Now all roads lead to France and heavy is the treadEdward Thomas, Roads
Of the living; but the dead returning lightly dance.
Friday, January 2, 2026
Was the U.S. Military Intervention in the First World War Worth the Cost? — Video
Thursday, January 1, 2026
Who were Pip, Squeak, and Wilfred?
By James Patton
The British Empire service medal group pictured above, consisting of (Left) the 1914 Star (informally the "Mons Star") , or the similar 1914–15 Star, (Center) the British War Medal, and (Right) the Victory Medal, was irreverently dubbed by the veterans as “Pip, Squeak, and Wilfred.”
These three names were taken from cartoon characters in a very successful comic strip that ran in the British tabloid The Daily Mirror from 1919 to 1940 and again from 1947 to 1955. Originally the work of Bertram J. Lamb (1887–1938), who was the children’s editor of the paper and illustrator, Austin B. Payne (1876–1959), this charming and witty work featured the mongrel dog Pip, a South African penguin (Spheniscus demersus) named Squeak that had escaped from the zoo, and later on an infant long-eared European hare (Lepus europaeus) whom they called “Wilfred”, who only says "gug" and "nunc." When Wilfred joined the group, Pip assumed the paternal role and Squeak the maternal, even accessorizing with a red purse. The strip emphasized companionship, and the three characters were always depicted together.,
The strip was innovative. These three ‘toons were among the first anthropomorphic animal characters in the comics. In 1921 several five-minute animated films featured them, predating Walt Disney’s Steamboat Willie by seven years. Starting in 1923, there was produced an annual book which featured all of the daily strips from the previous year, a practice which continues to the present day with many daily comic strips. The use of the term "lovely" to indicate approval or agreement was started by Squeak and has long since passed into every-day UK English.
| Squeak — Pip — Wilfred |
Why did the Tommies name the service medals after these characters? Likely because the grouping was as ubiquitous as the comic strip. The officers, posh types and heroes got fancy medals, such as the DSO, DSM, DCM, or even the MC, but Tommy Atkins only got Pip, Squeak, and Wilfred.
Why were the medals regarded as common? Everyone who served honorably received them, no matter who they were, where they served or what they did. The trio set was awarded to about 2.35 million persons, and the duo set of the War Medal and the Victory Medal was bestowed upon an additional 4.5 million persons whose service was after 1915. Today an authentic three-medal set sells for prices starting at US $750 on eBay and appear to be rather rare. Three individual medals can be had for about £100 at dealers, and exact replica sets go for US $49.99 on Etsy.
You can read more about the story of the cartoon strip by clicking HERE.
Wednesday, December 31, 2025
100 Years Ago: 1925 Was a Big Year for Peacemakers
As the new year of 1926 approached, there were a lot of congratulations being passed between the various diplomatic ministries of the participants in the recent World War. Various actions seemed to have secured a long lasting peace. We know in hindsight that none of those statesmen saw the worldwide Great Depression a few years in the future or the next big war. Nevertheless, the accomplishments of the various statesmen and politicians of those days are worth remembering and admiring.
As representatives for all the many individuals determined to see the catastrophe of 1914–1918 not be repeated, I've chosen here to present the Nobel Peace Prize recipients for c. 1925. There were so many worthy recipients during this period that the Nobel Peace Prizes for achievements in 1925 were spread over three years.
I think it's fitting to remember the peacemakers of a century past, all honored in their time with the Nobel Peace Prize.
- Charles Gates Dawes, United States
Nobel Peace Prize 1925
Charles Dawes received the Peace Prize for 1925 for having contributed to reducing the tension between Germany and France after the First World War.
Dawes's background was as a lawyer and businessman. He came into politics when he headed the presidential election campaign of the Republican candidate William McKinley in 1896. McKinley won but was shot in 1901, and Dawes returned to business life. Dawes did not return to public life until the USA entered World War I in 1917. He was sent to Europe as an officer, and was put in charge of all supplies to the Allies at the front. He was elected vice president of the United States in 1924.
