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Seventy-eight officers held senior command positions at army, corps, and divisional level in Britain’s three main field armies – the Second (North-West Europe), Eighth (Italy), and Fourteenth (Burma) – at the end of the Second World War. Using a range of source material, including their private papers, this article examines their socio-economic and family background, education, and early career development and finds that as a group, they were more representative of the middling classes than heretofore depicted. They were also far more diverse in education and place of birth: twenty-one were born outside Britain. As this article argues, the make-up of the three armies also differed, suggesting the formation of a more elite, home-grown, ‘first team’ for service with the Second Army in North-West Europe.

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This page is a summary of: The Social, Educational, and Early Military Backgrounds of Senior Officers of the British Army of the Second World War, 1944–1945, International Journal of Military History and Historiography, September 2024, De Gruyter,
DOI: 10.1163/24683302-bja10066.
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