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Conscription and Conscientious Objectors

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Conscription and Conscientious Objectors Aims: The reasons why conscription was introduced. Why some men were exempt from conscription. The treatment of conscientious ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Conscription and Conscientious Objectors


1
Conscription and Conscientious Objectors
2
Aims
  • The reasons why conscription was introduced.
  • Why some men were exempt from conscription.
  • The treatment of conscientious objectors during
    the war.

3
Conscription
  • Britain entered the war with a volunteer army of
    90,000 men. In the first year of the war over 2
    million men volunteered to join the army.
  • By 1915 high casualty rates and a drop in
    volunteers led the government to introduce
    conscription in 1916.
  • Conscription is when a government introduces
    compulsory military service.
  • At first this new law applied to unmarried men
    between the ages of 18-41 but within six months
    it was extended to married men as well.

4
Exemptions
  • Some categories of men
  • could apply to be exempt
  • from this new law.
  • Carried out a job vital to the war effort.
  • Religious beliefs
  • Moral grounds

5
Conscientious Objectors
  • Some men totally refused to be conscripted.
  • They were called conscientious objectors or
    conchies because their conscience would not
    allow them to fight there were 16,000 in total.
  • Some refused for religious reasons, political
    reasons and others argued that they were
    pacifists.
  • They would have to face a special court called a
    Tribunal and convince the court of their beliefs.

6
  • People regarded conscientious objectors as
    cowards and even at the end of the war they were
    despised and often found it difficult to get a
    job.
  • Most of them were prepared to accept
    non-combatant duties e.g. stretchers bearers,
    drivers etc.
  • They often faced the same dangers as those
    fighting in the trenches.

7
Absolutists
  • Some conscientious objectors refused to help the
    war effort in any way.
  • They were shown no sympathy by Military
    Tribunals.
  • Around 6,261 were sent to prison or labour camps.
  • Conditions were harsh inmates were beaten, kept
    in solitary confinement, thrown into wooden cages
    and pits in the ground.
  • Some went on hunger strike to protest but they
    never won round public sympathy.

8
Absolutists
  • Around 1,500 absolutists were sent to the Western
    Front for active service.
  • If they refused to obey orders they could be
    court-martialled.
  • Field Punishment Number One involved the offender
    being attached to a fixed object for up to two
    hours a day for a period of up to three months.
  • Men who suffered this punishment were sometimes
    put in a place within range of enemy fire.

9
Group Task Conchie Cartoon
  • Study the cartoon carefully and answer the
  • questions which follow
  • Who does the man in the chair represent? How do
    we know this?
  • Describe what the man in the chair is doing.
  • Who else do you see in the cartoon?
  • What are they wearing?
  • What does this cartoon tells us about peoples
    attitudes towards conscientious objectors?

10
A cartoon produced by Frank Holland during the war
This Little Pig Stayed at Home
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