Britain’s small, highly trained regular army was no match in terms of numbers for the huge German forces which, within a week of mobilisation, had 3.8 million men under arms. Kitchener foresaw that a new citizens’ army would be required, made up of volunteers.
In times of war, the government had envisaged that the regular and Territorial armies would simply grow organically, taking on new recruits and expanding as required. Lord Kitchener, who had little enough faith in the prowess of the new Territorial Force formed in 1908 with part-time soldiers, originally meant for home defence), decided to discard the idea and, as the new Secretary of State for War, create an entirely New Army of 100,000 men. However, such was the apparent enthusiasm to fight that some 300,000 civilians enlisted in August, before word ever got out that this New Amy was needed. Then, when Kitchener launched his famous appeal, epitomised by the poster ‘Your Country Needs You’, there came a second, spontaneous response, hundreds of thousands of men besieging recruiting stations set up right across the country.