Now all roads lead to France and heavy is the tread
Of the living; but the dead returning lightly dance.
Edward Thomas, Roads

Monday, June 22, 2026

Remembering a Veteran: Lt. Dana Coates, 11th Aero Squadron, USAS

 

Cadet Pilot Dana Coates with Sopwith F1 Camel

By Gareth Morgan, Western Front Association

Dana Edmond Coates was born in Lodgepole, Nebraska, in 1894, the third of ten children. He was descended from one Charles Coates, a British soldier sent to America during the Seven Years War (1756–1763—although hostilities started two years earlier in North America) who settled in the country after hostilities ended. Charles's descendants fought in the American War of Independence and in the Civil War. His mother was born in true pioneer style in a "soddy" (a house made of earth sod) in Nebraska. At the time of Dana's birth, the Coates family ran the train depot and the telegraph station in Lodgepole. The family later moved to Denver, Colorado, where his father ran a telegraph school, and two of his sisters were noted as being exceptional in their mastery of the telegraph. 

Dana served in the Colorado National Guard Signal Corps and saw service on the Mexican border during the U.S. Army's 1916 campaign against the revolutionary Pancho Villa. We can only wonder if he saw the Curtiss JN-3 aeroplanes flown by the U.S. Army during the campaign and decided then that aviation was the way that he'd like to wage war.

Following the U.S. entry into the Great War in April 1917, Dana enlisted in the army on 15 August 1917 and volunteered for the air service, then a branch of his old regiment, the Signal Corps. James Sloan, in his book Wings of Honor, lists Dana Coates as a member of the second group of 204 American cadets sent to England in August and September of 1917, known as the Oxford Group. They were selected from the group of graduates from the Schools of Military Aeronautics at Princeton, the Universities of Illinois, Texas, and California. These cadets were originally informed they would be sent to Italy. An undated newspaper article (probably in the Denver Post) announced that "1st Lieutenant Coates has been sent to Italy to serve with the American squadron of aviators."


Photos From the Coates Family Collection


After transport across the Atlantic Ocean, and arrival in England, Cadet Coates and his traveling companions were informed that they would be sent to Oxford, along with other potential pilots from the US. Army, to commence flying training with the British RFC. His flying clothing was issued on 15 November 1917 at No 44 Training Squadron at Waddington, Lincolnshire, where he may have undergone some basic flying training. He then attended the School of Military Aeronautics at Oxford University, with Squad 20, Course No. 6, and was billeted in Exeter and King's Colleges. 

During his time at Exeter College he was invited out for afternoon tea by Sir William and Lady Osler, the Canadian-born Regius Professor of Medicine at Oxford (Sir William was a descendant of American War of Independence hero Paul Revere and died during the influenza pandemic of 1919; his son, Lt Revere Osler, was killed in action while serving with the 16th Canadian Infantry Battalion in October 1916). . . 

After ground training at Oxford, Dana moved back to Waddington for flying training at No. 47 Training Sqn about February 1918. It appears that he had flown his first solo prior to this date, but, unfortunately, his logbook has suffered some damage and the first two pages are no longer legible.

In September 1918, 1Lt Coates was posted to the 11th Aero Squadron USAS, in France. The squadron was originally formed at San Antonio, Texas, in May 1917 and transported to the UK from New York in December. After being split up for training at various locations in the UK it was reunited at Waddington (where Dana Coates trained) in late July. After a period at Waddington, the unit moved to Delouse in France on 26 August to be equipped with the U.S.-built DH-4 (the Airco DH-4, a two-seat light bomber) and to serve as a bombing squadron on the Lorraine-St Mihiel-Meuse-Argonne sector of the Western Front. Commanded by 1Lt Charles L Heater, it moved to Amanty aerodrome on 6 September and then to Maulan on 24 September. Maulan was also the home of the two other units in the First Day Bombardment Group, the 20th and 96th Aero Squadrons. Later they were joined by the 166th Aero Squadron, also a DH-4 unit. It was at Maulan that the 11th Aero Squadron adopted the cartoon character Mr. Jiggs (from the George McManus comic strip "Bringing Up Father") as its symbol, and commenced painting the little man on its aeroplanes.


The Aircrews and DH-4s of the 11th Aero Squadron

1Lt Coates had his first flight in a DH-4 at Amanty,  in AS 23292 (which he described as a "Liberty DH 4") on 24 September. He next flew AS 32808 to Maulan. After a navigation exercise to Ligny, Bar-le-Duc and St Dizier on 25 September, Dana flew his first combat mission on 26 September when, with 2Lt Lauren R. Thrall, from Bone Gap, Illinois, as observer, he flew DH-4 AS 33043 in a six-aeroplane bombing raid on Etain, flying at 12,000 feet. The raid was assessed as being very successful, and all the U.S. aircraft returned to Maulan. Coates didn't take part in a successful six-aeroplane raid on Grandpré, on the extreme left of the American sector of the front, on 29 September. 