After the war, the Germans resented France's occupation of parts of the country, intended to force them to pay reparations. Tension between the two countries rose. Dawes headed an international committee set up to assess Germany's situation. In 1924, the committee presented the Dawes Plan. Germany was granted American loans enabling it to pay indemnity. In return, France ceased its occupation.
- Sir Austen Chamberlain, United Kingdom
Nobel Peace Prize 1925
- Aristide Briand, France
Nobel Peace Prize 1926
The French foreign minister Aristide Briand shared the Peace Prize for 1926 with the German foreign minister Gustav Stresemann. They were awarded the prize for reconciliation between Germany and France after World War I.
Aristide Briand pursued a career in the French Socialist Party after having read law at the Sorbonne. He entered the government in 1906 and spearheaded the devolution of France's state church. From 1909 on, he was prime minister for various periods, including during the war.
The war convinced Briand that a peace treaty must not lay the foundations for a revanchist war. He accordingly opposed the harsh treatment meted out to Germany after the war. Briand was also critical of the French occupation of parts of Germany as a means of obtaining war indemnity. In 1925 he signed a reconciliation agreement with Germany in the Swiss town of Locarno. Briand later made unsuccessful attempts to persuade the USA to guarantee France's security.
- Gustav Stresemann, Germany
Nobel Peace Prize 1926
The German foreign minister Gustav Stresemann shared the Peace Prize for 1926 with the French foreign minister Aristide Briand. They were honored for having signed an agreement of reconciliation between their two countries in the Swiss town of Locarno in 1925.
Before entering politics and becoming foreign minister, Stresemann had studied literature, history and economics and worked in business. In 1907 he was elected to the German Reichstag. In the field of foreign policy, he stood out as an eager imperialist who demanded “a place in the sun” for Germany.
During World War I, he supported Germany's annexation of territories from neighboring countries. But with the war going badly, he believed that Germany should sue for peace. He was shocked at the harsh terms accorded Germany at the peace negotiations in 1919 but opposed the idea that Germany should sabotage the peace treaty. Stresemann was prime minister for a short time in 1923, before as foreign minister initiating reconciliation with France.
- Ferdinand Buisson, France
Nobel Peace Prize 1927
Ferdinand Buisson grew up under the nineteenth-century dictatorship of Emperor Napoleon III. He studied philosophy and pedagogy, and moved to Switzerland so as to be able to work, think, and write freely. All his life he was committed to the advancement of democracy and human rights.
After the Franco-German war (1870–71) and the Emperor's fall, Buisson returned to France, where he became professor of pedagogy at the Sorbonne. He took a stand against the anti-Semitism in French society, and in 1902 he was elected to the Chamber of Deputies for the Radical Socialists. There he also became a spokesman for women's suffrage.
In World War I, Buisson denounced Germany as the aggressor but was strongly opposed to the harsh treatment to which it was subjected after the war. He feared it would lay the foundations for a revanchist war on Germany's part and arranged meetings aimed at Franco-German reconciliation. This work gained him the Peace Prize together with the German Ludwig Quidde.
- Ludwig Quidde, Germany
Nobel Peace Prize 1927
Interestingly, no Nobel Peace Prizes were awarded in 1928. Possibly, it was sensed or detected that movement had started toward another world war. Although, on the other hand, an award was made in 1930 to U.S. secretary of state Frank Kellogg for having been one of the initiators of the Briand-Kellogg Pact of 1928, prohibiting wars of aggression. While it failed to prevent another world war, it did establish a legal rationale for prosecution of war instigators.
Sources: All the material above was found at the various websites of the Nobel Prize Committee
Tuesday, December 30, 2025
Eyewitness: The Trenches as Dante's Inferno
| Poilus Heading for the Trenches |
Letter from Chasseur á Pied Robet Pellissier
February 7, 1915
. . . My battalion had a devil of a time the second half of January. We went up the range and down the other side to take up the trenches about Steinbach and Uffholz.
