Introduction
On 1 September 1946 a small group of British military wives and children walked down the gang plank from HMT Empire Halladale to the shore at Cuxhaven, Germany. They were greeted by regimental bands and were guided onto different colour-coded trains, bound for their new homes. They were part of the post-war allied occupation of Germany at the end of the Second World War and under the auspices of ‘Operation Union’, the first major organised scheme to bring British military families to Germany.Footnote 1 This reception, one officer noted, ‘rightly sounded the notes of encouragement, of moral example, and of caution. “Germany” they emphasised emphatically “was not going to be a land of milk and honey. A pioneering spirit and a cheerful outlook were both equally essential”’.Footnote 2
Although couched in the language of British wartime stoicism and even imperial endeavour, this kind of ‘family reunion’ had a far broader significance in post-war Europe. Bringing families back together, in the midst of housing shortages, demobilisation, mass displacement and individual and collective grief, was an objective of many states and international humanitarian organisations. At once practical and symbolic, the restoration of families (or reconstruction of new ones) stood as a talisman against future war and heralded a brighter ‘tomorrow’. Like other post-war European national governments, the British post-war Labour government stressed the importance of developing a welfare state at home: the restored family and, most importantly, the restored father, represented the righting of the necessary wrong of wartime separation, in an era when the state was increasingly concerned with its citizens’ mental wellbeing and ‘family life’.Footnote 3
But British families newly arriving in war-torn Germany also sat at a unique trifecta of identities: they were occupiers and victors over fascism; they were adapting to becoming junior partners in a Cold War alliance with the United States; and they were part of a rapidly decolonising empire.Footnote 4 As this article argues, these converging international contexts shaped the framing of British family life, more so than British historians have perhaps acknowledged, in addition to the more well-known values of the post-war welfare state. Military families were, for instance, intended to act as a bridge with former enemies, exhibiting the very best of liberal, Western life: as one resident noted, there ‘is no icebreaker like a tiny child’ and ‘British family life has made good in observant German eyes’.Footnote 5 Authorities argued that British tutelage, honed by years of imperial rule, would both sever links with the Nazi past and repudiate the apparently ‘anti-family’ policies of Soviet-occupied East Germany and Eastern Europe, as tensions mounted with their former allies after 1945.Footnote 6 By the time of the creation of West Germany in 1949 and the end of the formal post-war occupation in 1955, British families were recast not just as ‘quasi-diplomats’ responsible for keeping on good terms with their neighbours but as 'Cold Warriors' themselves.Footnote 7 One regimental newspaper noted that a family-based, residential ‘style of occupation . . . allowed a barrier between East and West to be slowly and surely built up’.Footnote 8 Indeed, so integrated was the family into military life at this time that some British outposts were even known as ‘family stations’, including Germany, Cyprus, Hong Kong, and Gibraltar.Footnote 9
Moreover, as the history of this often overlooked yet large community shows, warfare continued to shape family life after 1945. Whilst in Britain itself the family had become a central organising unit in new health care, education and housing policies, military families’ lives were far more often shaped by the needs of the ‘warfare state’.Footnote 10 And that warfare state repeatedly changed and contracted, moving from a mass Second World War military to a post-war one with many post-war National Service conscripts, and then again to a more specialised Cold War force.Footnote 11 Its demands were constant throughout: military personnel took part in military exercises or overseas deployments; military families moved every two or three years to a new posting; and children went to boarding schools in the United Kingdom to mitigate against educational disruption. Yet despite these demands, some families persistently felt as if they were an inconvenient encumbrance to the military man.Footnote 12 As this article shows,military families help expose uncomfortable inconsistencies in post-war national and transnational visions of family life.
Furthermore, as this wider special issue shows, the family was not simply a palimpsest upon which official messages about domestic stability, European integration and liberal democracy were etched: the family has historically acted as an agent as well as an object of state power, capable of shaping social and political landscapes. This article reveals how, whilst some British residents enthusiastically took up the tasks set out for them, others ignored official messages or responded in ways that exposed the inherent contradictions that faced military families. Using the case study of British military families in Germany, spanning the initial occupation from 1945–55 and the following twenty years (a period often associated with the post-war period or ‘First Cold War’) I argue that these inconsistencies offered families opportunities to modify, circumvent or ignore the ideals that were placed upon them.Footnote 13
Yet, more significantly, repeated reunions also show instances of context-specific agency: as seen below in discussions over children's education, families grasped at the limited choices available to them in a largely choice-less world and carved out their own vision of British family life overseas. Many military families in fact came to see enforced necessities, like regularly moving home, as part of their identity.Footnote 14 More broadly for historians, these responses reveal not only how the exercise of choice depends on specific contexts but also the subjective significance of decision-making itself. Agency has, of course, rightly been questioned as a category of analysis. It has become a ‘kind of “safety” argument’, an easy political statement for largely privileged scholars to make, a clichéd or homogenising approach to social history, or even a repetition of the antiquated ideas of liberal subjecthood.Footnote 15 Military families present an important opportunity to understand agency in a more nuanced way, what Lynn Thomas describes as a mess of ‘articulated intentions, frequently unspoken fantasies and ordinary efforts’.Footnote 16 First, their almost universal acceptance of ‘orders’ means any demonstration of agency is unlikely to be conflated with political resistance. Second, they are unusually visible in the historical record compared to many other types of family, due to infamously detailed military bureaucratic processes. Children moved from school to school with envelopes full of reports on their attainment, and every item that was used in family life was stringently accounted for in ‘marching out’ paperwork at the end of a tenancy.Footnote 17 The military had rigorous definitions of who constituted the family throughout the Cold War though: families were largely tied to the father (wives and children having to use his name and military number even to borrow a library book) and parents were always a married, heterosexual couple. Without even considering the hidden history of queer military family structures, these definitions were difficult for many, particularly for those who came from close extended families, missed their tight-knit local communities back in Britain or who had families that were not two parents plus children.Footnote 18 Families were also created to some extent by such processes and formed into a unit, not dissimilar from the various military units that organised service life. The family was one of several integral building blocks of military life, though one sometimes eclipsed by the needs of the military.
