England’s military heartland

Preparing for war on Salisbury Plain

Authors:
Vron Ware
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Antonia Lucia Dawes
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Mitra Pariyar
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Alice Cree
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This book provides a glimpse of life lived next to and within the perimeter of a British Army ‘super garrison’ located in Wiltshire in south-west England. Comprising the largest training area in the country, Salisbury Plain offers a unique opportunity to investigate the impact of this military base on rural communities living close to the wire. Situated within the precious ecology of mostly ‘unimproved’ chalk grassland, in an area known for its rich prehistoric remains, this is an environment that bears the scars of more than a century of modern warfare. While the names of road and buildings in the camps and garrisons offer lessons in imperial military history, the new housing estates perched on the edge of open country point to the vast infrastructure of service family life required to maintain the modern army. In addition to the social, cultural, economic and political aspects of life in an area dominated by military training needs, the book examines different facets of nature conservation, farming and other ecological questions that emanate from the army’s historic occupation of the Plain. The relationship between this Wiltshire ‘super garrison’ and the zones of contemporary conflict elsewhere in the world accounts for the secrecy and inaccessibility that pervades this militarised landscape. By drawing attention to this particular place, this book interrogates the costs and consequences for society as a whole of maintaining a professional military workforce.

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