Hardly had we reached our positions than the Dutch began to give signs of unusual activity. They began to bombard, and they kept it up day after day. The first forty-eight hours my company was held on reserve and all we could do was to sit in covered trenches and listen to the shells burst in our neighborhood. It was quite a stunt to get out at all as fragments came buzzing along at any time. Although the explosions took place near the regular trenches quite a distance from us we could not have any fires because of the danger of being spotted, and it was freezing pretty hard. Another thing, we could not lie down. The covered ditches being too narrow, we slept with our knees to our chin.
The third and fourth days we relieved the company in the first line trenches. The one we occupied made me think of Dante‘s Inferno, the part assigned to Brunetto Latini, who runs madly on a sandy plain under a rain of fire. The trench was in yellow mud. In the front of it in the mud there were poor fellows stretched out in their last sleep, fifteen or twenty of them. In addition many humps over the field, all being hastily made graves. The trench was German originally. It had been stormed by the 252nd regiment and turned around to face the German front. The slaughter had been terrible. To our back and to the right was the village of Steinbach, or rather the ghost of the village. My company took it December 13th. It was retaken by the Dutch. Soon after that, taken away from them by line infantry, every house riddled with shot. Few roofs and many black walls, the steeple showing the light right through in a dozen places. To our left was the road of access, and perhaps the most striking element in the picture, every square yard ploughed up by exploded shells. There the earth was red, just as it is near Holyoke. Well, the trees, fruit trees and the vineyards were all red from the amount of dirt kicked up by shells. . .
| Sgt. Robert Pellisier |
The fifth day and the sixth we were to be in the second line, they made us build an artillery shelter in the back woods. All went serenely until about 4 P.M. There was just the regular number of shells, two or three every five minutes, but at four, by gum, things began to hum, and we received orders to move to the front P.D.Q. My section started up, I pulled out my watch and started to count. It took us eleven minutes to get to our second line position and in that time we received in front and in back to the right and left eighty-two shells.
The noise and the stuff kicked up and the branches cut made an "ensemble" impossible to describe, yet no one was hurt. Our adjutant turned once to shout a command and got his mouth full of dirt. That was all. To me our escaping scot free was a real miracle. Well, the bombardment stopped and before we had time to get to the first line the Dutch had grabbed hold of a bit of trench. All we could do was to dig one right back and so we did. It was pitch dark by that time and as I am not much good at digging, I asked to be put on sentry duty to see that no Boche sneaked up to those who were working. Four of us went about twenty yards forward, sat down and listened. Our artillery had set fire to three houses in the plain. The red smoke was all we could see, but we could hear our men digging and the Germans digging. We were about eighty yards from them, suddenly things started up again. I don’t know who did the starting or why, but we were caught between two perfectly fiendish fusillades. Our light artillery fired over our heads, dangerously close to our pates. The Dutch fired bombs with their trench bombs and their hand grenades. Some kind of fragment finally hit me on the shoulder so I stopped firing and took to cover behind a big log. The other sentinels crept up also and we waited for the storm to slacken.
________________
Robet Pellissier was born in France in 1882. He grew up in the United States and was teaching at Stanford University when the Great War broke out in his homeland. Returning as a voluteer, he initially saw uninterrupted service in the Vosges Mountains. He was killed in action in the Battle of the Somme on 28 August 1916.
This letter excerpt is from:
A Good Idea of Hell:
Letters from a Chasseur á Pied
Reprinted by permission of the Editor and Publisher. Available at Amazon.com HERE
Monday, December 29, 2025
Remembering a Veteran: Private Frank (Mayo) Lind, Royal Newfoundland Regiment
Francis T. Lind (1879–1 July 1916) Lind, who at age 35, gave up his successful career as an accountant and became a member of the “First Five-Hundred” Newfoundlanders who signed up for the war effort. Through his highly personal letters home, published in the St. John’s Daily Mail, he quickly emerged as the “Unofficial War Correspondent” of the regiment.
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| Mayo as a New Soldier, Second from Left |
Thirty-two letters were published during the war and eventually published in book form after the war and reprinted in 2001. His initial combat experience was at Gallipoli. He was wounded there and evacuated to Malta. After his recovery, he returned to the Newfoundland Regiment when it was deployed to France in 1916. While in service, he earned the nickname "Mayo" from his frequent appeals for Mayo Tobacco.
