From Bedales to the Boche: The ironies of an Edwardian childhood
English
By (author): Robert Best
Robert Best and his younger brother Frank were born into privileged middle-class Birmingham in the 1890s, where their father owned one of the UK's most successful lighting factories, supplying fashionable fittings to offices, hotels, restaurants and opera houses all over the word.
Sent to the most enlightened new school of its day - Bedales - the boys not only enjoyed the freedom to explore their own interests but absorbed the inspirational moral thinking of the school's founder and headmaster, J.H. Badley.
From Bedales to the Boche charts their history and that of the school in its early years, and shows what Badley's idea of a progressive education consisted of. It also shows how the boys, both highly talented, honed their ambitions to becoming music-hall entertainers, writing and performing their own material at home and at school, and eventually showing it to London impresarios.
Their plans for the stage were interrupted, however, by their father's insistence that they study design at another progressive institution, the art school in Duesseldorf, that had been headed until 1907 by Peter Behrens. Best's account of his year there, and of Frank's the following year, provides an amusing interlude ahead of the First World War.
When hostilities broke out, the brothers enlisted at once into the Army Service Corps (ASC), which took them to the battlefields of northern France and to Dublin in 1916 to help quell the Easter Rising.
Their passion, however, going back to their experiments with flight while at Bedales, was for the newly formed Royal Flying Corps, which they entered in late 1916, joining the Corps' new school and embarking on a training programme that Best describes in fascinating detail.
After six months of training, the brothers were sent to France where the life expectancy of a pilot was about 4 months. Frank lasted five weeks; his plane was shot down, his body never found.
In respect of his death, From Bedales to the Boche is rich in pathos. Best ends by showing how he and his parents responded to Frank's loss, even attending seances to try to communicate with him, and how he tried to rediscover and make sense of Germany after the war was over. See more