Toggle menu
Toggle preferences menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.
This wiki has been automatically closed because there have been no edits or log actions made within the last 120 days. If you are a user (who is not the bureaucrat) that wishes for this wiki to be reopened, please request that at Requests for reopening wikis. If this wiki is not reopened within 6 months it may be deleted. Note: If you are a bureaucrat on this wiki, you can go to Special:ManageWiki and uncheck the "Closed" box to reopen it.

The clutching hand

From The Great War On This Day

The clutching hand: Applied sometimes to a Quartermaster Sergeant, as being popularly supposed to benefit personally when there was a shortage of anything, rations, etc. The phrase would seem to have originated with a certain film melodrama of an exceptionally lurid kind. Also, an Air Force nickname for the "D.H.6" (De Havilland) aeroplane in use in 1917-1918 as an elementary training machine. [1]

References / notes

  1. Edward Fraser and John Gibbons (1925). Soldier and Sailor Words and Phrases. Routledge, London p.59.
Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.