But this article also compares official paper trails with experiential life-writing material and oral history testimony. This is another potential pitfall when analysing agency, Thomas points out, because oral historians are potentially more inclined to ascribe ‘agency’ to their narrators, owing to the relationships forged in research encounters.Footnote 19 In over sixty interviews conducted with a range of former residents (from parents and children to teachers, civilian workers and clergy), I as the interviewer grappled with whether families were expressing agency or rather offering a post-hoc justification of their decisions.Footnote 20 Furthermore, how far were they expressing the collective views of the wider military culture? Instead of trying to unpick the individual from their wider discursive culture, this article embraces that interaction in great detail, making use of group or partnership interviews to understand communal dynamics as well as standard individual life-history interviews.Footnote 21 Oral history and life narratives, it argues, are some of the few places where historic family decision-making processes can be uncovered and for the language surrounding such actions to be analysed.
The article begins with an exploration of the discursive significance of family reunion in post-war Europe. It then examines the processes by which British families went to Germany and the opposition they faced, followed by a detailed analysis of the three overlapping official visions for the military family: first, as emblems of familial and domestic stability; second, as ‘unofficial ambassadors’ promoting Anglo-German friendship and (West) European unity in the initial decades after the war; and, finally, as the friendly faces of Western democracy in the simmering tensions of the longer Cold War conflict. Though Anglo-German relations are key to this case study, this article does not delve superficially into the perspectives of the German communities: German families were undergoing their own complex period of reconstruction and re-imagination, shaped by a different ‘triangle’ of forces. They too were under surveillance and had meaning ascribed to their actions.Footnote 22 Parallels are also drawn with many American military families stationed in Germany, though again the different cultures surrounding their base communities, the different international contexts shaping their presence in post-war Europe and the relative lack of interaction between allied communities (except in Berlin) limits the connections that can be made. Nevertheless, cumulatively this case study suggests that both domestic and wider discourses in post-war European history profoundly shaped how British families were viewed – and, indeed, how they saw themselves.
Family Reunion in Post-War Europe
In October 1946, one military wife summarised the family's significance in a British Army of the Rhine (BAOR) newspaper: ‘We have lived so long on the edge of a precipice, and have emerged from one crisis only to be faced with another for so many years, that the quiet, ordinary existence of a united home life is to many of us the unattainable ideal of which we dream’.Footnote 23 The war had marked an unprecedented assault on the family in Europe: forced displacement, mass murder, conscription and incarceration had damaged or destroyed many pre-war families, in all their various forms.Footnote 24 For others, separation was temporary but still keenly felt: in Britain, wartime employment and evacuation had parted children from parents, the consequences of which ignited a voracious professional and state interest in young people and ‘troubled families’.Footnote 25 On both sides of the emerging iron curtain, the family became an emblem of a new future-facing mentality.Footnote 26
Of course, the family was not ‘discovered’ in 1945: the ‘family unit [has long been seen] as a building block of state power’, one around which images of nationhood have been continually created.Footnote 27 The family could be used within nations to both include and exclude.Footnote 28 But, as Tara Zahra argues, the family did become more ideologically significant after the liberation of Europe in 1945. Humanitarian organisations and European authorities applied themselves with zeal to reuniting families and producing new forms of expert knowledge around child development and family relations. Family members were sometimes passive in these processes, but others engaged actively with it, opting to join new families, leaving behind memories of their pre-war families or even, in some cases, surviving family members.Footnote 29 Yet the logistical problems of bringing families back together were immense: in Britain, the memory of the poor state response to returning service personnel in 1918 fuelled concerns about the return of demobilised conscripted military personnel to their families.Footnote 30 It was a popular periodical topic in the 1940s, with women given particular advice about how to treat their returned husbands (and carefully curate their own appearance).Footnote 31 After an excited wait, much longed-for reunions were often anti-climactic, nervous or even distressing occasions, especially when appearances or lives had changed significantly. For children who did not know their fathers – and could not understand why they now slept in their mother's bed – reunion could cause anxiety and confusion.Footnote 32 This unease sat at odds with the new passion among practitioners for active fatherhood or ‘family-orientated masculinity’.Footnote 33 Fatherhood was seen as a way for men to put the war behind them, to turn ‘away from soldierhood and war’.Footnote 34 Discipline in particular became a father's responsibility, a way for the father to find a post-war purpose in the family.Footnote 35 Reunion was therefore not always a joyous occasion: it was a time of complex negotiation and learning familial dynamics anew.Footnote 36
Yet this chronology of post-war British family life never fully applied to career military families. Fatherly absence characterised military life before and after 1945; it was a regular discussion point in regimental magazines, amongst military wives and frequently featured in community jokes.Footnote 37 Women sometimes expressed exasperation about the return of husbands and the impact on gender roles, family life and routine.Footnote 38 For those who ‘followed’ their partners overseas, they were separated from wider families ‘at home’ in Britain.Footnote 39 Children too expressed their views on family separation: one military spouse recalled a child stamping on a picture of his father, angry at his absence.Footnote 40 A former military child remembered that her stepfather was rarely present and they seldom knew how long he would be away.Footnote 41 Reunion was thus both a more common and fleeting experience for military families.
