The Shock of War
World War I troops were the first to be diagnosed with shell shock, an injury – by any name – still wreaking havoc
- By Caroline Alexander
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2010, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
“I am quite unable adequately to express my gratitude to you for your kindness and hospitality to me,” wrote Lieutenant Craven, as if giving thanks for a pleasant weekend in the country. Most letters, however, run to several pages, their eager anecdotes and their expressions of anxieties and doubt give evidence of the sincerity of the writer’s feeling. “I got such a deep breath of ‘Lennel,’ while I was reading your letter,” wrote one officer from the Somme in December 1916, “& I’ll bet you had your tennis shoes on, & no hat, & a short skirt, & had probably just come in from a walk across the wet fields”; “Did you really and truly mean that I would be welcome at Lennel if I ever get the opportunity for another visit?” one officer asked yearningly.
A number of the letters are written from hotels while awaiting the results of medical boards. Most hoped for light duty—the dignity of continued service but without the dreaded liabilities. “The Medical Board sent me down here for two months light duty after which I must return to the fray!” writes Lieutenant Jacob, and, as a wistful postscript; “Did you ever finish that jolly Japanese puzzle picture?!” For some, the rush of the outside world came at them too fast: “I have been annoyed quite a lot at little things & my stammer has returned,” one officer confided. Several write from other hospitals; “I had not the remotest idea of how & when I came here,” Lieutenant Spencer wrote to Lady Clementine. “I do not know what really happened when I took ill but I do sincerely hope that you will forgive me if I was the cause of any unpleasant situation or inconvenience.”
At war’s end, the legions of shellshocked veterans dispersed into the mists of history. One catches glimpses of them, however, through a variety of oblique lenses. They crop up in a range of fiction of the era, hallucinating in the streets of London, or selling stockings door to door in provincial towns, their casual evocation indicating their familiarity to the contemporary reader.
Officially they are best viewed in the files of the Ministry of Pensions, which had been left with the care of 63,296 neurological cases; ominously, this number would rise, not fall, as the years passed, and by 1929—more than a decade after the conclusion of the war—there were 74,867 such cases, and the ministry was still paying for such rehabilitative pursuits as basket making and boot repairing. An estimated 10 percent of the 1,663,435 military wounded of the war would be attributed to shell shock; and yet study of this signature condition—emotional, or commotional, or both—was not followed through in the postwar years.
Following the Great War, Major Waring served as Parliamentary private secretary to Winston Churchill. For her work at Lennel House, Lady Clementine was made a Commander of the British Empire. She died in 1962, by which time the letters and papers of her war service were stored in the Lennel House basement; there may be other country houses throughout Britain with similar repositories. Lennel House itself, which the family sold in the 1990s, is now a nursing home.
The fate of some officers is made evident by Lady Clementine’s correspondence: “Dear Lady Waring...my poor boys death is a dreadful blow and I cant realize that he has gone forever....Oh it is too cruel after waiting three long weary years for him to come home.” Very occasionally, too, it is possible to track an officer through an unrelated source. A photograph that had been in the possession of Capt. William McDonald before he was killed in action in France, in 1916, and which is now archived in the Australian War Memorial, shows him gathered with other officers on the Lennel House steps, with Lady Clementine. Some later hand has identified among the other men “Captain Frederick Harold Tubb VC, 7th Battalion of Longwood,” and noted that he died in action on 20 September 1917; this is the same “Tubby” who had written to Lady Clementine a month earlier, at the completion of an 11-hour march, heading his letter simply “In the Field”: “An aeroplane tried to shoot us last night with a m[achine] gun besides dropping sundry bombs around. It rained a heavy storm last night. It is raining off an[d] on today. The weather is warm though. My word the country round here is magnificent, the splendid wheat crops are being harvested....”
Caroline Alexander’s latest book is The War That Killed Achilles: The True Story of Homer’s Iliad and the Trojan War.
