Re: History thread
Posted: Mon Jun 03, 2024 2:28 pm
Durham and York are both very good. Cambridge is good, obviously, but it is a different lifestyle choice.C69 wrote: Sun Jun 16, 2024 8:28 pm My daughter is looking to do a degree in History.
Current choices, with crazy grade boundaries are
Cambridge Durham York and Lancaster
Any advice etc
I note the mandated personal statement from Oxbridge being wholly subject related nods to the other Unis.
Sorry but I can't think of anywhere else that is as knowledgeable as here.
Advice regarding colleges etc would be good
First visit yesterday to Durham was good
Thanks in advance. Would really appreciated inputq
salanya wrote: Sun Jun 16, 2024 8:40 pmDurham and York are both very good. Cambridge is good, obviously, but it is a different lifestyle choice.C69 wrote: Sun Jun 16, 2024 8:28 pm My daughter is looking to do a degree in History.
Current choices, with crazy grade boundaries are
Cambridge Durham York and Lancaster
Any advice etc
I note the mandated personal statement from Oxbridge being wholly subject related nods to the other Unis.
Sorry but I can't think of anywhere else that is as knowledgeable as here.
Advice regarding colleges etc would be good
First visit yesterday to Durham was good
Thanks in advance. Would really appreciated inputq
Not sure about colleges, sorry.
Sorry just seen this.C69 wrote: Sun Jun 16, 2024 8:28 pm My daughter is looking to do a degree in History.
Current choices, with crazy grade boundaries are
Cambridge Durham York and Lancaster
Any advice etc
I note the mandated personal statement from Oxbridge being wholly subject related nods to the other Unis.
Sorry but I can't think of anywhere else that is as knowledgeable as here.
Advice regarding colleges etc would be good
First visit yesterday to Durham was good
Thanks in advance. Would really appreciated inputq
I'd echo Durham and York being very good, Cambridge being different. Don't know about Lancaster.C69 wrote: Sun Jun 16, 2024 8:28 pm My daughter is looking to do a degree in History.
Current choices, with crazy grade boundaries are
Cambridge Durham York and Lancaster
Any advice etc
I note the mandated personal statement from Oxbridge being wholly subject related nods to the other Unis.
Sorry but I can't think of anywhere else that is as knowledgeable as here.
Advice regarding colleges etc would be good
First visit yesterday to Durham was good
Thanks in advance. Would really appreciated inputq
That counts out Lancaster thenBiffer wrote: Mon Jul 01, 2024 12:58 pmI'd echo Durham and York being very good, Cambridge being different. Don't know about Lancaster.C69 wrote: Sun Jun 16, 2024 8:28 pm My daughter is looking to do a degree in History.
Current choices, with crazy grade boundaries are
Cambridge Durham York and Lancaster
Any advice etc
I note the mandated personal statement from Oxbridge being wholly subject related nods to the other Unis.
Sorry but I can't think of anywhere else that is as knowledgeable as here.
Advice regarding colleges etc would be good
First visit yesterday to Durham was good
Thanks in advance. Would really appreciated inputq
Key thing is to be somewhere she'll be happy, she will get a better degree that way.
My neighbours daughter is at Lancaster, she loves it
The STD rate will be of more importance to C69
My mother (dob Feb 1930) is adamant there was a POW camp for Italians in the town where I grew up. Given she is Italian herself this is something you'd think she'd notice. I can find nothing listed anywhere.Niegs wrote: Sun Aug 18, 2024 8:06 pm My grandmother told me there was supposed to be a POW camp near where we grew up. A quick search didn't reveal anything (but maybe it was some kind of house attached to the local airfield where I know pilots were trained where just a few trustworthy ones worked out of?). I did, however, find this article on one's adventure from Norway, where he was captured by commandos, to Ontario and Alberta...
I'm sure I've read of Italian POWs in Cultybraggan too. I've always assumed it was from there they were sent out on to the farms.weegie01 wrote: Sun Aug 18, 2024 9:05 pmMy mother (dob Feb 1930) is adamant there was a POW camp for Italians in the town where I grew up. Given she is Italian herself this is something you'd think she'd notice. I can find nothing listed anywhere.Niegs wrote: Sun Aug 18, 2024 8:06 pm My grandmother told me there was supposed to be a POW camp near where we grew up. A quick search didn't reveal anything (but maybe it was some kind of house attached to the local airfield where I know pilots were trained where just a few trustworthy ones worked out of?). I did, however, find this article on one's adventure from Norway, where he was captured by commandos, to Ontario and Alberta...
