Thankful Villages: Difference between revisions

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Throughout the land, in almost every village is a war memorial recaording and honouring the fallen of the Great War, but these few villages saw all their young men return. The term "Thankful Village" was popularised by the writer Arthur Mee in the 1930s. In ''Enchanted Land'' (1936), the introductory volume to ''The King’s England'' series of guides, he wrote that a Thankful Village was one which had lost no men in the Great War because all those who left to serve came home again. His initial list identified 32 villages.
Throughout the land, in almost every village is a war memorial recaording and honouring the fallen of the Great War, but these few villages saw all their young men return. The term "Thankful Village" was popularised by the writer Arthur Mee in the 1930s. In ''Enchanted Land'' (1936), the introductory volume to ''The King’s England'' series of guides, he wrote that a Thankful Village was one which had lost no men in the Great War because all those who left to serve came home again. His initial list identified 32 villages.


In a November 2010 update <ref name="TV">{{cite web|last=Norman Thorpe, Rod Morris and Tom Morgan|title=The Thankful Villages|url=http://www.hellfirecorner.co.uk/thankful.htm|publisher=Hellfire corner|accessdate=18 November 2010}}</ref> researchers have identified 52 Civil parishes in England and Wales from which all soldiers returned.  None has been identified amongst the shires of Northern Ireland nor Scotland.
In a November 2012 update <ref name="TV">[http://www.hellfirecorner.co.uk/thankful.htm ''The Thankful Villages'' on Hellfire Corner] - Norman Thorpe, Rod Morris and Tom Morgan</ref> researchers have identified 51 villages in England and Wales from which all soldiers returned.  None has been identified amongst the shires of Northern Ireland nor Scotland.


Of these villages, [[Upper Slaughter]] in [[Gloucestershire]] may be accounted twice-thankful, for in the Great War, 1914-1918, twenty-four men and one woman went to fight and al returend and then in the Second World War 1939-1945, thirty-six villagers went to war and all returned.
Of these villages, some may be accounted twice-thankful, for losing none of their sons in the First or Second World Wars.  From [[Upper Slaughter]] in [[Gloucestershire]] in the Great War, 1914-1918, twenty-four men and one woman went to fight and all returned and then in the Second World War 1939-1945, thirty-six villagers went to war and all returned.


{|
''Doubly thankful villages are marked with an asterisk:''
|
{|width="90%"
|valign="top"|
;Buckinghamshire
;Buckinghamshire
*[[Stoke Hammond]]
*[[Stoke Hammond]]
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*[[Llanfihangel y Creuddyn]]
*[[Llanfihangel y Creuddyn]]
;Cornwall
;Cornwall
*[[Herodsfoot]]
*[[Herodsfoot]]*
;Cumberland
;Cumberland
*[[Ousby]]
*[[Ousby]]
Line 21: Line 22:
*[[Bradbourne]]  
*[[Bradbourne]]  
;Dorset
;Dorset
*[[Langton Herring]]
*[[Langton Herring]]*
;Durham
;Durham
*[[Hunstanworth]]
*[[Hunstanworth]]
Line 31: Line 32:
*[[Coln Rogers]]
*[[Coln Rogers]]
*[[Little Sodbury]]
*[[Little Sodbury]]
*[[Upper Slaughter]]
*[[Upper Slaughter]]*
;Herefordshire
;Herefordshire
*[[Knill]]
*[[Knill]]
*[[Middleton-on-the-Hill]]
*[[Middleton-on-the-Hill]]*
*[[Pipe Aston]]
|valign="top"|
|
;Hertfordshire
;Hertfordshire
*[[Puttenham, Hertfordshire|Puttenham]]
*[[Puttenham, Hertfordshire|Puttenham]]
Line 42: Line 42:
*[[Knowlton, Kent|Knowlton]]
*[[Knowlton, Kent|Knowlton]]
;Lancashire  
;Lancashire  
*[[Arkholme]]
*[[Arkholme]]*
*[[Nether Kellet]]
*[[Nether Kellet]]*
;Leicestershire
;Leicestershire
*[[East Norton]]
*[[Saxby, Leicestershire|Saxby]]
*[[Saxby, Leicestershire|Saxby]]
*[[East Norton]]
*[[Stretton en le Field]]
;Lincolnshire
;Lincolnshire
*[[Bigby, Lincolnshire|Bigby]]
*[[Bigby, Lincolnshire|Bigby]]
*[[Flixborough]]
*[[Flixborough]]*
*[[High Toynton]]
*[[High Toynton]]*
*[[Minting]]
*[[Minting]]
;Northamptonshire
;Northamptonshire
Line 59: Line 60:
;Nottinghamshire
;Nottinghamshire
*[[Cromwell, Nottinghamshire|Cromwell]]
*[[Cromwell, Nottinghamshire|Cromwell]]
*[[Maplebeck]]  
*[[Maplebeck]]
*[[Wigsley]]    
*[[Wigsley]]
*[[Wysall]]
*[[Wysall]]
;Pembrokeshire
;Pembrokeshire
*[[Herbrandston]]
*[[Herbrandston]]*
|
|valign="top"|
;Rutland  
;Rutland
*[[Teigh]]
*[[Teigh]]
;Shropshire
;Shropshire
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*[[Rodney Stoke]]
*[[Rodney Stoke]]
*[[Shapwick, Somerset|Shapwick]]
*[[Shapwick, Somerset|Shapwick]]
*[[Stocklinch]]
*[[Stocklinch]]*
*[[Tellisford]]
*[[Tellisford]]
*[[Woolley, Somerset|Woolley]]
*[[Woolley, Somerset|Woolley]]*
;Suffolk
;Suffolk
*[[Culpho]]
*[[Culpho]]
*[[The Saints, Suffolk|South Elmham St Michael]]
*[[South Elmham St Michael]]*
;Sussex
;Sussex
*[[East Wittering]]
*[[East Wittering]]
;Yorkshire
;Yorkshire
*[[Catwick]]
*[[Catwick]]*
*[[Cundall, North Yorkshire|Cundall]]
*[[Cundall, Yorkshire|Cundall]]
*[[Helperthorpe]]  
*[[Helperthorpe]]  
*[[Norton-le-Clay]]
*[[Norton-le-Clay]]
Line 92: Line 93:
|}
|}