Here is his last letter home, written and sent just before moving up to the Somme front.
Sunday, December 28, 2025
The Military History of the Dreyfus Case
| What It Was Really All About |
By Gerard Demaison
Based on his research carried out over a period of forty years within the French State archive system, French historian Jean Doise (1917-2006) tied together the great French scandal, l' Affaire Dreyfus with the development of one of the decisive weapons of the First World War. His findings—the principal source for this article—was published in 1994. It's French title: Un secret bien garde: Histoire militaire de 1'Affaire Dreyfus translates in English to the title for this article A Well Kept Secret: The Military History of the Dreyfus Case.
It has long been demonstrated, in fact since 1898, that Captain Dreyfus was innocent of the charges of espionage pressed against him. Dreyfus had no links whatsoever with an intercepted "list" or "bordereau," of French military documents which was later to be addressed to the German military attaché in Paris, Colonel Maximilian von Schwartzkoppen, in the fall of 1894. This list had been retrieved in a waste paper basket at the German Embassy by a cleaning lady who was in the employ of French military counter-intelligence. This document had been torn up but was easily pieced together. It announced, among other items, a forthcoming report on a new French 120mm howitzer and the comportment of its hydraulic recoil mechanism, as well as detailed manuals describing the current organization of French field artillery.
| Captain Alfred Dreyfus (1859–1935) in 1894 |
The old official story goes that this "bordereau" intercepted by French counter intelligence was immediately forwarded to the Defense Minister, General Mercier. The Defense Ministry concluded that the "bordereau" was so diverse and so technical in nature that it had to originate from an artillery officer on the General Staff. Then, the Defense Ministry prepared a short list of potential suspects and the name of Alfred Dreyfus rose to its top. Captain Dreyfus was 35 years old in 1894 and a well-noted artillery officer from prestigious Ecole Polytechnique as well as a graduate from Ecole Superieure de Guerre (the French War College). At the time of his arrest, in 1894, he was completing a training assignment with the Army's General Staff, a clear sign that he was on a career "fast track". Captain Alfred Dreyfus traveled about once a year to Alsace in order to visit his ailing father and the long established family textile business located in Mulhouse. The Dreyfus family had chosen to retain its French nationality at the time of the German annexation of Alsace in 1871, after the Franco-Prussian war. Captain Dreyfus' Alsatian connection, artillery training and the lame charge that the handwriting on the "bordereau"—although interpreted at the time as probably disguised—was likely to be his, led to his arrest.
An "Alsatian layer "which underlies the beginnings of the Affaire Dreyfus. Captain Alfred Dreyfus came to the attention of a French spy in Alsace, during his yearly visits to his ailing father in Mulhouse, a town which had become German since 1871. This French spy, whose name is divulged in the book, alerted Colonel Sandherr to the fact that Captain Dreyfus had been seen in Mulhouse several times. However these visits to his family in Mulhouse were already known to Captain Dreyfus' own superiors and they had never raised any objections. It is also interesting to note that, besides Alfred Dreyfus himself, the principal protagonists of the Dreyfus Case were also born in Alsace and spoke German fluently as a second language: Madame Bastian the French cleaning lady and spy who was sifting the waste paper baskets at the German Embassy, Colonel Sandherr the chief of French military counterintelligence who organized the framing of Alfred Dreyfus and Colonel Picquart who was first to demonstrate that the author of the "borderau" was Major Esterhazy, thus proving Captain Dreyfus' innocence as early as 1898. It was within this layer that information was gathered to paint Alfred Dreyfus as a credible "traitor."
