An extraordinary account of Oxford’s role in the Second World War.
Oxford played a unique part in the national endeavor to defend Britain in the Second World War. Thanks to its proximity to London, the city provided an alternative base for civil servants from the Ministry of Food, the Foreign Office, the Ministry of Home Security, the Ministry of Information, and the Ministry of Works. The Admiralty, the War Office, the Air Ministry, MI5, and Bletchley Park all also had a presence in Oxford. Colleges became military hospitals, evacuee centers, and both cadet and senior officer schools. Students fit for active service took shortened degree courses and underwent military training while they studied. Grassy quadrangles were converted into vegetable plots and the New Bodleian Library provided underground storage for treasures from Parliament and national museums.
Drawing on first-hand narratives and the University of Oxford’s archival material, this pioneering account reveals the essential role Oxford played in producing military intelligence, creating propaganda, and developing radar and the atomic bomb. It also explores how the university provided sanctuary for academics fleeing fascism who in turn made significant contributions in their fields of expertise, painting an astonishing picture of the war’s profound impact on an ancient seat of learning.
408 pages | 35 color plates, 10 halftones | 6.14 x 9.21 | © 2024
History: British and Irish History, Military History
Table of Contents
Introduction
1. A Tour Round Town
2. Of University and Colleges
3. Rising Fascism, Approaching war
4. Conscription and Requisitioning
5. Living Under Requisition
6. Threat, Worry and Evacuation
7. In Wartime Oxford
8. Undergraduates at War
9. Dons at War
10. Intelligence, Science and Medicine
11. The Post-War World
A Note on Sources
Abbreviations and Acronyms
Notes
Bibliography
Acknowledgements
Picture Credits
Index
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