But it was not just fathers who periodically left the military family: since at least the 1840s, military children, especially officers’ children, had been sent away from imperial settings such as India when they reached early adolescence, on the grounds of ‘health’ and future prospects, departing temporarily or permanently for boarding schools and the homes of British guardians.Footnote 42 Children were important transnational historical actors within the family, but also in Britain's wider colonial world. Military children beat the bounds of empire through their travel across its spaces and within its welfare systems, as well as through the decisions made about their futures by families.Footnote 43 Despite decolonisation, these historical precedents not only shaped administrative processes and educative traditions facing families in 1945 (such as longstanding connections with certain boarding schools) but also powerfully influenced the emotional and social discourses that military families in the post-war period used to explain their decisions. For instance, making sacrifices for ‘duty’ was a commonly expressed idea among families in the post-war years that descended directly from the lives of ‘empire children’.Footnote 44
These older ideas collided with far newer concerns though. Not only were there a great many more children in post-war Europe (as a result of a baby boom), but childhood and family were central to both competing political ideologies in the new Cold War.Footnote 45 Citizenship was becoming a battleground, where children as ‘future citizens’ were centre stage.Footnote 46 Elaine Tyler May and Donna Alvah argue that this attention led to a re-conceptualisation of family in the United States, as the family became a ‘stronghold against Cold War threats to the nation and society’.Footnote 47 To some extent, children were passive within these visions, ‘innocent weapons’ around whom elaborate policies of protection grew in the second half of the twentieth century.Footnote 48 The hope placed in them in turn placed greater limits on their actions and behaviours.Footnote 49 Real children featured surprisingly little in these representations, an oversight of which historians of both childhood and the family are perhaps equally culpable.Footnote 50 But children could be actively engaged with the Cold War, even if they were simultaneously symbolically significant too.Footnote 51 In this special issue, for instance, Jennifer Crane highlights how the idea of gifted children was invested with promise and political power, but families could also mobilise the term themselves. Similarly, families in Cold War Germany were often keenly aware of the discursive significance of their presence and adopted different attitudes to it, starting with their arrival in 1946.
Reunited on the Rhine: British Military Families in Germany
Conditions in Germany were not encouraging for family reunion in early 1946: acute food and housing shortages assailed the British Zone, as did problems with industrial outputs, ruined infrastructure and Displaced Persons (DPs).Footnote 52 The British occupation was tasked with overseeing the administration of the northwest regions of the country, assisting in demilitarisation, decentralisation and denazification processes and the transition to democracy, monitoring public sentiment and implementing economic change.Footnote 53 Even by 1946 though, BAOR's potential role as a Cold War army, poised to face Soviet invasion, became another reason to maintain a presence in Germany.Footnote 54
Several British ministers were adamant that bringing military families to Germany would cause further trouble. In 1946 William Beveridge, whose 1942 report had given him an international reputation as an expert on social policy, embarked on a lecture tour of the British Zone of Germany and Berlin.Footnote 55 In his regular column in The Star he conveyed the stark situation in Germany: ‘The British housewife can, perhaps, realise what the German rations would mean by considering her week's rations of fats had to last not for a week but for a month’.Footnote 56 In this situation, Beveridge argued:
BAOR wives should not be allowed to enter Germany now. Their arrival in the British Zone is about to cause enormous trouble among the Germans. . . . The housing situation, such as at Hamburg, is bad beyond the understanding of anybody who has not been in the country. Hundreds of thousands of people are living permanently in cellars. To provide for the BAOR wives, homes and furniture are being requisitioned by the military. It is just like war. Since the requisitioning has begun, with troops with fixed bayonets controlling it, the feeling among cooperative Germans has grown against us. We are playing into the hands of Communists and what is left of the Fascists.Footnote 57
His claim that requisitioning, the main form of accommodation before specific blocks were built in the late 1940s and 1950s, was unpopular tallied with British intelligence reports.Footnote 58 As in the longer history of the family, housing proved a particularly contentious issue. Beveridge was not insensitive to the calls for military families to be reunited and agreed that children needed to grow up in a family setting to become ‘healthy, happy and productive citizens’. Yet he pointed out that in DP camps across Germany ‘an agonising large proportion’ of people were also separated from their husbands, wives and children.Footnote 59 His rationale for preventing military wives from re-joining their husbands came from a concern over the fine balance of public and political opinion in Germany that could once again endanger the continent.Footnote 60
Education Secretary Ellen Wilkinson opposed reunion for reasons that centred on the families themselves. In a Cabinet meeting discussing Operation Union in June 1946, she voiced her ‘personal’ opposition to the costs involved and the transfer of 150 to 250 teachers to Germany to educate the children of service personnel, even though the officials in the Ministry of Education itself thought it would be possible.Footnote 61 Prime Minister Clement Attlee had similarly expressed his concern about sending children to BAOR: ‘Should we send the children to [a] country where there may be disorder, disease and famine[?]’, though Health Minister Aneurin Bevan had pointed out that children could not be left behind in Britain for very long without their mothers.Footnote 62 Wilkinson conceded eventually that, if they had to go, it was ‘essential that the children receive a proper education’.Footnote 63 The concerns voiced by Beveridge, Wilkinson and Attlee expose the practical problems and ideological inconsistencies that family reunion posed: for Beveridge, whilst family life was the best incubator for future ‘citizens’, British family life must not be prized above that of other Europeans; for Wilkinson, the education of children – another fundamental value of the welfare state – must not be imperilled for the sake of military family reunion; and for Attlee, British children must not be exposed to dangers needlessly. Government must, as Attlee argued, ‘be careful and go slowly’.Footnote 64
