HMS Birkenhead

The Shipwreck That Created "Women and Children First"
212 Seiten, Taschenbuch
€ 18,70
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Kurzbeschreibung des Verlags

In 1852, HMS Birkenhead struck rock off the coast of South Africa and began to sink into the dark water.She was carrying soldiers, crew, women, children, and dependants toward the Cape, part of Britain's vast imperial military network. But when the troopship was fatally damaged, the voyage became something far more enduring than a maritime accident.The boats could not save everyone.In the chaos that followed, women and children were given the first chance of escape while soldiers were ordered to stand fast. Many of those men remained on deck as the ship failed beneath them, preserving order when panic might have destroyed the evacuation. Their discipline became famous as the "Birkenhead drill," later remembered through the phrase "women and children first."HMS Birkenhead: The Shipwreck That Created "Women and Children First" tells the full story of the ship, the voyage, the Cape route, the strike, the evacuation, the soldiers on deck, the survivors, and the legend that followed.This book examines not only the courage remembered from the wreck, but also the harder questions beneath it: imperial movement, military discipline, inadequate lifeboat provision, gendered codes of protection, survivor memory, and the way societies turn disaster into moral example.The Birkenhead did not shape history by deciding a war or changing a map. She shaped history by creating a code.When survival was scarce, the strong were expected to stand back.