9 reviews

Tank Man - The Life and Times of Captain Bert Baker

£12.99 GBP
Tank Man - The Life and Times of Captain Bert Baker is one of the most complete stories of one man's service with the Tank Corps.

Usually shipped within 24 hours

UK deliveries from £4.95

Delivery & Returns

We use the Royal Mail, DHL Express or UPS for our customers. For UK addresses, deliveries under 10kg are a standard £4.95 via Royal Mail Tracked 48 Service. For orders over 10kg and overseas customers, postage is calculated for you at checkout once you have entered your postal address. This price, does not include any potential custom charges that may apply, depending on the product or destination, as every country has very different import duties / taxes. Online exclusive products (such as trainers) will be delivered to you directly from the printer, separate from other items in your order, but your postage fee covers ALL items in your order.

If you are unhappy with your purchase, please email shop@tankmuseum.org within fourteen (14) working days of receiving your goods, and return it to us at the address below, in its original condition, unopened (with any seals and shrink-wrap intact) and we will issue you a full refund or replace it. Goods must be returned at your own cost. If the item is faulty, you do not need to return it, we will send you a replacement free of charge.

Description

Tank Man - The Life and Times of Captain Bert Baker is one of the most complete stories of one man's service with the Tank Corps. 

Museum visitors will recognise Albert (Bert) Baker from the Tank Men exhibition, where he is featured alongside the Graincourt gun – his prize from the Battle of Cambrai.

His life up to that point had been confined to a small family dairy in south London. But like so many of those others, in the heat of battle he proved himself capable of extraordinary deeds of valour. Bert served in the trenches, but his wartime story is inextricably bound up with his service in the tanks.

The tanks had a painful infancy. But as an officer in the newly-created Tank Corps, Baker featured in two actions that helped establish it once and for all as a frontline weapon - winning a Military Cross in the first and a bar to it in the second.

Outside Ypres, Baker was part of the successful Cockroft raid. At Cambrai, tanks forced a spectacular advance that overcame the doubts of even the most skeptical commanders.

Drawing on Baker’s papers, Jonathan Baker tells his grandfather’s story from the eyewitness perspective of one of the first men to command a tank in battle.

Bert’s story is also a social history: growing up in the newly-emerging suburbia of London, the ins and outs of running an urban dairy, and his own post-war involvement, as a chemical analyst, in the efforts to produce milk that was safe to drink. 

Reviews (9)

Customer Reviews

Based on 9 reviews
100%
(9)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
P
P.R.
Excellent

Very well written and enjoyable from a family member working from Berts papers

K
K.G.
I really enjoyed the book

I am relatively aware of WWI events and battles and honestly thought-mistakenly-that tanks were first deployed at Cambrai. I had no idea of the previous engagements and until I read the book no idea of the role Capt. Bert Baker played in these engagements.

The book also explains the absolute horror of conditions serving in the early tanks-heat, fumes, metal splinters flying around in almost total darkness. The thought of trying to steady oneself in the vehicle and only having red hot pipes to grab hold of makes the mind boggle.

Perhaps the most interesting part of the book is the life Bert Baker lived before joining the army. Working with dairy cows in London-sounds impossible and could have been nothing but-hot, smelly and extremely unpleasant work . Not a bad apprenticeship for tank work?! What an incredible man he was.

R
R.C.
Excellent

A very enjoyable read.

A
A.M.
Tanks For The Memory

A fine chronicle of the life of Bert Baker before, during and after the Great War - an ordinary man doing extraordinary things. Stylishly written and meticulously researched, it provides a vivid narrative of the evolution of the tank and the ordeal of the uncomplaining men who had to suffer the hell of being inside one for hours on end. The battle scenes are particularly well painted. A bonus is the study of the pre-war dairy industry in which Bert was employed and the development of the safe milk we all take for granted today. A thoroughly enjoyable read.

R
R.R.
Wonderfully Informative

Five Stars
Excellent
This is a very well written book by Jonathan Baker, and thoroughly worth purchasing and reading. Whilst this book also held a personal interest for me due to a close family connection (Bert Baker was my great uncle), I would say that it is a must read for anyone interested in the early history of tanks, the trials and tribulations of their acceptance in the WW1 battlefield environment, and their development thereafter. It is very well researched, very interesting and thoroughly recommended.

TM Publications

Tank Man - The Life and Times of Captain Bert Baker

£12.99 GBP

Tank Man - The Life and Times of Captain Bert Baker is one of the most complete stories of one man's service with the Tank Corps. 

Museum visitors will recognise Albert (Bert) Baker from the Tank Men exhibition, where he is featured alongside the Graincourt gun – his prize from the Battle of Cambrai.

His life up to that point had been confined to a small family dairy in south London. But like so many of those others, in the heat of battle he proved himself capable of extraordinary deeds of valour. Bert served in the trenches, but his wartime story is inextricably bound up with his service in the tanks.

The tanks had a painful infancy. But as an officer in the newly-created Tank Corps, Baker featured in two actions that helped establish it once and for all as a frontline weapon - winning a Military Cross in the first and a bar to it in the second.

Outside Ypres, Baker was part of the successful Cockroft raid. At Cambrai, tanks forced a spectacular advance that overcame the doubts of even the most skeptical commanders.

Drawing on Baker’s papers, Jonathan Baker tells his grandfather’s story from the eyewitness perspective of one of the first men to command a tank in battle.

Bert’s story is also a social history: growing up in the newly-emerging suburbia of London, the ins and outs of running an urban dairy, and his own post-war involvement, as a chemical analyst, in the efforts to produce milk that was safe to drink. 

View product