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Related topics: Brain Health Wars
Additional Sources
Report of the War Office Committee of Enquiry Into “Shell-Shock,” Imperial War Museum (London), 2004









Comments (12)
in my drama lesson i really enjoyed the the topic about shell shock and i tried to learn more about it.people with shell shock are they really mad?
Posted by Tracy Asafo Adjei on June 10,2012 | 12:11 PM
By this WWI criteria I was "blown up" twice on seperate actions as a young Marine during the Korean War....That, coupled with 24/7 anxiety from other combat trauma, resulted in 50+ YEARS OF UN-DIAGNOSED PTSD....The VA is now providing some help.
Posted by Lawrence Baker on November 20,2010 | 10:04 AM
I was most interested to read 'The Shock of War', as members of The Beatrix Potter Society visited Lennel House in Coldstream only this summer. It was the house in which the Potter family spent the summer of 1894, when Beatrix was 28 years old, and about which she writes at some length in 'The Journal of Beatrix Potter 1881-1897'. Lennel House is now a beautiful care home for the elderly.
Posted by Judy Taylor Hough on October 31,2010 | 08:12 AM
I am grateful for The Shock of War article. I am grateful to the military medical community's attempt to address the complexities in diagnosing and treating our wounded. I remain appalled that given the increased awareness by the military and others about the necessity of proper psychological and medical diagnosis, intervention, treatment and planning for the care of the wounded, there are installations that lack the basics needed for such care. In Quantico, VA, at TBS (The Basic School which trains officers) there is neither pyschological care, nor case management available. Suffering soldiers are asked to navigate medical options for themselves, which ends up meaning they're given a hand full of pills by different doctors. Commanding officers are told that there isn't space on the base for psychological care, and there isn't a budget for it. Quantico is only one example. Someone help.
Posted by L. Cook on September 19,2010 | 06:19 PM
The Shock of War article was well done and long overdue. However, the photo on Page 60 (left) of "British prisoners at the Battle of the Somme in 1916" was incorrectly cited. The photo, according to the highly regarded book
"World War 1 in Photographs" by Adrian Gibert & John Terraine, published by Orbis Book Publishing Company, London, 1986 and Military Press, NY, 1986, has this correct citation: "...British and German wounded withdraw from the front line during the Battle of the Somme, 19 July, 1916." The British soldiers shown were not prisoners in this photo, as the British soldiers on horseback heading toward the front clerly indicate. Interestingly, the one German soldier in the photo, now a prisoner of war, is assisting a wounded British soldier to the rear.
Posted by H Hilowitz on September 12,2010 | 08:11 PM
There is no doubt that societies have been changed by rapid and traumatic changes in the gene pool. The black plague of the 14th century, in its perverse way, greatly enhanced the immune system of the Europeans who survived it. In the centuries that followed that allowed them to conquer, via disease, peoples without their immune system advantage. I have seen some speculation of a similar effect in France during the inter-war period caused by the mass eradication of relatively healthy young males in the trenches of the Great War. However, that was at least as much a social as a biological phenomenon.
Posted by Seth Feldman on September 11,2010 | 04:07 PM
The article on The Shock of War was interesting and topical, considering the difficulties that many U.S. military personnel experience after returning to the U.S. from Iraq and Afghanistan, but I was surprised that the author failed to mention the famous pioneering work on PTSD which was carried out by Dr.W.H.R. Rivers during the First World War at Craiglockhart War Hospital in Edinburgh. As is well known, Siegfried Sasson was one of his patients.
