John Terraine

John Alfred Terraine (15 January 1921 in London - 28 December 2003 in London)[1] was a TV screenwriter, and leading British military historian, although not permanently associated with any academic institution. He is best known for his persistent defense of British General Douglas Haig, "the Butcher of the Somme",[2] and also as the lead screenwriter for the landmark 1960s BBC-TV documentary The Great War. A quote from one of his books, ''The Smoke and the Fire'' (1980) is used by the WJEC as a source for GCSE history coursework.

Education

Terraine was educated at Stamford School and at Keble College, Oxford.

In 1945 he married Joyce Waite; they had one daughter.

Screenwriting career

After leaving Oxford in 1943, he joined BBC radio and continued to work for the BBC for 18 years, ending as its Pacific and South African Programme Organiser. After resigning from the BBC in 1961, Terraine worked as a freelance television screenwriter. Among other series, Terraine was associate producer and chief screenwriter of the 1963-64 BBC-TV documentary The Great War, and co-wrote its sequel The Lost Peace (1965). For Rediffusion and Thames Television he wrote The Life and Times of Lord Mountbatten (1966–68) and Lord Mountbatten: A Man for the Century (1969),[3] and later collaborated with Mountbatten on an illustrated biography based on the series. Terraine found Mountbatten an impressive performer, but was intrigued by his "curious mix of boastfulness and diffidence".[2] Terraine wrote and narrated The Mighty Continent (1974–75), an impressive 13-part BBC-TV history of Europe in the first three quarters of the 20th century.[2]

Publishing career

Terraine published 16 books, most of them dealing with aspects of the great European wars of the 20th century, and numerous articles and book reviews for The Daily Telegraph. His first major study of the First World War, Mons: The Retreat to Victory was published in 1960. In 1964 Terraine edited a collection of diaries written by General James Lochhead Jack during the First World War, which became a bestseller in the United Kingdom. The Right of the Line: The Royal Air Force in the European War 1939-45 (1985) won the Yorkshire Post Book of the Year award. His last book Business in Great Waters: The U-Boat Wars, 1916-1945 was published in 1989.

Terraine was the founder-president of the Western Front Association from 1980 to 1997, after which he became its patron. One obituarist wrote that for sheer scholarship, the quality and accessibility of his writing and for his debunking of historical myths, Terraine was one of the outstanding military historians of the 20th century.[4]

Terraine was for many years a member of the Royal United Services Institute for Defence Studies. He was awarded the Institute's Chesney Gold Medal in 1982. He was elected a fellow of the Royal Historical Society in 1987.

Views

According to his obituary in The Independent:[1]

"John Terraine was one of the outstanding military historians of the 20th century. His intellect, scholarship and breadth and sharpness of vision marked him out amongst his peers as one to be listened to with great care and attention, and challenged with circumspection, although challenged he was.
"The fundamental reason for the controversy he aroused, and the challenges his challenges met, was that his study of generalship in the First World War led him to criticise, indeed demolish, the argument that British generals in the period 1914-18 were all "donkeys", that their actions simply led to slaughter and disaster. What he could not abide was the "Oh! What a Lovely War" syndrome espoused by the historical, political and pacifist left and also to some extent by B.H. Liddell Hart. In his work he made a very strong case for the view that British generals were actually pretty good and, in the end, unlike their enemies, won the war with a great victory."

Works

Notes


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