The "French 75mm layer" began not by random coincidence, in late 1894, only four months after the novel 75mm field gun prototype had been successfully tested in complete secrecy. A disinformation campaign against the German Military Attaché, Col. Von Schwartzkoppen, by the false spy Esterhazy was then initiated. As part of this effort, Colonel Sandherr, assisted by Major Henry, orchestrated the framing of Captain Dreyfus as a traitor and leaker of military secrets probably in order to make his own counter-espionage agent, Major Esterhazy, credible as a purveyor of French artillery information. The name of Alfred Dreyfus had come to Sandherr's mind as the ideal "patsy" because of Dreyfus' Alsatian connection, coupled to Dreyfus's early professional training as an artillery officer (although Dreyfus had never been involved, even remotely, into the highly secret 75mm field gun research and development).
Eventually, the participants at this level of the conspiracy were all discredited. Major Henry committed suicide in prison in 1898, after being arrested for forging documents designed to further incriminate Alfred Dreyfus. As to Colonel Sandherr, Henry's superior, he left behind the devastation he had brought to Alfred Dreyfus and to the French military establishment by conveniently dying of disease in 1895. Major Esterhazy admitted much later, while in self-imposed exile in England that he was the one who had written the "bordereau" used to incriminate Dreyfus. However, Esterhazy was never condemned by the French for espionage or for the part he had played in the framing of Captain Dreyfus. Instead, he continued to receive a monthly pension from an unknown source, until his death in 1923.
The "Cover-up by the French General Staff layer. " This cover-up was pursued by the highest authorities in the French General Staff and took place between late 1894 and 1898. Alfred Dreyfus was rushed to judgment and unjustly condemned because War Minister General Mercier had believed the falsehoods concocted by Sandherr and Henry, and because some of the graphology experts had inaccurately concluded that the author of the "bordereau" was Captain Dreyfus. However the situation became indefensible after 1896 when proof supplied by the new chief of French military counter-intelligence, Colonel Picquart, showed that the "bordereau" had been handwritten by Major Esterhazy himself. Rather than accepting responsibility for this miscarriage of justice, the French military leadership persisted in the cover-up for another two years. A newspaper article by Emile Zola finally blew the case wide open for the public, in 1898.
Because of intense political pressure, Captain Dreyfus was recalled to France and amnestied in 1900. His recall also coincided with the first international exposure of the French 75's performance during the Boxer Rebellion in Peking (China). A French 75 field artillery group [3 batteries of 4 guns] had been sent to China with the international expeditionary force, also in 1900.
The Germans adopted a modern field gun with recoil brakes only in 1901: the well known German 77mm field gun. However, the shells and the time fuses of the French 75, particularly the shrapnel shell with a rear explosive charge that makes the shell behave like a huge shotgun at any distance up to 8kms, were not matched by the Germans until 1915. All the deceptions, however, came close to a Pyrrhic victory since the Dreyfus controversy nearly destroyed France politically and lowered military preparation in 1914 because the politicians had acquired a deep distrust of the General Staff.
Mr. Doise's work is a captivating research volume, with a wealth of new and highly detailed material, thanks to the military and artillery research background of the author and to his unrestricted access to French military archives. Thus it ideally complements the better known literary resources which are already available on the judiciary and political aspects of the Case. Mr. Doise's book only exists in the French language for the time being, but we hope that this review will spur the interest of a translator and publisher for the benefit of the English-speaking readership.
| Alfred Dreyfus Grave, Montparnasse Cemetery, Paris |
Postscript: In a supreme irony of history only one of the French principals of "Affaire Dreyfus" did actually fight in the defense of his country during the Great War.
- As noted above, Colonel Sandherr died of natural causes (a stroke) in 1897.
- Major Henry committed suicide with his razor in his prison cell on 31 August 311898.
- Major Esterhazy died of natural causes near London in 1923. He did not participate in World War I.
- Colonel Picquart became Minister of War in Clemenceau's cabinet, in 1908. It is during his tenure that the number of 75 batteries in the French Army was voted by the Chamber of Deputies to be doubled! The Army entered the war in 1914 with 1,000 (a thousand) 75mm batteries of four guns each. Picquart died from a fall while practicing horsemanship on 19 January 1914.
- General Deloye reached the age limit in 1901 and permanently retired.
Source: France at War @ WorldWar1.com
Saturday, December 27, 2025
Who Was Yakov Mikhailovich Yurovsky?