Yet calls for families to go to Germany became steadily louder. The Chancellor for the Duchy of Lancaster, John Hynd, responsible for the administration of the British Zone, reported that the commanders-in-chief in Germany thought a reunion scheme would improve morale, recruitment and retention.Footnote 65 More sensationalised reasons were given too. The most-discussed argument was that families prevented ‘fraternisation’ between British service personnel and Germans.Footnote 66 As Lauren Stokes points out elsewhere in this issue, family reunion has often been pitched as a preventative measure. John Stevenson, the Permanent Prosecutor for CCG in Berlin, later stated that: ‘The results of this prolongation of “soldier-bachelor” life, following on years of war separations, were thoroughly harmful and unsettling . . . and also led to a lot of living that they would not have dreamt of doing in a less rackety environment’.Footnote 67 Stevenson's allusions to ‘harmful and unsettling’ elements were widely discussed in 1945 and 1946. One padre urged soldiers ‘to keep in regular contact with their wives’ and to remember that ‘you promised God to stick to your wife for better or for worse until death. . . . “Falling in love” with someone you have just met does not release you from your promise to God. . . . Write to your wife – every day is a good rule.’Footnote 68 Some even argued that those who ran schools for military children overseas were actively improving ‘morale and morality’ in the forces and had become the ‘guarantors of family life’.Footnote 69 Institutions that facilitated children joining parents in Germany would ‘go far to mitigate a danger which strikes at the very basis of British life – the Family’.Footnote 70
But this was not the only reason given for reunion: mirroring the wider protrusion of the ‘psy’ disciplines into post-war family life, military family reunion was also increasingly framed in terms of psychological development.Footnote 71 In her article in 1946, a ‘BAOR wife’ argued that:
From the children's point of view, apart from the broadening influence of a new country, the stabilising effect of having that magic person ‘Daddy’ as part of everyday life cannot be overestimated. In the secure and shifting sands of present day existence a well-balanced home in which both parents play their part, and Daddy is not merely ‘that man who comes to stay every few months’ provides a foundation to a child's life that nothing can replace or destroy.Footnote 72
Active fatherhood was regarded here as a key component in post-war family life, including the military family. From the 1940s, the British soldier was depicted as a ‘soldier-citizen’, capable of thinking and discussing world politics, as well as defending his country.Footnote 73 He was to be the weapon of the warfare state, but also a citizen of the welfare state and a ‘thinking’ member of his community, as well as present with his family.Footnote 74 One later training film for teachers asserted that ‘the soldier of today is a family man, well-versed not only in the skills of his military profession but also in his duties as a husband and a father’.Footnote 75
However, this rebranding did not change the soldier's ultimate task and the expectation of familial closeness exposed an early tension in the welfare state rhetoric: in the case of Soviet invasion, it was clear that the serviceman's first priority was his wartime role, not his family.Footnote 76 One former military child recounted in an interview that: ‘they were soldiers first, and families were sort of second, even to the extent that mum was known as “wife of Corporal M--”. It wasn't – you weren't Mrs, you didn't have your identity like that. So you were literally baggage, that's what you felt like.’Footnote 77 Critical military theorist Victoria Basham goes even further, arguing that the modern welfare state was built not on utopian principles for human betterment but wartime expectations and understandings of family, gender and race.Footnote 78 It was these ideas which swiftly came to underpin peacetime ideas of citizenship and which again relegated families in the military hierarchy. Restoring fathers to children was thus always a secondary motivation for reunion.
Yet whilst Cold War imperatives placed the soldier's combat role above his role within the family, the prevailing international tensions did actually encourage reunion in some specific settings, such as Berlin. Senior diplomat William Strang wrote to Orme Sargent, Permanent Secretary to the Foreign Office, in early June 1946 to complain that ‘Senior Soviet military and civilian officers have had their families with them here since the early days of the occupation’.Footnote 79 A fellow diplomat hinted that the presence of wives in Berlin gave diplomats a quite ‘different footing’ and that they were needed for social occasions, especially as French, Russian and American wives were in frequent attendance.Footnote 80 Sargent reflected in a confidential note that Strang had a point and that ‘our prestige’ could potentially be damaged, but that the arrival of Strang's wife should ideally coincide with that of other British wives, ‘so that any charge of discrimination in favour of senior officers can be met’.Footnote 81 Equality, or overtures towards it, was vital in the immediate post-war period: for instance, Mary Bouman, a CCG civilian employee, noted the ‘great outcry and ill-feeling’ when officers had been trying to ‘earmark’ furniture for their families’ arrival.Footnote 82 Reunion, it was felt, had to proceed along fair and equitable lines in the prevailing political and social climate.
Strang, meanwhile, had not let the issue lie and used the threat of the Cold War to further his case. In a telegram on 21 June, he noted that: ‘It is also freely rumoured among the Germans that the British have delayed having their families here because we are convinced that there will be war with the Soviet Union’.Footnote 83 Such an observation, whether correct or not, played on a key characteristic of Cold War politics: watching one another's militaries but also observing any changes in the social and communal life in Germany. Strang was pointing out that families’ presence would reassure the Soviets that war would not take place imminently and would ease tensions at a critical moment.
