Description - Sand, Planes and Submarines by Paul Brown
How a small market town provided the means to beat the Germans in the First World War. The Prince of Wales and the nobility came to hunt in this rural town before the First World War. Once hostilities began Leighton Buzzard was transformed into a chief supply line for the armed forces and it became a vast transit camp. This book relates how Leighton Buzzard played a vital part in the war effort. The carriage works were converted into an aircraft factory where the country's first bomber, the Vimy, was built. Sand was quarried in large quantities so guns could be forged for the western front, and submarine nets were produced in their hundreds. The book also contains many interesting accounts such as the story of Bluebell, the post office horse that went to the Middle East and took part in the last successful cavalry charge. AUTHORS: Paul Brown has been a journalist for 50 years and worked for the last 30 at the Guardian. He is currently co-editor at Climate News Network, an internet news service for journalists. He is a Fellow of Wolfson College, Cambridge and the Royal Geographical Society. He has won awards for investigative and environmental journalism, and is Chairman of the Leighton Buzzard and District Archaeological and Historical Society. Delia Gleave is an active local historian and member of the Historical Society. 110 b/w illustrations
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