A similar excerise of research was done in France, which was the battlefield itself and where the human cost of war was higher than for Britain.  In the whole of France only one village, Thierville, lost no men in the First World War and thus had no memorials constructed in the subsequent period.  Remarkably, the men of the village of Thierville were spared too in the Second World War II and had lost none either in the Franco-Prussian War.<ref>Jérôme Duhamel (Paris 1990). ''Grand Inventaire du Génie Français'', p.196: "Between 1919 and 1925, a war memorial was erected in every community in France, with one single exception: the village of Thierville in the department of the Eure, the only French village which had no dead to mourn, not in 1870, nor in 14-18, nor in 39-45"</ref>
A similar exercise of research was done in France, which was the battlefield itself and where the human cost of war was higher than for Britain.  In the whole of France only one village, Thierville, lost no men in the First World War and thus had no memorials constructed in the subsequent period.  Remarkably, the men of the village of Thierville were spared too in the Second World War and had lost none either in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-1871.<ref>Jérôme Duhamel (Paris 1990). ''Grand Inventaire du Génie Français'', p.196: "Between 1919 and 1925, a war memorial was erected in every community in France, with one single exception: the village of Thierville in the department of the Eure, the only French village which had no dead to mourn, not in 1870, nor in 14-18, nor in 39-45"</ref>


== References ==
== References ==

Latest revision as of 11:48, 7 August 2018

Upper Slaughter, a twice-Thankful Village

Thankful Villages (also known as Blessed Villages[1]) are those few villages in Britain to which suffered no casualties in the First World War.

Throughout the land, in almost every village is a war memorial recaording and honouring the fallen of the Great War, but these few villages saw all their young men return. The term "Thankful Village" was popularised by the writer Arthur Mee in the 1930s. In Enchanted Land (1936), the introductory volume to The King’s England series of guides, he wrote that a Thankful Village was one which had lost no men in the Great War because all those who left to serve came home again. His initial list identified 32 villages.

In a November 2012 update [2] researchers have identified 51 villages in England and Wales from which all soldiers returned. None has been identified amongst the shires of Northern Ireland nor Scotland.

Of these villages, some may be accounted twice-thankful, for losing none of their sons in the First or Second World Wars. From Upper Slaughter in Gloucestershire in the Great War, 1914-1918, twenty-four men and one woman went to fight and all returned and then in the Second World War 1939-1945, thirty-six villagers went to war and all returned.

Doubly thankful villages are marked with an asterisk:

Buckinghamshire
Cardiganshire
Cornwall
Cumberland
Derbyshire
Dorset
Durham
Essex
Glamorgan
Gloucestershire
Herefordshire
Hertfordshire
Kent
Lancashire
Leicestershire
Lincolnshire
Northamptonshire
Northumberland
Nottinghamshire
Pembrokeshire
Rutland
Shropshire
Somerset
Suffolk
Sussex
Yorkshire

A similar exercise of research was done in France, which was the battlefield itself and where the human cost of war was higher than for Britain. In the whole of France only one village, Thierville, lost no men in the First World War and thus had no memorials constructed in the subsequent period. Remarkably, the men of the village of Thierville were spared too in the Second World War and had lost none either in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-1871.[3]

References

  1. St Cyrus - an example of the use of "Blessed Villages"
  2. The Thankful Villages on Hellfire Corner - Norman Thorpe, Rod Morris and Tom Morgan
  3. Jérôme Duhamel (Paris 1990). Grand Inventaire du Génie Français, p.196: "Between 1919 and 1925, a war memorial was erected in every community in France, with one single exception: the village of Thierville in the department of the Eure, the only French village which had no dead to mourn, not in 1870, nor in 14-18, nor in 39-45"