Date of Award
5-2025
Degree Type
Masters Thesis
Degree Name
Master of Arts (MA)
School
Humanities
Committee Chair
Dr. Andrew Wiest
Committee Chair School
Humanities
Committee Member 2
Dr. Katya Maslakowski
Committee Member 2 School
Humanities
Committee Member 3
Dr. Joseph Peterson
Committee Member 3 School
Humanities
Abstract
This thesis will look at the immense backlog of war diaries, journals, personal letters, government documentation, and oral histories left behind by British tank crewmen of the First World War. The purpose of this investigation is mainly to uncover the reasons that individuals were chosen for transferal into the Royal Tank Regiment, where they were transferred from, what their training consisted of before their deployment, and their combat history once they were sent into the battlefields on the Western Front. The goal of this project is to gauge the reaction to the emergence of this crucially important technology on a personal level, specifically from those who had to work in and around them during World War One. This thesis is a probe into the new and unique relation between man and machine that the First World War created.
One of the key findings of this investigation is the unique way that class relations in the British Army were altered by the emergence of mechanized warfare. Working-class soldiers were given significantly more agency through the tank corps, and were able to engage in the sorts of tactical education and decision-making that beforehand would have been reserved for the upper-class corps of officers, as was the case with the infantry. This thesis finds that the training of these tank crewmen and their individual actions and newfound agency in mechanized forces contributed decisively to how well thesis vehicles performed in the field, and how they were remembered after the war had concluded.
ORCID ID
0009-0002-1139-9988
Copyright
Lucas C. Campbell, 2025
Recommended Citation
Campbell, Lucas C., "Those Magnificent Men in their Fighting Machines: An Investigation into the Lives of WWI Tankmen" (2025). Master's Theses. 1097.
https://aquila.usm.edu/masters_theses/1097
Included in
European History Commons, History of Science, Technology, and Medicine Commons, Military History Commons, Oral History Commons