In the face of these multiple pressures, the Cabinet relented. They estimated that, including children, 22,500 new arrivals would come; by June 1950, there were 32,881 family members in Germany.Footnote 84 In all these early deliberations, military families were caught between Britain's domestic rhetoric and international concerns: whilst restoring family life was a crucial dimension of the new welfare state, British military families were embroiled in Anglo-German and European relations from the moment of their arrival.
European Integration, Post-War Peace and Military Children
Families were initially tasked with giving their German neighbours an example of ordinary and orderly lives under a liberal democratic system and, after the formal end of the occupation, contributing to European integration. Lt. Col. Stevenson noted that ‘I honestly think that the majority – and not least the younger generation of Germans – have gained a permanent, spiritual and not merely material benefit from their contacts with those whose first coming was greeted with only sneers, or cynical words and laughter’.Footnote 85 Families’ role in Anglo-German integration was promoted throughout the Cold War period and beyond, right up until the closure of the final military bases in 2020.Footnote 86
Children were seen as an important element of this bridge-building. Despite Wilkinson's misgivings, the British Families Education Service (BFES) strived to offer children an education equal to that offered to British children in Britain under the 1944 Education Act.Footnote 87 Dubbed a great ‘educational experiment’, BFES's early tasks included adapting buildings, ensuring supplies or furniture and equipment and attending to the considerable administrative tasks involved in setting up British schools.Footnote 88 Yet from the start, the possibilities of raising children in Germany struck many civilian educators and military officials. The British Zone Review argued in 1946 that educating British children in Germany ‘may even sow the seeds of a better international relationship for future generations. Much may depend on the success of the education of these children while they are in Germany’. The article noted that British children should ‘obviously’ learn German and that ‘children out here may well be our best “ambassadors” and it may be that the German children who are too young to be indoctrinated with the Nazi doctrines may see in the British children something which leads as they grow to adult life to the beginnings of a new and better relationship between the two nations’.Footnote 89 Much of this discourse echoed post-war ideas of reconciliation, which was increasingly being embraced by British organisations, towns and individuals.Footnote 90 The BFES director stated their friendships might lead to a ‘future relationship between the two nations which will contrast favourably with the relationship in the past thirty-five years’, but that this relationship must not be forced.Footnote 91
There is some evidence to suggest that teachers, if not the children, took such messages to heart. The logbooks of one primary school at RAF Wildenrath show concerted efforts of teachers in forging connections with a local school in Effeld village; by 1959, the school was hosting an Anglo-German day, a common event among British communities.Footnote 92 Many other schools made connections with local communities, orphanages and old people's homes, giving food and gifts at Harvest Festival.Footnote 93 Outside of school, some British children spent time with German children – and those from many other European countries – through groups like the Scouting movement.Footnote 94
Crucially though, as West Germany moved from a vanquished post-war state to a Cold War partner, marked by its accession to NATO in 1955, the ambassadorial function placed on children shifted away from example-setting to their new role as ‘world citizens’ instead. The 1965 BFES film School Is Everywhere stated, alongside the shots of children examining shells on the Maltese sea-shore, visiting German industrial plants and watching Chinese clippers in Hong Kong, that: ‘[f]or nearly 300 years, the Army has been educating its children. Children who are growing up with a greater understanding of the world and its people, future citizens of the whole world of tomorrow’. Footnote 95 The video stressed that British children overseas would be educated to British standards, but the broader experiences that military overseas education afforded them would make them more engaged with the world around them.
But, as Zahra argues, these internationalist visions – of children and their restorative capacities for both families and societies – were in themselves deeply national projects.Footnote 96 An identity crisis plagued post-war Europe and, in the vacuum of identity, ‘fantasies of post-war reinvention were projected onto Europe's children’.Footnote 97 State pronatalist policies and humanitarian groups both maintained that children in families were the key to the rehabilitation of Europe: only the family and the ‘creation of nationally homogeneous nation states would guarantee lasting peace’.Footnote 98 The British context was further complicated by the withdrawal from empire and perceptions about British decline, a background against which all such internationalist projects were framed. Empire still affected the British sense of ‘mission’ in its early days, with one British Zone Review author boldly claiming that the ‘greatest test’ of British colonial administration would be the overseeing of ‘a very highly organised European community’ in post-war Germany.Footnote 99 Family life again adopted a greater significance in the post-war and post-imperial world.
Yet the extent to which children actually fostered links with local German children is unclear: by 1977, W.S. Rollings, a head teacher visiting BFES from Norfolk, said that he felt that ‘British Army bases appear to be British islands set within the German mainland’.Footnote 100 Oral history interviews with former residents support the ‘British islands’ idea, though memories are doubtless complicated by their later lives and outlooks, as well as the context of many of the interviews during the Brexit negotiations of 2016–20.Footnote 101 Whilst some military children did not find the lack of common language an impediment to certain outside games, exploring or trading NAAFI chocolate, some found the language barrier harder to overcome when playing, particularly in smaller groups.Footnote 102 Many schools offered German lessons to British children, but some schools saw this as a ‘token gesture’ to some extent.Footnote 103 The situation was different for families who lived in smaller British communities, particularly in the days of the early occupation: one narrator, Jan, recalled how there were no other English children to play with when she lived in Hamburg and Lübeck in the immediate years after the war, so she learnt to play and speak in German, something which produced a degree of ‘ill-feeling’ among neighbours and friends when she returned to post-war England.Footnote 104 In those early days before the establishment of vast base complexes in the 1950s, containing crèches and other family facilities, a few parents opted to send their children to the local German kindergarten, again facilitating language learning and friendships.Footnote 105 Some older children were aware of Germany's Second World War history and their games around ruined buildings re-imagined Nazi atrocities (‘for we all knew such things had happened’, one former military child wrote in a later memoir), but others simply accepted Germany as a ‘posting’ and an exciting one at that.Footnote 106 In some cases, families actually stood in the way of further integration, with some children forbidden to play with German children, an edict many chose to ignore.Footnote 107 Overall, over time it became harder for children to establish meaningful contact with local German children, particularly those who lived in larger British base communities, and they did not necessarily understand or identify with the ambassadorial role bestowed on them.
