 3,000 soldiers were sentenced to death by Army Law, for desertion or other petty crimes, and more than 300 of these were blindfolded and shot by their own battalion. Many of the 'men' were still teenagers, and faced judgement in a time where shell shock was seen as an excuse for cowardice. They were branded traitors, their deaths covered up and their names forbidden from memorials. Only in 2006, nearly 100 years later, were they finally pardoned. Robert King was part of the campaign to pardon these forgotten men. Here he touches on the lives of fifteen Welshmen history has tried to ignore, and explores what it really meant to be led out and shot at dawn.
Robert's Rules of Order
Robert King
bookShopify
Robert King
bookShot at Dawn: The Fifteen Welshmen Executed by the British Army in the First World War
Robert King
bookThe Pick-Up Game : The proven way to become skilled at approaching and dating women
Robert King
bookI scream, you scream, we all scream for Ice Cream
Howard Johnson, Robert King, Billy Moll
bookI scream, you scream, we all scream for Ice Cream
Howard Johnson, Robert King, Billy Moll
book