Peter Moss Exclusive - The Oxford History Project Book 1
Leo spent what felt like an hour in the camp. He watched a woman weaving a basket (Chapter 3: Settling Down ). He held a stone tool, feeling the sharp edge that the book had described as "painstakingly chipped." He understood, in a way a worksheet could never teach, why the transition to agriculture was so revolutionary. The work was hard. The food was scarce. The "History" wasn't a story; it was a struggle to survive.
According to the text, the famous "missing day" in the official diaries of Churchill’s War Cabinet—December 3, 1940—was not an administrative error. It was erased because on that day, a small group of MPs and intelligence officers learned that a German plane had not merely bombed a residential square in London, but had accidentally struck a deep government vault containing the original Magna Carta, the Rotuli Angliae , and a set of bronze plaques from the Roman occupation. The fire was so intense that the artefacts were not destroyed—they changed . The heat and the chemical residue from German incendiaries fused them into a single, unreadable metallic mass. Rather than admit that centuries of physical history had been reduced to slag, the government declared the vault empty and the fire “routine.” the oxford history project book 1 peter moss exclusive