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National Treasures

Saving The Nation's Art in World War II

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National Treasures

By: Caroline Shenton
Narrated by: Esther Wane
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About this listen

The gigantic covert wartime mission led by the men and women of London's museums and galleries to save the nation's priceless heritage.

As Hitler prepared to invade Poland during the sweltering summer of 1939, men and women from across London's museums, galleries and archives formulated ingenious plans to send the nation's highest prized objects to safety. Using stately homes, tube tunnels, slate mines, castles, prisons, stone quarries and even their own homes, a dedicated bunch of unlikely misfits packed up the nation's greatest treasures and, in a race against time, dispatched them throughout the country on a series of top-secret wartime adventures.

National Treasures highlights a moment from our history when an unlikely coalition of mild-mannered civil servants, social oddballs and metropolitan aesthetes became the front line in the heritage war against Hitler. Caroline Shenton shares the interwoven lives of ordinary people who kept calm and carried on in the most extraordinary of circumstances in their efforts to save the Nation's historic identity.

(P) 2021 Hodder & Stoughton Limited©2021 Caroline Shenton
Art Library & Museum Studies Military Social Sciences War England

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Critic reviews

Geeks triumph over the forces of darkness: nothing could have given me greater pleasure. Combining an exciting story with scrupulous research, Caroline Shenton has done her unlikely heroes proud (Lucy Worsley)
An engrossing and uplifting story of how some of the greatest treasures of Britains museum, gallery and library collections were protected and preserved during the darkest days of WWII (Richard Ovenden, author of Burning the Books)
Shenton has the archivist's unerring eye for detail and the storyteller's instinct for what will make a compelling tale. It is brought to life with energy and confidence (Julie Summers, bestselling author of Jambusters)
Entertaining, surprising and full of brilliant vignettes, Shenton does justice to one of the great untold stories of the Second World War (Josh Ireland, author of Churchill & Son)
Fascinating, engaging and often eye-stretching, Caroline Shenton's account of the battle to save the nation's greatest treasures during wartime features a wonderfully eclectic cast of oddballs, bluestockings and endearingly eccentric aristocrats. A cracking read (Giles Milton)
Shenton manages to combine scholarly and diligent research with a powerful narrative drive and a hugely entertaining taste for the anecdotal. Moreover, her cast of characters wouldn't disgrace an Ealing comedy. I haven't enjoyed a book so much in years (Adrian Tinniswood)
Reveals the wonderfully inventive ways Britain's great museums hid their priceless exhibits from Hitler's bombs (Daily Mail)
Vigorously researched and highly entertaining (Daily Telegraph)
All stars
Most relevant
This is a wonderful book. Thank you Caroline for delving so deep into the archives to bring us such a detailed story of the evacuation of these art treasures and of the lives of the people who were involved. The narrator Esther Wane was the perfect choice to read it too.

A fascinating story meticulously researched

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