National Service
Young British men in the 1950's were confronted by the daunting
prospect of National Service.
Under the terms of the National Service Act of 1948 thy were
"called up" at the age of eighteen to undergo two years
of military training and duty - the first time compulsory military
service had been seen in Britain outside of wartime.
Many young 1950's servicemen spent their entire term in
draughty army barracks polishing boots and 'square-bashing'.
Others were dispatched to the outposts of Britain's shrinking
empire to fight her enemies.
They took on the left-wing guerrillas in the Malay jungle. In
Kenya they tried to outwit the Mau Mau terrorists. They guarded
the Suez Canal. And they went on desert forays in Aden and the
troubled Gulf States.
Around 400 were killed in action and many more were wounded.
However, National Service was never a big political issue for
British youth.
Some young men actually enjoyed their service overseas as it
opened up new horizons and experiences, just as it had for their
fathers and brothers during the war. It was simply the conformity,
the regimentation and the intense drabness of the post-war world
they lived in that provided the spur for revolt.
National Service
eventually became unpopular with the new breed of teenager and was
abolished in 1960.

|