Not all British military children lived full-time in Germany though: in 1955 when the official occupation ended, the military established an Education Allowance, meaning that parents could opt to send their children to boarding school in the United Kingdom instead.Footnote 108 The decision to send children to boarding school, usually in Britain or in one of the few that existed in Germany during this period, or to keep them in day-schools also proved to be one of the most emotionally charged issues for military families in Germany across the Cold War period. Official historian of Army Education N.T. St John Williams put the decision down to personal preference: some families simply placed ‘a higher priority on family unity, preferring to take their children with them rather than face the emotional and social problems of separation’.Footnote 109 Within the community too, there was a cultural expectation that boarding school was the norm within certain ranks (particularly those where military service spanned the generations) or else families followed the lead of other families to whom they were close.Footnote 110 But in some cases it was economic factors, not just emotional ones, that bound the military family together in Germany, as private funds were usually needed to supplement the boarding school allowance.
However, the language surrounding the decision to send children to boarding school is revealing in understanding context-specific agency. In oral histories and life narratives, parents and children frequently described how it was their decision and their family response to military life and regular postings. Most families decided when children were aged ten or eleven, but for others it was far earlier, particularly those familiar with the British preparatory school system. Some parents felt that keeping children in Germany was best, either for their particular child's needs or in terms of learning and development, as it was ‘good for them to be going into new situations each time’ they moved.Footnote 111 Rank played a part too, meaning that the secondary schools and local organisations like Scout groups in Germany were sometimes largely filled with the children of lower ranked soldiers who did not go to boarding school, something that did not go unnoticed among parents and children.Footnote 112 Some described the ‘terrible, terrible guilt’ some parents felt at sending their children ‘away’, even if they had few issues at boarding school.Footnote 113 On the allowance itself, one parent interviewed felt that it was ‘reasonable that as a society we do that’, acknowledging the familial sacrifice endured in the service of the military.Footnote 114 The language of sacrifice, originating among ‘empire families’, implied a personal or familial commitment to a greater cause, despite the ramifications that it might have on individual or collective happiness. In these narratives, they chose to endure separation for the sake of something bigger. Separation also bound military families closer to one another, particularly those of similar (larger higher) social class or rank, whose children might attend the same schools or share travel arrangements.
Overall, many life narratives implied that this type of family separation was purposefully undertaken by families in the face of difficult circumstances, rather than enforced by the military. This particular form of agency, so fleeting and limited, might be easily dismissed as post-hoc justification, but it remains a powerful indication of families’ ‘articulated intentions, frequently unspoken fantasies and ordinary efforts’.Footnote 115 It also reveals the impact such choices had on how people regarded their families back in Germany. Whilst some children missed their parents deeply, boarding school was an alternative family or ‘family of choice’ for others: one former military child, for instance, noted that ‘you were far closer to your friends, you needed your friends as you didn't have a family’.Footnote 116 School could provide security and routine, both in Britain but also in Germany itself when the personnel were deployed.Footnote 117
Childhood separation increasingly overlapped with fatherly absence from Germany too. By the early 1970s and amid rising tension in Northern Ireland, some described family life as inflected with ‘anticipation’ in the run-up to a deployment from Germany to Northern Ireland and then a countdown until the father returned. As with post-war British discourse on ‘stable’ family life, it was the mother who was deemed responsible for smoothing over any difficulties that fatherly absence entailed.Footnote 118 But once service personnel had left, one former military child recalled, there was plenty of support from the other regimental families, noting ‘that was where our family was, if you like’.Footnote 119 Military life contained its own ‘families of choice’ when the defined family unit could not provide support.Footnote 120 The idea that a military unit could substitute or emulate family life for soldiers is well-covered in histories of modern conflict, but its significance for families left behind is less understood. Military communities in Germany were very young, with large numbers of women with babies and young children. Whilst the family often stood at odds with the military, the military could itself provide a simulacrum of family life when needed, and narrators recall trips, contact points and events put on while ‘the men’ were away.Footnote 121
Significantly though, these constant cycles of family reunion and separation, as well as often painful decisions about educational futures, became a badge of pride among parents and children: ‘that real sense of belonging for want of a better word, all in the same boat, you know, your dad's in the army’, as one former military child put it.Footnote 122 Some families depicted themselves as like a military unit themselves: one former military chaplain, whose son later followed him into military service, noted that ‘the forces are what we do as a family’.Footnote 123 Such statements also explain the long-term pattern of British military life overseas, where military children themselves often chose to follow a similar career path to their parents or married someone with a military connection.Footnote 124 As in colonial India, the long period of time the British spent in Germany and the breadth of their communities led to many cases of déjà-vu: one military wife recalled returning to her former childhood family home in Sennelager, whereas one former army officer remembered how his office was adjacent to one previously occupied by his father.Footnote 125 The distinct nature of and pride in British military family life thus perpetuated itself, against the background of Britain's continued presence in Germany.
