PODCAST · history
Remembering the Fallen: The Great War Education Trust Podcast
by Lucy
Real stories of the Great War — told with compassion, research, and purpose.Hosted by Lucy Barnett, researcher, educator, and founder of Remembering the Fallen: The Great War Education Trust, this podcast explores the lives behind the names, the overlooked histories of ordinary soldiers, and the complex moral questions of command, discipline, memory, and loss.Each episode brings together thoughtful research, personal insight, and a deep commitment to honouring those who served. From battlefield experiences and home-front stories to ethical dilemmas and forgotten tragedies.
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The Christmas Truce: A Fragile Peace on a Violent Front
n this special episode, Lucy explores the story of the 1914 Christmas Truce — not as a single, sentimental moment, but as a patchwork of brief, fragile truces that flickered along the Western Front.Some men shook hands in No Man’s Land. Some exchanged gifts. Others refused outright. And for many, the guns never fell silent at all.By looking closely at different battalions, locations, and personal accounts, we uncover a far more complex reality: the truce was remarkable, yes, but it was never universal. It depended on the ground, the officers, the mood, and sheer chance. It was a human pause in an inhuman war — and one that ended as quickly as it began.Lucy reflects on why this moment still captivates us, and why it matters to remember the truth:if history makes you comfortable, then you aren’t truly listening.The Christmas Truce invites us to look beyond the myth and sit with the uncomfortable reality of war — compassion, fear, connection, and violence existing side by side.
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Episode 4 — “Five Men at Mons: Human Stories from the First Shots of the Great War”
In this episode, Lucy tells the stories of five soldiers caught in the chaos of the Battle of Mons — the moment the British Expeditionary Force first met the full force of the German Army in August 1914.Through their experiences, we see Mons not as a sweeping manoeuvre on a map, but as a series of human moments: courage, confusion, endurance, and the sudden collision between expectation and reality. Some survived, some did not — but each man’s story reveals what it meant to be among the first to fight, retreat, and hold the line in the opening days of the Great War.With archival research, personal detail, and a deep sense of compassion, Lucy brings these five soldiers back into focus, showing how the earliest battles shaped the rest of the war — and the lives left behind.
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Rev. Arthur W. Woods: Faith, Duty, and the Army Chaplains of WWI
In this episode, Lucy explores the life and service of Reverend Arthur W. Woods, the Canadian chaplain who buried Private George Follett in June 1915. Through his story, we look more widely at the essential – but often overlooked – role of Army chaplains on the Western Front.From front-line ministry to writing final letters home, chaplains carried a unique emotional burden. They comforted the dying, walked among the wounded, and offered families a shred of certainty in a world collapsing into chaos. Rev. Woods’ quiet compassion at Follett’s burial gives us a powerful window into the pastoral, moral, and human responsibilities these men carried in the trenches.Join Lucy as she brings together archival research, personal testimony, and battlefield history to illuminate the chaplains’ role in remembrance, grief, and the everyday endurance of soldiers at war.
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Episode 2: The Story of Private George Follett — A Life Lost in 1915
In this episode, Lucy shares the story of Private George Follett, 8th Battalion Canadian Infantry (90th Winnipeg Rifles), who was killed on 21 June 1915. Drawing on personal research, archival records, and family history, Lucy brings George’s life and service into focus — not just how he died, but who he was.She explores George’s journey from England to Canada, his enlistment, his time with the Winnipeg Rifles, and the circumstances surrounding his death at the front. Lucy also reflects on the emotional process of researching a single soldier, the meaning of remembrance, and the powerful connection created when we bring individual stories out of the archives and into the present.This is the first in a continuing series of personal soldier histories — honouring their names, their families, and their legacy with compassion and care.To support our work please visit https://patreon.com/greatwareducationtrust
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Episode 1: Welcome — Who I Am and Why This Podcast Exists
In this introductory episode, Lucy Barnett — researcher, educator, and founder of Remembering the Fallen: The Great War Education Trust — shares the story behind the podcast and the mission that drives it.Lucy talks about her background in WW1 Studies, her personal connection to remembrance, and why preserving the real, human stories of the Great War matters now more than ever. She explains how the charity began, what it aims to achieve, and what listeners can expect from future episodes.This is the start of a journey into the lives, experiences, and memories of those who served — told with compassion, research, and purpose.To support our work visit https://patreon.com/greatwareducationtrust
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Real stories of the Great War — told with compassion, research, and purpose.Hosted by Lucy Barnett, researcher, educator, and founder of Remembering the Fallen: The Great War Education Trust, this podcast explores the lives behind the names, the overlooked histories of ordinary soldiers, and the complex moral questions of command, discipline, memory, and loss.Each episode brings together thoughtful research, personal insight, and a deep commitment to honouring those who served. From battlefield experiences and home-front stories to ethical dilemmas and forgotten tragedies.
HOSTED BY
Lucy
CATEGORIES
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