John Spencer has a particular interest in Grand Strategy and superior direction in the Great War. He completed his PhD on Sir Henry Wilson’s impact on British policy during the conflict in 2017 at the University of Wolverhampton, under the supervision of Professor Gary Sheffield. He has a BA in International Relations from the University of Lancaster and an MA in First World War Studies from the University of Birmingham. John was a journalist for more than 30 years, on regional newspapers and later as Managing Editor of the Press Association, the national news agency for Britain and Ireland. His study of the career of Field Marshal Sir William Robertson has resulted chapters on ‘Wully’ in Stemming the Tide: Officers and Leadership in the British Expeditionary Force 1914, Courage Without Glory: The British Army on the Western Front 1915 and At All Costs: the British Army on the Western Front 1916, all edited by Spencer Jones and published by Helion & Company. John is a member of both the Western Front Association and the Gallipoli Association, and editsRecords, the journal of the Douglas Haig Fellowship.
Born in 1961, Gary Sheffield studied history at the University of Leeds, before beginning to lecture on war studies at the Royal Military Sandhurst Academy. He then completed his PhD at King’s College, London.
After finishing his studies, Sheffield moved into full-time academia, as Professor of Modern History at King’s College, and then the first Professor of War Studies at the University of Birmingham. He later moved to the University of Wolverhampton.
Sheffield has been published widely on military history subjects, with his second book, The Chief: Douglas Haig and the British Army (2011) widely commended in both academic and popular circles alike.
Sheffield currently serves as Vice President of the Western Front Association and sits on the Advisory Board of the Royal United Services Institute.