Posted by Dr. Schuyler Jones CBE on September 7,2010 | 05:09 PM
It seems interest in the brain & its conditions regularly end up in a false dichotomy. Is it physical or mental? Mind or brain? As the brilliant Univ of Iowa psychiatrist reminds us through a poem, you can't have the dance without the dancer. We now know that emotion, trauma does in fact alter the structure, physiology of the brain. When the structure is changed the function is changed & the "behavior" is affected. Trauma-informed care is hugely important for effective treatment of people with whatever the source of their trauma is. [See: SAMHSA.gov for resources]
To the reader Malachai asking about overall, intergenerational effect - I think that is an interesting & realistic possibility. Recent research, longitudinal research, and effectiveness of trauma-informed services v. traditional psychiatry/psychology/social work suggest that trauma can be and is intergenerational. [See: CDC.gov which now has all the Adverse Childhood Experience (ACE Study) research & findings.
At this juncture, my strongly held opinion is that there is no useful distinction between mental-physical, medical-mental health. It is a vestige of systemic bias, turf and the need to figure out who is going to pay.
Posted by Virginia K. Wright on September 3,2010 | 05:11 PM
The tragic complexities of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and Traumatic Brain Injury can only be divided by Organic and the other Traumatic . Unfortunately i am too well aware of this phenomenon and if it were not for Post Retrograde Amnesia i well do believe that the brutal details of what happened to so many in the Great War would have been layed out for the medical staff to define .
Post Retrograde Amnesia is when the brain suffering from violent shock cannot remember 48 hrs before and 48hrs after the accident ! This vital strike of unknowing has been the very reason why the medical experts define the two as different yet the real facts are that PTSD AND TBI are the same thing and always have been !
Studies from the Great War all the way to Iraq and countless horrifying work related accidents have given insurnce companies an excuse to mislabel and divide the very people who are one in the same when it comes to serious brain injury and it,s complexities which are really PTSD one in the same !
One day the insurance companies and their Doctors will have to conform to the truth ,Due to the overwhelming evidence of having to classify them as one in the same instead of dividing and altering for the sake of saving money and relying on the publics ignorance ...
On a different note let,s not forget the great numbers of German American Austrian Canadian Hungarian and Turkish Soldiers who suffered as greatly as the British from the Great War also !
Thankyou
Posted by N.F Hoffmann on August 26,2010 | 02:06 PM
It is interesting to see the role of the psychologist in two-fold: their duty to their country and their obligation as a doctor. The first expects them to endorse a war that creates absurd circumstances and destroyed minds in which then the psychologists have to remedy. The second allows them to question whether such absurd circumstances should be foisted on any human being: their individual conscience if you may. In such cases as Dr. Rivers where it seems those two roles come in conflict, there is an internal dialogue that develops and expands. I wonder if Dr. Rivers was the only psychologist in the book to show such conflict? Who are the others? Who was in opposition?
Posted by Helen Xu on August 25,2010 | 12:30 AM
To Malachi: When reading about the trauma's of War and Occupation, especially Wars of Choice as that adds to the trauma, Always keep in mind those invaded and occupied for it's happening in their countries and they have no real escape even becoming refugees from, to outside of the country or within, just adds to that trauma of War! it's taken us Vietnam Veterans, as well as many but still a very small number of non military, years of talking into the wind, while everyone ignored as that would take money to treat, about what was finally given more then just a name but a better understanding of the Trauma of War and what it does to us Humans Minds and we still leave out those who live 24/7 within. It's also not only as to War but anyone who's experienced extreme trauma in their lives that also develop PTS and live in their silence of as it was not understood nor diagnosed as such, but is now better understood and with War Trauma better treatments can finally come forward!
Posted by James S on August 24,2010 | 08:21 AM
I'm curious after reading this if anyone has considered if the trauma that the UK sustained after 2 massive wars had any evolutionary impact on the people of the island?
That is, can the trauma of modern warfare when subjected to a large enough population group from a single origin be a stimulus to actual genetic evolution in a people?
When I search on the topic headings I keep getting evolutions in warfare rather than a look at humanity with warfare as stimulus. With such massive numbers of shell-shocked coming home and the persistence of these wounds into years after the fact, was it significant enough to change the face of Britain into what we know today.
Ideas?
Posted by Malachi Doane on August 23,2010 | 08:43 AM