Sustaining the Iron Curtain and the British ‘Way of Life’
While children and husbands came and went from Germany more often after 1955, British wives largely remained on bases, the main bearers of family life on this new Cold War frontier. Their behaviour needed to be exemplary, not only to help ‘improve’ their ‘host’ nation, but also increasingly to prove that the democratic way of life was far superior.Footnote 126 British wives were encouraged to meet their German neighbours relatively early in the occupation. In 1948, it was reported that the atmosphere of the Women's Institute has ‘crept into Hamburg’. The Anglo-German Frauenklub, for instance, was a fairly socially conservative occasion where ‘German and British women sit informally together at small tables – once again, there are the inevitable cups of tea, a variety of hats with and without flowers and veils, uniforms of CCG, German Women Police, Red Cross – and, around it all, a cheering buzz of chatter, some of it a little halting perhaps, a curious mixture of English and German, but nevertheless a really good conversation.’Footnote 127 Donna Alvah argues that through such events women acted as a pseudo ‘peace corps’ in West Germany. Post-war humanitarian internationalism placed great emphasis on family reunion, but it also spurred many women on to get involved with charitable initiatives.Footnote 128
Yet examples such as the Anglo-German Frauenklub spoke to ideas of a particularly ‘British way of life’ too. The phrase ‘way of life’ was a much-repeated Cold War shorthand for liberal democracy, ‘fair play’ and freedoms, and was widely used in post-war culture and society, but it had specific British inflections in this case as well.Footnote 129 One Mrs Piehler wrote in 1946 that: ‘many wives are using their opportunities to promote good feeling by “putting across” the British way of life and creating a feeling of sympathy between themselves and their German neighbours’. Some worked with the British Red Cross, Salvation Army and Society of Friends to aid local civilians and DPs, while one woman gave up her garden as a sunray clinic for German children.Footnote 130 The church was a particularly prominent vehicle for such good works and some felt that religiously-informed life was the key to the occupation: as ‘BAOR wife’ maintained, ‘unless we can revive our religious instincts and live them openly among the Germans, our occupation of Germany is doomed to ultimate failure’.Footnote 131 This ‘common Christianity’ could stand as a post-war balm and a Cold War weapon.Footnote 132
But again, if we move beyond the message of official documentation to interrogate the very existence of such advice, a more fragmented picture of British Cold War efforts forms. The force behind these diplomatic messages reflects the degree to which they were ignored by families: the majority of oral history interviewees pointed out the isolation of the British community and lack of integration, even if they had a few German friends themselves.Footnote 133 In 1950, J.G.E. Hickson, the British Resident in Kreis Lemgo (a regional division of the British Zone), bemoaned how service families failed to connect with their West German allies, particularly in the areas of religion, sport and the cinema: ‘most British cinemas have rows and rows of empty seats. There are many Germans who understand English, but who do not often get invited by us, and it would seem that a good opportunity of showing the British way of life through films is being thrown away’.Footnote 134 The British were not, in other words, doing their best to promote their ‘way of life’, which had the potential to expunge both the German totalitarian past and the communist threat. Hickson felt this was true of the British cultural centres set up shortly after the war, die Brücke, which were ‘recognized as the focal point of free discussion and tolerance’ but which required hard work to run. ‘Are we so half hearted’, Hickson questioned, ‘about democracy and our way of life that we cannot spare a few thousand pounds to advertise it? What will the Germans think when we close them down after all our talk about fostering Anglo-German relations?’Footnote 135 Despite these failings, Christopher Knowles has argued that families or small groups were still one of the most successful settings for interaction and integration, with cocktail parties succeeding where Anglo-German clubs and larger initiatives sometimes faltered.Footnote 136
But who was to take the lead in such interactions? Already, sociability was an obligation for senior British military wives, who were expected to fulfil several social roles, from hosting dinner parties to organising coffee mornings with other wives. One officer wrote home to his fiancée in 1949 that ‘there may be a certain amount of visiting to be done. . . . There may also be a bit of tactful settling of differences too. Other Ranks’ wives are notorious for quarrelling’.Footnote 137 Later that year, after their marriage, she wrote to him from Germany (while he was away on exercise) about the obligation to hold events like this: ‘I think perhaps I'd better ask Mrs Newman again. She has had me twice and I've only asked her once so I'm definitely owing her a morning's coffee’.Footnote 138 Women's sections in regimental magazines suggested that women should extend this social network beyond just the British on the base too: ‘if you're a “Mum at Home”, why not make a summer resolution to get out a bit more in the German community?’Footnote 139 The burden was placed on wives to break the pattern of insularity, alongside their domestic orfamily lives.