However, she has talked about how all the Italians worked on local farms and had a high degree of freedom. Which makes me think it wasn't a POW camp per se but a work camp.
There was however a camp at Cultybraggan about 7 miles away that housed some of the most dangerous POWs. It is the most complete POW camp in the UK as it became an army training centre post war and was in continuous use till quite recently whan a local trust took it over to preserve and run as a local asset.
https://www.cultybraggancamp.uk/
There were at Cultybraggan as well. I think the Italians were there first with less risky German prisoners, then the hard nuts came later and the camp was divided.Jock42 wrote: Sun Aug 18, 2024 9:32 pmI'm sure I've read of Italian POWs in Cultybraggan too. I've always assumed it was from there they were sent out on to the farms.weegie01 wrote: Sun Aug 18, 2024 9:05 pmMy mother (dob Feb 1930) is adamant there was a POW camp for Italians in the town where I grew up. Given she is Italian herself this is something you'd think she'd notice. I can find nothing listed anywhere.Niegs wrote: Sun Aug 18, 2024 8:06 pm My grandmother told me there was supposed to be a POW camp near where we grew up. A quick search didn't reveal anything (but maybe it was some kind of house attached to the local airfield where I know pilots were trained where just a few trustworthy ones worked out of?). I did, however, find this article on one's adventure from Norway, where he was captured by commandos, to Ontario and Alberta...
However, she has talked about how all the Italians worked on local farms and had a high degree of freedom. Which makes me think it wasn't a POW camp per se but a work camp.
There was however a camp at Cultybraggan about 7 miles away that housed some of the most dangerous POWs. It is the most complete POW camp in the UK as it became an army training centre post war and was in continuous use till quite recently whan a local trust took it over to preserve and run as a local asset.
https://www.cultybraggancamp.uk/
Ah Cadet Summer Camp at Culty , whats not to love.weegie01 wrote: Sun Aug 18, 2024 9:46 pmThere were at Cultybraggan as well. I think the Italians were there first with less risky German prisoners, then the hard nuts came later and the camp was divided.Jock42 wrote: Sun Aug 18, 2024 9:32 pmI'm sure I've read of Italian POWs in Cultybraggan too. I've always assumed it was from there they were sent out on to the farms.weegie01 wrote: Sun Aug 18, 2024 9:05 pm
My mother (dob Feb 1930) is adamant there was a POW camp for Italians in the town where I grew up. Given she is Italian herself this is something you'd think she'd notice. I can find nothing listed anywhere.
However, she has talked about how all the Italians worked on local farms and had a high degree of freedom. Which makes me think it wasn't a POW camp per se but a work camp.
There was however a camp at Cultybraggan about 7 miles away that housed some of the most dangerous POWs. It is the most complete POW camp in the UK as it became an army training centre post war and was in continuous use till quite recently whan a local trust took it over to preserve and run as a local asset.
https://www.cultybraggancamp.uk/
I was in the cadets at school in Crieff. Each year the oldest cohort went to an army camp in the summer. First prize was Germany, my year got Cultybraggan. We were impressed.
weegie01 wrote: Sun Aug 18, 2024 9:46 pmThere were at Cultybraggan as well. I think the Italians were there first with less risky German prisoners, then the hard nuts came later and the camp was divided.Jock42 wrote: Sun Aug 18, 2024 9:32 pmI'm sure I've read of Italian POWs in Cultybraggan too. I've always assumed it was from there they were sent out on to the farms.weegie01 wrote: Sun Aug 18, 2024 9:05 pm
My mother (dob Feb 1930) is adamant there was a POW camp for Italians in the town where I grew up. Given she is Italian herself this is something you'd think she'd notice. I can find nothing listed anywhere.
However, she has talked about how all the Italians worked on local farms and had a high degree of freedom. Which makes me think it wasn't a POW camp per se but a work camp.
There was however a camp at Cultybraggan about 7 miles away that housed some of the most dangerous POWs. It is the most complete POW camp in the UK as it became an army training centre post war and was in continuous use till quite recently whan a local trust took it over to preserve and run as a local asset.
https://www.cultybraggancamp.uk/
I was in the cadets at school in Crieff. Each year the oldest cohort went to an army camp in the summer. First prize was Germany, my year got Cultybraggan. We were impressed.
