Quite interesting, I and a few other members will remember the 50th Anniversary of the Great War in 1964. At that time most of the survivors were still around and in their late 60s or 70s. I was 9 at the time and remember the Armistice day service at our local church with many sporting their Great War Trios (one or two in their late 80's wearing their QSA's as well). Everybody agreed that the War was utter hell but it was the general view that those who had took part war all hero's who had gone through what most could not imagine in their worst nightmare, Germany was very much still considered the villain and any one who remembers the 1966 world cup will remember comments like it's the third time we've beaten them, 1918, 1945 and 1966. One veteran I got to know very well was Arthur Atkinson in the Liverpool Regt. Previous to 1 July 1916 he was a very irreligious man. Luckily for him he had a contracted a badly infected foot and therefore was in the sick bay, he was to discover that many of his friends and colleagues had been slaughtered, he felt God must have spared him and he became deeply religious serving as a Lay Reader for many years. At the time there was very little revisionist views and we still sang the Supreme Sacrifice on Remembrance Sunday until a few years later when a rather evangelical minister banned it because he believed it blasphemous.
Most people over the age of 50 would have lost a father, uncle, cousin or even and older brother virtually no family in Britain was totally untouched by bereavement during the war.
That's my threefarthings worth (if it's even worth that).
Paul