Even if wives took up these tasks, not all saw them in a Cold War light even as the conflict warmed up during the 1950s and 1960s. Proximity to the border or residence in Berlin did sharpen attention to the possibility of Soviet invasion, as did the job roles of their family members, but this was not uniformly felt.Footnote 140 When asked to recall her level of awareness as a child (a difficult feat), Jenny, a former military child living in Germany in the 1950s, commented that ‘I don't think it was a question of not knowing, it was a question of being brought up with it and that was normal and that's what you did’.Footnote 141 Another former military child claimed she also felt ‘the seriousness of it’.Footnote 142 Some recalled the briefings later in the Cold War to wives on what to do in case the Soviets did invade (though many later claimed they would have wilfully ignored the instruction to leave their family pets behind).Footnote 143 Military exercises had the most obvious impact on family life, with husbands away for days or weeks enacting their ‘war roles’: some teachers felt that this impacted on the children, whereas others felt that school continued the same regardless of this instability at home.Footnote 144 One senior officer stated in an interview: ‘I don't think most British soldiers or their families spent a lot of time worried about the Soviet Army. They worried about whether they could afford duty-free goods in the NAAFI . . . not so much the grand politics of it all’.Footnote 145 Others claimed that their life in Germany was so ‘magical’ that even the rumbling of tanks on nearby training ranges did not alarm them.Footnote 146
Yet it is very difficult to ascertain the level of past anxieties, even in retrospective settings like oral history interviews. A senior army wife stationed with her family in Germany in the 1950s recalled how: ‘I was certainly very aware of the Cold War. You know, there was a nuclear dump just down the road there, that my husband used to have to go off and guard every so often . . . [but] it was certainly, looking back all those years, it was in many ways a much easier thing to live with than some of the . . . particularly the Northern Ireland business’.Footnote 147 The increasing IRA threat to British service personnel from the mid-1970s meant that many narrators could recall measures put in place for their safety then with far greater detail, such as using mirrors under their cars to check for explosive devices, not travelling in uniform and being circumspect about their conversations in public places.Footnote 148
By contrast, the earlier period of Cold War anxiety between 1945 and 1975 was on the whole remembered less vividly. Most had a sense of why they were in Germany, explaining both Germany's troubled past and the brooding presence of the eastern bloc a few miles away. The Cold War was even a source of fascination: senior officers’ wives organised tours to Berlin, with some even permitted to go beyond Checkpoint Charlie and later trips to Moscow before the Berlin Wall came down.Footnote 149 The ‘iron curtain’ itself became a common sight for many wives: several interviewees recalled taking friends and family from Britain to visit the inner border with East Germany in the Harz mountains, as ‘everybody wanted to go there’.Footnote 150 For those living in or visiting West Berlin after 1961, itself a divided city within East Germany, the Berlin Wall became a popular tourist site among British service personnel and their families.Footnote 151 By 1971, Gordon Lee wrote in The Economist that BAOR and RAF Germany's continued presence in Germany to combat Cold War foes was easy to ‘half-forget’, so accustomed had the British public, politicians and even service families themselves become to life in Germany.Footnote 152 They may not have been Cold warriors at heart, but British military families saw Germany as an inevitable and accepted part of military and family life in the post-war period.
Conclusion
Family reunion was a much-desired aim in the post-war period, but a phenomenon all too regular and fleeting for military families. For them, the visions of the welfare state constantly conflicted with their position within the military and their compliance with its continual demands. But the discourse of post-war liberal internationalism, which so enthusiastically emphasised the redemptive power of family, did touch military families to some extent: they were to act as quasi-diplomats in forging new links with past foes and demonstrating the positive democratic ‘way of life’ now open to them. In restoring British military families, however briefly, the state also sought to provide domestic stability after an era of profound dislocation. That this never fully applied to Britain's many military families, whose itinerancy continued much as before the war, was one of the abiding inconsistencies within the post-war welfare state. As the 1940s drew to a close, Cold War exigencies meant that British military families would remain an acceptable exception to the norms now set down in Britain itself. They were also embroiled in the task to actively defend that very same liberal democratic welfare state, increasingly part of the division between east and west and bolstering the military presence in Western Europe.
However, within this seemingly immovable system of security, strategy and enforced movement, British military families did carve out spaces for agency and choice. The difficult decisions to send children to boarding school for educational continuity or to ‘keep the family together’ were consciously made by families. Whilst the choices themselves might appear limited, British families nonetheless depicted them as their choices. For historians examining agency in communities who did not express themselves in terms of rebellion or speaking out, the articulation of the language of choice is sometimes as significant as effecting actual change. Families also subtly managed to subvert or ignore the roles set out for them: whilst the insularity of some members of the British community was embarrassing for senior military authorities, it nevertheless demonstrated a resistance to play a part in wider Cold War politics. Whether due to apathy, unfamiliarity or the sheer busyness of everyday life, British integration into the German community was often patchy. And whilst the Cold War undoubtedly shaped everyday life in Germany – indeed, their whole presence there was predicated on it – its presence was not universally felt by families. Historians need to understand family agency in its full context if that term is to retain its analytical usefulness and that context can range in scale, from broad international discourses to individual families’ specific circumstances. Military families might well seem a homogeneous group, not known for speaking out and with few options for individual action or resistance, but their syncretisation of centralised messages and the multiplicity of narratives that emerge from their life stories demonstrate that their choices, actions and outcomes were not in any way uniform. Their important history complicates much broader dichotomies of peacetime and wartime; of welfare and warfare; and of powerlessness and agency.
Acknowledgements
My thanks go to the AHRC Leadership Fellowship Scheme (AH/S002634/1) and to the British Academy/Leverhulme Small Grant scheme (SG152333) for funding this research. I would also like to sincerely extend my thanks to all oral history narrators for their generosity in sharing their stories with me, to the organisations that put me in touch with interviewees, and to colleagues and reviewers for reading earlier drafts of this piece, particularly Jennifer Crane, Julio Decker, Will Pooley, Lauren Stokes and Sarah Paterson. My thanks also go to Joel Morley as post-doctoral research assistant on the ‘British Military Bases in Germany’ project. Informed consent was granted for use of oral history interview material for research purposes and publication and interview recordings are available on formal request from the University of Bristol Research Data Storage Facility.