Reconstruction planning and the small town in early post‐war Britain

2008 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 291-321 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter J. Larkham ◽  
John Pendlebury
1967 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 215-219 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. J. Johnston
Keyword(s):  

Sowiniec ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 27 (49) ◽  
pp. 101-160
Author(s):  
Anna Radecka

Following the Footsteps of the Soldiers of the Jędrzejów District of the Home Army in the Years 1939-1956. Part 1: The Conspiracy in KarolówkaThe family of Przemysław Janoff (Janów), a forester and administrator of the forests and goods of the landowner Górski family, has lived since 1936 in Motkowice, a small town located 14 km east of Jędrzejów. The forest lodge Karolówka became a center of underground activity during the German occupation. Przemysław Janoff, codename „Stary”, together with his son Sergiusz, codename „Set”, soldiers of the Union of Armed Struggle, and later of the Home Army, acted in the intelligence, sabotage and reception of airdrop. They also organized transfers, stored weapons, and conducted radio monitoring. In the forest lodge, secret classes were organized and people sought by the Gestapo were protected. An unknown part of the family’s activity was the action of helping Jews by creating the first link of the „chain of life”. The Janoff family hid Jews from the Jędrzejów ghetto, who, after a short stay in hiding, were later transported to safe places. The aid campaign for the Jewish doctor Hirsch Beer in Jędrzejów was the only one mentioned in historical literature. Since 1943 Sergiusz Janoff „Set” carried out the underground tasks together with Andrzej Ropelewski, codename „Karaś”, and in 1944, when participating in the armed actions of a sabotage group, he met with brothers Wesołowski - Leszek, codename „Strzała” and Wiesiek, codename „Orzeł”, guerillas from the „Barabasz” and later the „Spaleni” group. Common experiences made young people friends for the rest of their lives. The basic thread of the article is the story of four friends shown against the background of the underground and armed activities of the poviat level of the Home Army. Mentioning the details of the biographies of the protagonists and many other characters aims to convey the realities of the underground everyday life and the atmosphere of the German occupation. A study of the characters, attitudes and choices of Home Army soldiers during the war gives rise to reflection on their fate in post-war Poland. This article is therefore a fragment of a larger undertaking and aims at initiating a cycle of publications. Unknown facts and those already described which required verification were examined on the basis of new historical sources and re-analysis of the already known ones.


Urban History ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 183-205 ◽  
Author(s):  
PETER J. LARKHAM ◽  
KEITH D. LILLEY

This article reviews an unusual and subtle form of place promotion, that contained in the series of British post-war reconstruction plans produced up to c. 1952. These were not explicitly designed as place-promotional literature, and we suggest that they should be seen as subverse promotion of towns and cities, as well as vehicles for civic boosterism. Evidence of this is discussed with respect to the production of these plans, for example in the commissioning of eminent and expensive consultants; in the texts of plans; and in the often striking and colourful imagery used.


Author(s):  
Donald Davidson

This chapter is a review of William Faulkner's novel, Soldiers' Pay, arguing that it reveals Faulkner as a “sensitive, observant person with a fine power of objectifying his own and other people's emotions...” Soldiers' Pay is the story of of a wounded aviator who returned home to a small town in Georgia following the conclusion of World War I. The text here claims that Soldiers' Pay is superior to to John Dos Passos's Soldiers Three, because it delves deeper into human nature. Faulkner's title indicated the irony which he discovers in the post-war situation, that irony familiar to returned soldiers, who came back to discover life moving as casually as ever in its old grooves, and people as much untouched by the war as by polar exploration. The text concludes by describing Soldiers' Pay as “a powerful book, done with careful artistry and with great warmth of feeling”.


Urban History ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 437-461 ◽  
Author(s):  
STEPHEN ESSEX ◽  
MARK BRAYSHAY

ABSTRACTThe retreat from bold reconstruction planning in Britain's blitzed cities is now well established, although there are two notable exceptions: Coventry and Plymouth. While the circumstances in Coventry have been fully researched, the narrative in Plymouth remains untold. The aim of this article is therefore to evaluate the main formal measures required to embark on the comprehensive redevelopment of Plymouth's heavily blitzed core area and whether, despite Whitehall's failure to deliver the necessary legal and administrative powers in a timely and co-ordinated manner, the city maintained its faith in bold plans and planners.


2011 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 159-194
Author(s):  
Piotr Zubowski

 In her narrative Bronisława Guza (born in 1929) talks about the life of her family in Obertyn – a small town in the former Stanisławów province – starting from 1930s and WW2 period, to the post-war years when she came to Lower Silesia. In her recollections she describes places that played an important role in the town’s life: Saints Peter and Paul’s church and priests serving in it, a convent belonging to the Congregation of the Servants of the Holiest Virgin Mary of the Immaculate Conception from Stara Wieś, along with an orphanage run by the nuns (which she used to attend as a child), the market square on market days, various shops, houses, a mound made to commemorate the battle of Obertyn in 1531, as well as a cross standing on its top. She tells us about relations between Obertyn’s inhabitants: Poles, Ukrainians and Jews – how they established and maintained close bonds, together celebrated holidays and weddings, participated in funerals, and so on – and about mutual respect for other denominations and customs. Bronisława Guza’s story of WW2 contains recollections of the Soviet and German occupations, circumstances of the Soviet re-entering at the end of March and at the beginning of April 1944, and of the activity of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists on these territories. The key moment for this time in history was in 1945, when a vast majority of the Polish community of Obertyn was resettled to the Western Territories. Bronisława Guza and her family ended up in Siedlce near Oława, where initially she lived together with the German, evangelical community of the village. The inhabitants settled down in the new place and tried to adapt to the new life conditions.


2013 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 225-265
Author(s):  
Marcelina Jakimowicz

In the latter half of 1941, over 100,000 Polish children lived in an area extending from Arkhangelsk to Nakhodka Bay; in the Altai Krai and the Soviet Socialist Republics of Central Asia. Among them there were a growing number of orphans in exile. There is no detailed information concerning the fate of these Polish orphans, who were placed into Soviet instructional and educational institutions, so-called “diet domy”. Most of the institutions taking in Polish children treated them as Soviet citizens but did not report this fact to any Polish institutions responsible for their care and wellbeing. Moreover, given their ‘Soviet’ status, the orphans had neither the right nor the occasion to contact the Polish embassy in Kujbiszew or any of its representatives. And for the younger children, their stay in these so-called “diet domy” usually resulted in instant Russification and Sovietisation. Irena Mrówczyńska’s account describes her childhood memories of pre-war Kowel, the children in exile in Siberia who were taken from summer camps in June 1941 and about post-war times in Jawor, a small town in Lower Silesia. Her story is exceptional because she grew up in exile. She was taken from school without her parents’ consent, put into the Soviet “diet dom” in Bojarka along with other children, before later being sent to the Polish Orphanage and Disabled People’s Home in Bolszoj Konstantinovce, where she spent 6 years. A twist of fate enabled her to contact the Polish embassy in Kujbiszew and report that there were other children in the Polish Orphanage and Disabled People’s Home that had also been “taken” from the summer camps in 1941. This account describes how traumatic the “kidnapping of children from the summer camps” was, resulting in the then 10-year-old girl being sent to the Soviet children’s home and the subsequent indoctrination of Sovietisation that thereafter influenced the rest of her life.


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