Friday, December 26, 2025
The Ruhleben Internment Camp
1917 Painting of the Camp and Race Track by Detainee Nico Jungman |
The Ruhleben internment camp, situated on the outskirts of Berlin, held mostly British civilian internees from its opening in November 1914 to its closure in November 1918. While the camp suffered from overcrowding, conditions were relatively good, and inmates developed the social life of the camp into a community.
Camp Population
With the outbreak of hostilities, German authorities interned British citizens in Germany, just as other belligerent powers interned “enemy” civilians. In the opening stages of the war British civilians were left at liberty, with only a handful of suspected spies and saboteurs arrested and detained. However, on 6 November 1914, the vast majority of British civilian males in Germany were gathered for internment at the Ruhleben Trabrennbahn, a racecourse situated in the west of Berlin. Between November 1914 and November 1918, some 5,500 British civilians were held there; the population reached a peak of 4,273 in February 1915, and Ruhleben housed around 2,300 internees at the time of the armistice. Its proximity to the center of Berlin meant it became the most visited and widely publicized prison camp in the whole of the German Empire.
Camp Breadline, Nico Jungman |
Overcrowding
The Ruhleben camp was around ten acres in size, with 11 barracks to house the internees. Conditions were initially overcrowded, as the German authorities had planned for a prisoner population of around 1,500. Nine more barracks were completed in 1915, but it was only toward the end of the war, when the population was reduced to 2,500, that the problem of overcrowding was solved. The death rate in the camp was around 60 out of the total of 5,500 who passed through the camp during the war. This figure is well below the rate experienced in other civilian camps during the war and is helped by the fact that there were periodic repatriations of invalids and those deemed permanently unfit for military service. Admittedly, Ruhleben did not experience serious health scares such as the typhus epidemics that occurred in some prisoner of war camps. However, the years in internment, while not fatal, did take their toll on the inmates’ health.
Camp Culture
Ruhleben was by no means a typical camp. The relatively good conditions can be attributed to the camp’s location, a stable inmate population, support from humanitarian organizations, and the lack of reprisal punishments. Reciprocity also played a role; Britain and its empire held around 36,000 German civilians in internment by 1917, and any form of punishment against the inmates of Ruhleben would have had consequences for German internees within the British Empire. This good treatment allowed the British inmates to create a rich cultural community in the camp. Ruhleben’s inmates were an extremely diverse group and included people from all social classes within the British Empire. The focus in accounts of the camp was on cultural activities. Inmates engaged in art, theatrer, sport and even mock elections to ensure that the “borough” of Ruhleben was properly represented at Westminster. The camp offers an interesting case study of a community during the war.
| Release Day, 22 November 1918 |
The Residents
Wikipedia lists about 40 "notable" residents of Ruhleben. The list is surprisingly heavy in musicians and footballers. The first group mainly seems to have been performing when war broke out, the second was apparently involved in coaching German soccer clubs.
Three well-known physicists were studying or attending conferences when the war broke out: Henry Brose, Sir James Chadwick—Nobel Prize recipient for the Discovery of the Neutron— and Sir Charles Drummond Ellis
Probably the most famous tenant—at least during the war—was civilian sea captain Charles Fryatt, who was briefly held at Ruhleben, but was eventually executed in 1916 for ramming a German U-boat. Article HERE.
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Sources: Encyclopedia, 1914-1918; Lambeth Palace Library Blog
Thursday, December 25, 2025
Wednesday, December 24, 2025
How Alfred C. Gilbert Saved Christmas
| America's Savior of Christmas |
By James Patton
The Council of National Defense was formed on 24 August 1916 by President Woodrow Wilson under powers granted to the president in the National Defense Act of 1916 (PL 64-85 39 Stat. 166). Among the Council’s regulatory powers was the authority to tell American industry what they could and couldn’t make.
During the summer of 1918, the Council’s staff proposed a rule that would limit the production of Christmas gifts, especially toys. The objective was twofold: first, to redirect the materials and the industrial capacity toward military requirements, and second, to reinforce in the civilian population a spirit of sacrifice ("doing their bit").
