Before the Main Game: Australia’s Citizen Infantry Battalion Commanders before the First World War

Author(s):  
William Westerman

This article explores officer capability and culture of the Australian army before the First World War, in particular those officers who held infantry battalion commands. Although the men who served in Australia’s part-time citizen army as infantry battalion commanders showed dedication and enthusiasm for soldiering, they were under-developed as infantry commanders, owing to time constraints and general under-investment in officer education and training. Officers who became battalion commanders were also relatively old, and their rise through the ranks was facilitated more by social position, rather than competence or experience. As a result, those Citizen Forces battalion commanders who enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force largely failed to carry out commands effectively in wartime, an indictment on the state of the Australian Army before the First World War.

1975 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-59 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Savigear

Bernard Bosanquet spent the First World War at his cottage in Oxshott, in Surrey, and from here he measured the implications of the conflict for his philosophy of the state. The result of this reflection is available to us in the letters which he wrote during the war, and a variety of lectures and papers. His ideas, therefore, have a general interest to students of international theory.


Geophysics ◽  
1950 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 395-399 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew Gilmour

The application of physics to the search for minerals and especially for petroleum began in earnest after the first World War. As Weatherby has stated in his excellent paper on The History and Development of Seismic Prospecting (1940) “the stage had been carefully set and the players were ready to perform their new roles as prospectors.” Minthrop in Germany and Karcher, Hasemann, Eckhardt, and McCullom in this country were considering the use of artificial seismic waves in finding oil‐bearing structure. Ferdinand Suess in Hungary was building Eötvös torsion balances and the Askania Company in Germany was constructing torsion balances and magnetometers.


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