• Contact us
  • Advertise with us
  • Cumbria Crack app
  • About us
Friday, July 17, 2026
cumbriacrack.com
  • News
  • Sport
    • All sport
    • Carlisle United
  • Business
  • What’s on
  • Food & drink
  • Jobs
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Sport
    • All sport
    • Carlisle United
  • Business
  • What’s on
  • Food & drink
  • Jobs
No Result
View All Result
cumbriacrack.com
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Tuesday talks: One Hundred Years On: the 3rd Anglo-Afghan War of May 1919

by Cumbria Crack
09/05/2019
in News
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Cumbria’s Museum of Military Life in Carlisle Castle Tuesday talks continue with a fascinating insight into one of history’s shorter conflict, the 3rd Afghan War.

Dr Alastair Massie who worked at the National Army Museum between 1991 and 2018, where he was latterly Head of Research is giving the talk entitled “One Hundred Years On: the 3rd Anglo-Afghan War of May 1919” The event takes place at the Museum on Tuesday 14 May at 6pm.

Dr Massie was curator of the Museum’s photographic exhibition ‘Afghanistan: Then and Now’ and has published widely on eighteenth-century soldiers for the ‘Oxford Dictionary of National Biography’ and the Army Records Society, as well as on the Crimean War.

The talk comes as the Museum gears up for the opening of a new temporary exhibition, Blood, Sweat and Tears – Afghanistan, The Untold Story which will open on 20 May.

The 3rd Afghan War began with an Afghan invasion of British India on 3 May 1919 and ended a month later, following its repulse, with a ceasefire; sporadic fighting nevertheless continued until the final peace treaty was concluded in early August. Although official hostilities lasted only a matter of weeks, it still featured sharp fighting on three main fronts spread over a 500 -mile length of the frontier.

On the British side, new weapons such as light machine guns and hand-grenades made their first appearance on the Indian northwest frontier; armoured cars saw combat alongside horsed cavalry; motor lorries and camels were equally essential in carrying supplies; and aeroplanes raided the Afghan capital, Kabul, in an early demonstration of strategic bombing. Among British commanders, General Dyer, temporarily setting aside his Amritsar notoriety, did as well as any.

The war though saw the mass desertion of the tribal militias intended by Britain to police the frontier, and even a sit-down strike by disgruntled territorial soldiers, sent to India for the duration of the First World War and now eager to return home to the United Kingdom. For the Afghans, although defeated in all the major engagements, the war yielded results in that the British renounced their claim to control Afghanistan’s foreign policy, enabling the country to achieve full independence.

The talk will start at 6:00pm (doors open 5.30pm – a cash bar is available for refreshments)

Tickets are £5 each (£6 on the door) and can be booked by calling the Museum on (01228) 532774 or
email: [email protected] or online www.CumbriasMuseumofMilitaryLife.org.

Previous Post

Public invited to engaging and informative Dementia Talks

Next Post

Farlam Hall in Cumbria welcomes new American owners and management team

Have you read?

Kirkstone Pass closure: Work continues after landslip
Latest

Lake District road closed after landslip set to reopen today

17/07/2026
Lake District National Park vital for nation’s wellbeing says new report
News

Lake District National Park vital for nation’s wellbeing says new report

17/07/2026
Lake District runner closes in on 100th half-marathon for charity
News

Lake District runner closes in on 100th half-marathon for charity

17/07/2026
Lake District bad parking prompts double yellow lines
News

New traffic and parking restrictions for north and West Cumbria

16/07/2026
Emergency services called to A594 crash in West Cumbria
News

Emergency services called to A594 crash in West Cumbria

16/07/2026
Cumbria’s gritters set to head out on roads
News

No changes to Cumbria council’s winter gritting routes

16/07/2026

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our mailing list to receive daily updates direct to your inbox!

*We hate spam as much as you do. Privacy Statement

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

33 Middlegate
Penrith
Cumbria
CA11 7SY

Phone: 01768 862313
Email: [email protected]

Registered in England as Barrnon Media Limited. No: 12475190
VAT registration number: 343486488

Explore

  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Carlisle United
  • What’s on
  • Jobs

Useful links

  • Contact us
  • Send a sport report
  • Get our app
  • Advertise with us
  • About us

Follow us on

Newsletter

Subscribe to our mailing list to receive daily updates direct to your inbox!

*We hate spam as much as you do. Privacy Statement

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

© Barrnon Media Limited 2023

Terms & Conditions / Privacy Policy / Cookie Policy
This website and its associated newspaper are members of the Independent Press Standards Organisation
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Sport
    • All sport
    • Carlisle United
  • Business
  • What’s on
  • Food & drink
  • Jobs

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.