The Council staff had not reckoned with push-back. Enter Alfred C. Gilbert (1884–1961), an Oregon-born Yale medical graduate and athlete who shared a gold medal in the pole vault at the 1908 Olympics in London. He was also an amateur magician, and in 1907 he started a company that sold the “Mysto Magic Exhibition” sets. Building on this success, in 1913 he added the “Erector Set” to his line, which was a bestseller for nearly 50 years. My brother and I each had one.
Going back to 1918, Gilbert decided to make the Council of National Defense change its mind about banning toys. Representing the Toy Manufacturers of America, the trade association he had formed in 1915, he traveled to Washington, and after waiting for hours, he was given 15 minutes to convince them not to effectively cancel Christmas for the nation’s children.
| America's Council of National Defense |
Facing him across the table were six very powerful men: Secretary of War Newton D. Baker (1871–1937), Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels (1862–1948), Secretary of the Interior Franklin K. Lane (1864–1921), Secretary of Agriculture David F. Houston (1866–1940), Secretary of Commerce William C. Redfield (1858–1932), and Secretary of Labor William B. Wilson (1862–1934).Also present was the non-voting director, Walter C. Gifford (1885–1966), who was on loan from Western Electric.
“The greatest influences in the life of a boy are his toys,” Gilbert began. “Yet through the toys American manufacturers are turning out, he gets both fun and an education. The American boy is a genuine boy and wants genuine toys."
He had brought along a BB gun, made by Daisy Manufacturing of Plymouth, Michigan, (Gilbert never manufactured these) to show the Council how a child wielding a non-lethal weapon could become a skilled marksman, a valuable asset to a nation that relied on citizen-soldiers. He insisted that his construction toys—like the Erector Set—fostered creative thinking. (Consider what one can make today with LEGOs)
He told these men that toys provided a valuable interlude from the ever-present sacrifices of the war. Given appropriate play objects, a boy’s life could be directed toward “construction, not destruction,” Gilbert said.
Then Gilbert proceeded to lay out some more toys that he had brought along for the Council to examine. Navy Secretary Daniels was enamored with a toy submarine, marveling at the details. He asked Gilbert where he could get one; Gilbert said that it could be bought anywhere in the country. Some of them examined children’s books; yet another guided a wind-up toy locomotive as it putt-putted around the table. Gilbert spotted the fleeting moment where these hard-hitting middle-aged men became little boys again. The decision didn’t come immediately, but Gilbert left Washington knowing that the toys had won. And there was no toy embargo in 1918.
A prolific innovator, Gilbert eventually held over 150 patents. The “Fun with Chemistry” sets, the “Microscope and Lab Set,” and many other "educational" products were also runaway bestsellers. By far his most controversial product was the "U-238 Atomic Energy Laboratory, ” which included radioactive ore samples. My father, who had worked with radioactive materials during WWII, refused to let me get one. I did get the ”Electrical Engineering Set,” which was the basis for the first of my unlicensed radio transmitters.
From 1938 until 1966, the Gilbert company produced the classic American Flyer series of two-rail toy trains, using both AC and DC and mostly in S-Gauge (1:64). These were made with exquisite detail—the replica steam locomotives even produced "glowing smoke," "chugged," and could even whistle.
Sadly, in 1961, all of the magic died with Gilbert. His son succeeded him but survived only a year. Gilbert’s daughters then sold the business, and without inspired management, it had to be liquidated in 1967. American Flyer trains were bought by Gilbert’s erstwhile competitor, the legendary Lionel Corp., and the British firm Meccano bought the trademark “Erector,” which they hold to this day.
Gilbert has been remembered in several ways. The most significant are an internet-based group called the A.C. Gilbert Heritage Society; a museum in Salem, Oregon, called Gilbert’s Discovery Village; and a made-for-TV movie called The Man Who Saved Christmas, which was a forgettable production that was filmed in Toronto (to get the Canadian tax credits) and was quite slippery on the facts. It was aired here on CBS at Christmas time in 2002.












