Britain and Atomic Energy 1939-1945
[with] Britain and Atomic Energy: Independence and Deterrence 1945-1952, volume I Policy Making [and] volume II Policy Execution [and] References to Official Papers, July 1980.
London, Macmillan & Co. Ltd. & the Authority Historian's Office, 1964, 1974 & 1980.
Margaret Gowing (1921-1998) 'was at once a distinguished historian and a redoubtable champion of a variety of causes that reflected her keen perception of what constituted the public interest. Her scholarly reputation rested primarily on her magisterial studies of atomic energy in Britain during and after the Second World War' (obituary in the Independent, November 20, 1998).
Gowing took a First in economic history at the London School of Economics in 1941, then held posts at the Ministry of Supply and Board of Trade, followed by the Cabinet Office, where she spent fourteen years as part of the team producing civil histories of the Second World War. In 1959 she joined the Atomic Energy Authority as historian and archivist.
'In Britain and Atomic Energy 1939-1945 (1964) and its two-volume sequel, Independence and Deterrence (1974, written with the assistance of her friend and collaborator Lorna Arnold), she offered a characteristically clear-eyed account of the fashioning and implementation of British policy with regard to atomic energy from the outbreak of the war until October 1952, when "Hurricane" — the test of a rather primitive bomb at Monte Bello, a group of islands off the north-west coast of Australia — propelled Britain to the status of the world's third nuclear power. These books, along with her many articles, major public lectures, and penetrating reviews, established her not merely as a peerless chronicler and analyst of a crucial facet of the war effort and of Britain's subsequent struggles to maintain great power status, but also as a leading commentator on the relations between science and government. Her election first to the British Academy in 1975 and 13 years later to the Royal Society recognised equally the quality and the breadth of her work and placed her, with Sir Karl Popper and Joseph Needham, among the tiny handful of those who have been Fellows of both bodies' (the Independent).
First editions, possible second impression of the first volume, first impression of the other three; 4 volumes of which 3 are 8vo and 1 is a 32-page wire-stitched pamphlet; 4 double-sided plates from photographs in each of the primary volumes, vol. 1 with a little spotting to the edges of the text block and minor creasing to the lower corner of the prefatory leaves; original red and blue cloth, titles to spines in copper and gilt, two volumes with slightly bumped corners and rolled spines, short closed tear affecting the margin of pages 97-100 in Independence and Deterrence vol. I, jackets a little rubbed, toned, and creased, contemporary Macmillan price ticket to the jacket of the first volume in the set, a very good set.
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