Gary Mead : The Young Bernard Montgomery and the First World War (1914)
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
Ranking only behind Churchill in the pantheon of Britain's WW2 heroes is Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery or 'Monty'. In this episode the biographer Gary Mead takes us back to 1914 to catch a glimpse of Monty as a young soldier at the start of his first war.
Montgomery, Mead explains, was a complicated character. While admired by his men and celebrated for his great victory at El Alamein in 1942, he was nonetheless loathed by many of those who worked with him. In later years he went to great efforts to distort his personal story, often restorting to brazen falsehoods. Why he did this, Mead elaborates, remains a mystery.
One constant throughout his life was Monty's love of a battle. After a childhood spent in British public schools and distant parts of the Empire, in 1914 his chance for some fighting arrived. Like many in that fateful summer of 1914, he dashed across the Channel to confront the Germans.
Find out more about Gary Mead's Montgomery: Unbeatable, Unbearable.
Show NotesScene One: August 1914. Great Scotland Yard Recruiting Office, London.
Scene Two: 23 August 1914. The Battle of Mons.
Scene Three: Christmas Day 1914. The Truce at Neuve Chapelle.
Memento: A brass button from a German uniform.
People/SocialPresenter: Peter Moore
Guest: Gary Mead
Producer: Maria Nolan
Theme music: Firelight by Minka
Partner: ACE Cultural Tours.