Cross Dressing For King And Country

"Join Your Country's Army-to cross dress!" was never exactly the message Lord Kitchener was trying to get across in his Great War recruitment campaign. But to some of the young lads who did join up, learning how to act like a girl was the only skill they were ever taught.

Page [ 1 | 2 | 3 ]

They were the "volunteers" enlisted into the various concert parties which were used to keep up morale amongst the troops. Many of them were probably closet trannies anyway, glad of a chance to slip into a frock, but even those who weren't at least learned a trade they could use in civilian life. One far more useful than killing people.

And use it they did, taking their feminine tricks of the trade onto theatre stages throughout the country in all-male revues that were highly successful into the 1920's and beyond.

One of the most celebrated wartime concert parties had been called Les Rouges et Noir in France, but changed its name back to splinters back in Britain. The cast of cross-dressed ex-soldiers played to full houses in Shaftesbury Avenue and the London Coliseum before launching a provincial tour that ran with various changes of company for another twenty years.

Page [ 1 | 2 | 3 ]

[ Back to Gender Resource Links ]

Copyright © Transformation 2006


0.163419961929

You aren't currently logged in. Enter your username and password to log in, or click here to find out why you should register, or click here if you've forgotten your details.

username
password
 

Transformation special offer - Click for details!

American Idol or X factor ?

Please log in to vote on this poll and to view the poll results.

by ricarda on 30th Jun
Click here for more polls