Optatius Buyssens, a Belgian soldier during World War I, was famous for a remarkable incident where coins in his pocket saved his life. During a fierce battle, Buyssens was shot, and the bullet struck the pocket where he kept his coins. Instead of penetrating his body, the bullet was stopped by six coins, which absorbed the impact and spared his life. Three of the coins are from Belgium and three are from France. Today, the coins are in possession of Buyssens’ great-grandson, Vincent Buyssens, who lives in Antwerp.
“Ironically, the coins were the reason why he got shot,” Buyssens told CNN. “It was the noise of them clinging together in his breast pocket which gave his position away.”
Optatius Buyssens was initially barred from the army because of a hip injury but eventually joined as a volunteer. He was shot during a scouting mission in September 1914 near Lebbeke, Belgium. The German soldier who shot him kicked his head and Optatius Buyssens pretended to be dead. Once the soldier walked away, Buyssens and another comrade crawled to safety.
Vincent said it wasn’t until 2018 that he discovered the whole story about the coins in a journal kept by his great-grandfather’s brother, who was an avid archivist. Buyssens said he received photos of the journal from a local museum.
My old man used to go out to Cultybraggan for a summer job peeling tatties in the kitchens when he was a schoolboy back in the 50s.weegie01 wrote: Sun Aug 18, 2024 9:05 pmMy mother (dob Feb 1930) is adamant there was a POW camp for Italians in the town where I grew up. Given she is Italian herself this is something you'd think she'd notice. I can find nothing listed anywhere.Niegs wrote: Sun Aug 18, 2024 8:06 pm My grandmother told me there was supposed to be a POW camp near where we grew up. A quick search didn't reveal anything (but maybe it was some kind of house attached to the local airfield where I know pilots were trained where just a few trustworthy ones worked out of?). I did, however, find this article on one's adventure from Norway, where he was captured by commandos, to Ontario and Alberta...
However, she has talked about how all the Italians worked on local farms and had a high degree of freedom. Which makes me think it wasn't a POW camp per se but a work camp.
There was however a camp at Cultybraggan about 7 miles away that housed some of the most dangerous POWs. It is the most complete POW camp in the UK as it became an army training centre post war and was in continuous use till quite recently whan a local trust took it over to preserve and run as a local asset.
https://www.cultybraggancamp.uk/
During the three most intense months of the Battle of Britain, the German air force landed only 17 bombs that caused “severe” damage to aircraft and aircraft engine production, electricity services, gas supplies, water industry, oil infrastructure, and food service industries combined. This underscores just how ineffective Germany’s campaign was and how little chance there was a of an actual British defeat.
Monk wrote: Sun Sep 01, 2024 9:06 am Interesting review of How the War Was Won by Phillips Payson O’Brien
https://www.astralcodexten.com/p/your-b ... he-war-was
nice fact
During the three most intense months of the Battle of Britain, the German air force landed only 17 bombs that caused “severe” damage to aircraft and aircraft engine production, electricity services, gas supplies, water industry, oil infrastructure, and food service industries combined. This underscores just how ineffective Germany’s campaign was and how little chance there was a of an actual British defeat.
Thread on what the Germans thought of hurricanes v spitfiresMonk wrote: Sun Sep 01, 2024 9:06 am Interesting review of How the War Was Won by Phillips Payson O’Brien
https://www.astralcodexten.com/p/your-b ... he-war-was
nice fact
During the three most intense months of the Battle of Britain, the German air force landed only 17 bombs that caused “severe” damage to aircraft and aircraft engine production, electricity services, gas supplies, water industry, oil infrastructure, and food service industries combined. This underscores just how ineffective Germany’s campaign was and how little chance there was a of an actual British defeat.
A remarkable empire and then back to nothing.Biffer wrote: Wed Dec 04, 2024 4:29 pm Think I mentioned the Fall of Civilisations pod earlier in the thread.
Latest episode is out - The Mongols, at a whopping six and three quarter hours!
Wonder where those 17 bombs fell, I know supermarine in Southampton got bombed & destroyed the part built 4 engine bomber prototype they had going .Monk wrote: Sun Sep 01, 2024 9:06 am Interesting review of How the War Was Won by Phillips Payson O’Brien
https://www.astralcodexten.com/p/your-b ... he-war-was
nice fact
During the three most intense months of the Battle of Britain, the German air force landed only 17 bombs that caused “severe” damage to aircraft and aircraft engine production, electricity services, gas supplies, water industry, oil infrastructure, and food service industries combined. This underscores just how ineffective Germany’s campaign was and how little chance there was a of an actual British defeat.
Cheers