New Article: From Amputee to Author

Edward Bird, The Old Soldier’s Story, 1808 (Wolverhampton Art Gallery)

My research on Shadrack Byfield – an English War of 1812 veteran who buried his own severed arm, designed a custom prosthesis, and went on to write multiple memoirs – has recently been published in the Journal of British Studies. The article, “From Amputee to Author”, is freely available on the JBS website. This publication marks the culmination of a decade of intermittent detective work into the colourful life of a remarkable and very strong-willed man, and uses Byfield’s experiences as a means of thinking more broadly about the history of disability, veterans, and military autobiography.

It has been gratifying to see Byfield’s story resonate beyond academic circles. The University of Cambridge, where I was based when I completed the article, shared a news bulletin summarizing my findings. In the days leading up to the article’s release, my research was featured in Popular Science, Ars Technica, and the French-language publication Sciences et Avenir, as well as in several national and regional newspapers in Britain.

Article abstract
The memoir of Shadrack Byfield, an English weaver and war amputee, occupies a privileged place in the historiography and public memory of the Anglo‑American War of 1812. Yet relatively little is known about the author of this rare rank-and-file account. Drawing on extensive archival research and a newly discovered second autobiography, this article challenges the familiar image of Byfield as a plainspoken exemplar of military stoicism. It reveals how war in North America transformed the former private soldier both physically and psychologically. Examining Byfield’s return to civilian life, the article highlights his tenacious pursuit of veterans’ benefits, his cultivation of influential patrons, and his invention of a prosthetic device to enable a resumption of weaving work. It also traces the ex‑serviceman’s path to publication and explores his shifting self‑presentation in print—first as a dutiful soldier and later as a redeemed sinner. Integrating scholarship on disability, memoirs, military welfare, and the history of emotions, the article argues that Byfield’s exceptionally well‑documented life offers a window into the wider experiences of Britain’s homecoming soldiers after the Napoleonic Wars.

Click here to read more.

Article about Byfield in The Daily Express (UK), 15 January 2026