'My chief source of worry': An Assistant Provost Marshal's view of relations between 2nd Canadian Division and local inhabitants on the Western front, 1915-1917
C. Gibson, 'My chief source of worry': An Assistant Provost Marshal's view of relations between 2nd Canadian Division and local inhabitants on the Western front, 1915-1917, WAR HIST, 7(4), 2000, pp. 413-441
The British Expeditionary Force's landing in France in August 1914 brought
it into contact with allied civilians. Relations between soldiers and inhab
itants during the war's opening months were amicable, as a depiction in the
French weekly L'Illustration accurately portrays. Using the detailed war d
iary of the assistant provost marshal (APM), 2nd Canadian Division, this ar
ticle shows that relations during the years of trench warfare were fundamen
tally different from those characterizing the war's opening months. Focusin
g on the period September 1915-August 1916 (but also including material up
until May 1917), when 2nd Division occupied the Kemmel sector in Flanders,
the article examines liaison organizations, claims settlement, the consumpt
ion and sale of alcohol, perceptions of the Flemish and the administration
of military justice. It concludes that the local Flemish, who from the APM'
s perspective were greedy, sullen and a threat to security, resented the in
trusion of a military presence which controlled their mobility, regulated t
heir businesses, damaged their fields and farms and stole from their estami
nets. This mutual incomprehensibility and incompatibility would have matter
ed much less, however, if officers commanding had fulfilled their role in t
he administration of British military justice.