Winston Churchill's Toyshop: The Inside Story of Military Intelligence (Research)

by Stuart MacRae

Paperback, 2012

Status

Available

Call number

355.82094109044

Collection

Publication

Amberley Publishing (2012), 208 pages

Description

The inside story of one of the most famous of all the 'back rooms' of the Second World War - and of the men and women who worked for it. Conceived by Winston Churchill to circumvent the delays, frustrations and inefficiencies of the service ministries, Department M.D.1. earned from its detractors the soubriquet 'Winston Churchill's Toyshop', yet from a tiny underground workshop housed in the cellars of the London offices of Radio Normandie in Portland Place, and subsequently from the 'stockbroker Tudor' of a millionaire's country mansion in Buckinghamshire, came an astonishing array of secret weapons ranging from the 'sticky bomb' and 'limpet mine' to giant bridge-carrying assault tanks, as well as the PIAT, a tank-destroying, hand-held mortar. Written by Colonel Stuart Macrae, who helped found M.D.1. and was its second-in-command throughout its life, the story is told of this relatively unknown establishment and the weapons it developed which helped destroy innumerable enemy tanks, aircraft and ships.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member gbsallery
Vastly more entertaining than R. V. Jones' "Most Secret War", this is a delightfully well-written memoir. Modest, humorous and thoroughly engaging, Stuart Macrae tells a story of ingenuity and organisation which inspires and enlightens. Putting together such an efficient and effective group was a
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major achievement; to tell its story with such a light touch allows the reader to draw lessons from it without being bludgeoned by didacticism. In a way, this is the most effective book on management I have ever read, though I doubt it was intended as such.
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

208 p.; 7.7 inches

ISBN

1445608421 / 9781445608426
Page: 0.6103 seconds