Peter Liddle

Peter Hammond Liddle OBE FRHistS (born 1934) is a British historian and author specialising in the study of the First and Second World Wars. In the 1960s he developed the Liddle Collection, a large collection of interviews and memorabilia mainly relating to the First World War that is now held at the University of Leeds.

Career

Peter Liddle was born in 1934.[1]

In 1968 Liddle started interviewing people about their lives during and around the First World War, collecting oral history from the era. He founded the Liddle Collection and worked to expand in throughout the 1970s and 1980s, placing advertisements and recording many interviews. He also collected personal papers and memorabilia connected to the First World War[2] and the collection grew to be the "largest archive of personal documents from the first world war".[3][4] He developed a team of volunteers to handle the influx of materials.[2] In 1974 Liddle visited New Zealand, where he interviewed 150 war veterans and took the diary of Hartley Valentine Palmer. Palmer and Liddle came into disagreement as Palmer requested the diary back, and Liddle refused, maintaining that it was his "unequivocally". He refused to return it even after the New Zealand Police Association and federal government of New Zealand requested its return.[5] In 2016 a museum in Leeds scanned images of the diary and sent them to Palmer's family.[5] In 2017 it was reported that Liddle had taken 14 such diaries.[6]

By 1986, Liddle was a senior lecturer of history at the University of Sunderland. That year, The Sunday Times reported that the collection was at risk of being "split up or moved to North America" because the collection had grown out of the facilities where it was being held at Sunderland. Liddle was paying £2,000 a year to house the collection and was forced to stop collecting new items.[7] The University of Leeds had purchased the collection by 1988,[3] where it was moved. Liddle then worked at Leeds for ten years as the "Keeper of the Collection" to develop the archive. While at Leeds, Liddle expanded the scope of the collection to include the Second World War. Many items from collected relating to that war were instead placed at Walton-on-Thames in the Second World War Experience Centre.[2] Fred Ratcliffe, the director of Cambridge University Library, considered the collection "one of the most important private collections of 20th century papers".[7] In 2014 the collection had over 4,300 records in 2500 boxes,[2] and in 2011 it was written that 7,000 people had their stories documented with 4,000 interviews. After his retirement he was president of The Second World War Experience Centre, which had 6,000 accounts of the war in 2011.[8]

Liddle's publications include Facing Armageddon: The First World War Experienced,[9][10][11][12] D-Day, by Those Who Were There,[13] and The Great War 1914–1945: Lightning Strikes Twice.[14] In 2011 he published Captured Memories 1990-1918: Across the Threshold of War, an edited collection of twenty-nine interviews.[8]

Liddle was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2023 Birthday Honours for services to heritage and public understanding of the World Wars.[15]

References

  1. Writers Directory. Springer. 5 March 2016. p. 747. ISBN 978-1-349-03650-9.
  2. MacDonald, Juliet (1 September 2014). "Shelf lives: Drawing out letters from World War I". Journal of Writing in Creative Practice. 7 (3): 359–374. doi:10.1386/jwcp.7.3.359_1.
  3. "Great War collection is saved from dispersal". The Guardian. 10 October 1988. p. 5. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  4. "'People's war' archive moves to new home." Yorkshire Post [Leeds, England], 29 Jan. 2002
  5. "Nelson woman's 42-year battle for return of father's lost Gallipoli diary". Stuff. 21 March 2017. Retrieved 29 December 2020.
  6. "Hope for families of Anzac heroes fighting for decades to retrieve World War 1 diaries". Stuff. 22 April 2017. Retrieved 29 December 2020.
  7. "Cash squeeze risks all our yesterdays: threat to Peter Liddle's collection of personal memorabilia of World War I". The Sunday Times. 9 February 1986.
  8. Parotti, Philip (Fall 2011). "Voices of War". Sewanee Review. 119 (4): lxiii–lxvii. doi:10.1353/sew.2011.0104. S2CID 162311546.
  9. Peterson, Agnes F. (October 1997). "Facing Armageddon: The First World War Experienced: Cecil, Hugh, and Peter H. Liddle, eds.: London: Leo Cooper/Pen and Sword, 936 pp., Publication Date: 1996". History: Reviews of New Books. 26 (1): 8. doi:10.1080/03612759.1997.10525251. ISSN 0361-2759.
  10. Peterson, A. F. (1997). "Facing Armageddon: The First World War Experienced: Reviews of New Books". History. 26 (1): 8.
  11. Glenn, R. W. (1998). "Facing Armageddon: The First World War Experienced". Military Review. 78 (1): 112.
  12. Howard, Michael (11 October 1996). "Peoples in arms". The Times Literary Supplement.
  13. Harrison, K. C. (October 2004). "D‐Day, by Those Who Were There2004402Edited by Peter Liddle. D‐Day, by Those Who Were There . Barnsley: Pen & Sword Books 2004. 256 pp., ISBN: 1 84415 079 8 £19.99 $26.62". Reference Reviews. 18 (7): 50–51. doi:10.1108/09504120410559870. ISSN 0950-4125.
  14. Bernstein, L. (2002). "The two world wars that shaped the 20th century". Military Review. 82 (2): 107–108.
  15. "No. 64082". The London Gazette (Supplement). 17 June 2023. p. B13.
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