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The Story of the Malakand Field Force
In his first book, the renowned statesman and historian chronicles an 1897 British military campaign on the Northwest Frontier, in the vicinity of modern Pakistan and Afghanistan. Churchill served as a correspondent and cavalry officer in the conflict, and his incisive reportage reflects the energy and vision that re-emerged in his leadership during World War II.
At the time of the clash, Churchill was serving as a subaltern in the 4th Hussars. Weary of regimental life, the young soldier drew upon family connections to find a place among the brigades headed for the frontier. There he participated in his first combat in the Mamund Valley, where British troops suppressed a revolt among the region's Pathan tribes. Churchill's series of letters to the London Daily Telegraph formed the basis for this book, which he declared "the most noteworthy act of my life," reflecting "the chances of my possible success in the world." A century later, the towering historical figure's account of military action in this still-volatile region remains powerfully relevant.
At the time of the clash, Churchill was serving as a subaltern in the 4th Hussars. Weary of regimental life, the young soldier drew upon family connections to find a place among the brigades headed for the frontier. There he participated in his first combat in the Mamund Valley, where British troops suppressed a revolt among the region's Pathan tribes. Churchill's series of letters to the London Daily Telegraph formed the basis for this book, which he declared "the most noteworthy act of my life," reflecting "the chances of my possible success in the world." A century later, the towering historical figure's account of military action in this still-volatile region remains powerfully relevant.
Reprint of the Thomas Nelson & Sons, Ltd., London, Edinburgh, and New York, 1916, with a selection of images from Sketches on Service During the Indian Frontier Campaigns of 1897, published by James Bowden, London, 1898.
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In his first book, the renowned statesman and historian chronicles an 1897 British military campaign on the Northwest Frontier, in the vicinity of modern Pakistan and Afghanistan. Churchill served as a correspondent and cavalry officer in the conflict, and his incisive reportage reflects the energy and vision that re-emerged in his leadership during World War II.
At the time of the clash, Churchill was serving as a subaltern in the 4th Hussars. Weary of regimental life, the young soldier drew upon family connections to find a place among the brigades headed for the frontier. There he participated in his first combat in the Mamund Valley, where British troops suppressed a revolt among the region's Pathan tribes. Churchill's series of letters to the London Daily Telegraph formed the basis for this book, which he declared "the most noteworthy act of my life," reflecting "the chances of my possible success in the world." A century later, the towering historical figure's account of military action in this still-volatile region remains powerfully relevant.
At the time of the clash, Churchill was serving as a subaltern in the 4th Hussars. Weary of regimental life, the young soldier drew upon family connections to find a place among the brigades headed for the frontier. There he participated in his first combat in the Mamund Valley, where British troops suppressed a revolt among the region's Pathan tribes. Churchill's series of letters to the London Daily Telegraph formed the basis for this book, which he declared "the most noteworthy act of my life," reflecting "the chances of my possible success in the world." A century later, the towering historical figure's account of military action in this still-volatile region remains powerfully relevant.
Reprint of the Thomas Nelson & Sons, Ltd., London, Edinburgh, and New York, 1916, with a selection of images from Sketches on Service During the Indian Frontier Campaigns of 1897, published by James Bowden, London, 1898.
indian frontier;frontier war;river traffic;afghanistan veterans;famous tragedies;moral honesty;strange voyage;river war;lord randolph;egyptian natives;egyptian border;sudanese arab;northern sudan;northwest frontier;cavalry charges;maxim gun;british cavalry;chinese gordon;boer wars;british campaign;egyptian government;british control;british political;rebellious tribes;social development;british officers;cavalry officer;radical islam;military force;daring escape;military academy;world leaders;british soldiers;war correspondent;political career;late nineteenth;north africa;life lived;british army;dervishes;world wars;british empire;foreign policy;period piece;prime minister;nobel prize;late 19th;nineteenth century;south africa;english language;19th century;paralyses;mohammedanism;soudan;emirs;fashoda;mahdist;gunboats;omdurman;lancers;churchills;khalifa;sandhurst;mahdi;kitchener;cataracts;boers;subaltern;khartoum;reconquest;tribesmen;1898;1896;statesman;1899;polo;nile;logistics;1930;railroad;wartime;command;egypt;india;britain;malakand;pakistan;russia;afghanistan;books on british cavalries;books on lord randolphs;books on british controls;books on river wars;books on frontier wars;books on chinese gordons;books on northwest frontiers;books on boer wars;books on indian frontiers;books on afghanistan veterans;books on famous tragedies;books on strange voyages;books on egyptian governments;books on british campaigns;books on social developments;books on river traffics