On 1 October, the 11th and 20th Aero Sqns experimented with a large combined formation, with each unit forming one arm of a "V"; the 11th formed the left arm and the 20th the right arm. 1Lt Coates was flying DH-4 AS 32950, with Lt Jones as observer, when he suffered engine trouble after 15 minutes and had to return to Maulan. The rest of the unwieldy formation broke up shortly after and the raid was abandoned. The 11th Aero Sqn experienced many problems with the Liberty engines of its DH-4s, and it was very common for aircraft to turn back early from operations.

Coates's next effective combat mission was a bombing raid on St Juvin on 2 October when, with 2Lt Thrall as observer, he flew DH-4 AS 32605. The bombing was assessed as successful, and all the squadron aircraft returned to Maulan. Coates. Thrall had an active October, completing several successful missions, but sometimes being forces to abort due to problems with the aircraft or its fickle Liberty engine. 

On 4 November, 12 aircraft led by 1Lt Walter A Stahl took off to bomb Cheveney le Château from 12,000 feet, including Coates and Thrall in AS 32905, who were at the rear of the unit's formation. Three aircraft were forced to turn back before the formation reached the lines. Back at Maulan, 1Lt Cyrus J Gatton, from Bozeman, Montana, a flight commander and veteran of 12 missions with the French and 13 with the USAS, and 2Lt G E Bures, a four-mission veteran from Cicero, Illinois, both of whom had just returned to the squadron from leave, volunteered to reinforce the raiders. Five minutes after the departure of the main formation, they took off from Maulan in another DH-4 and endeavored to catch up with the formation, only to be shot down when in sight of the main body, probably by flak. Both airmen were killed.

After bombing, the formation was attacked by about 20 Fokker D VIIs from Jagdgeschwader 1's Jasta 11, one of which was flown by Lt. Friedrich Noltenius, an ace then credited with 20 victories. Noltenius concentrated on Coates's AS 32905, and hit the fuel tank, setting the aeroplane on fire. It was Noltenius's 21st, and last, victory of the war. Coates sideslipped in an effort to reduce the effect of the flames while Thrall continued to fire at the Fokkers, one of whom was reported to be shot down, though German records don't show a corresponding fighter loss, so it is likely that the pilot survived the encounter. The DH-4 crashed near the town of Stenay and both men were killed. They were buried by French civilians. Although the DH-4 was nicknamed "The Flaming Coffin," only eight of the 33 USAS DH-4s lost to enemy action were shot down in flames.

A raid on Mouzon by the 11th Aero Sqn on 5 November was abandoned due to adverse weather; it was the squadron's last operation of the war. If 1Lt Coates had survived the raid on 4 November, he would almost certainly have survived the war. 

1Lt Dana Coates now rests in Plot F Row 3, Grave 31, Meuse-Argonne American Cemetery, Romagne, France. He was posthumously awarded the Purple Heart, the WWI Victory Medal with battle clasp for Meuse-Argonne, and the WWI Bronze Victory Button. [Presumably Lt. Thrall received similar decorations, but we have been unable to confirm this detail, or determine his final resting location.]

Source: Abridged from Gareth Morgan's article "From Lodgepole to Stenay: First Lieutenant Dana E Coates, 11th Aero Squadron, USAS" at the Western Front Association's Online WWI Articles.  The full article with extensive details on Lt. Coates training and combat missions can be found HERE.


Sunday, June 21, 2026

The Bats of Verdun


Bechstein’s Bat (Myotis bechsteinii)
 One of 15 Species of Bat Populating the Verdun Battlefield


During my days leading tours of the Western Front battlefields we were occasionally treated to subterranean bat sightings. This most often happened at the Verdun sector forts, but I've since learned that many species of bats have been identified at Verdun, and they've been found in all sorts of places. 

 

A Colony Inside a Verdun Fort

The reason for this vibrant population is twofold. First, the big forts—like Douaumont, Vaux, or Troyon—where I've personally seen the critters—plus the countless number of abandoned concrete bunkers, subterranean tunnels, and fortified military shelters scattered across the surrounding battlefield provide perfect habitats and hibernating quarters for bats. The rough brick and stone interiors of the shelters are ideal for roosting. 

Second, the millions of craters—found everywhere else around the battleground—provide a wonderful hunting ground for those delicacies of bat cuisine, insects and amphibians. Apparently, the—recently arrived to the area—rare yellow-bellied toad is particularly delectable for bats.


Bats' Hunting Ground

Furthermore in the 21st century, both the predator and their quarry have found powerful legal protection, at least from humans. The Verdun battlefield is protected by the European Union Habitats and Birds Directives, which designate the area as a Natura 2000 site. In France, these frameworks are enforced under the Environmental Code (Code de l'environnement), specifically restricting activities that might threaten rare amphibians (like the yellow-bellied toad) and bat colonies. Incidentally, much to the happiness of local farmers, insects as far as I can tell are not protected and the bats of Verdun are welcome neighbors.


Verdun Bat Food: The Delicious Yellow-Bellied Toad

Sources: "In France, a Bloody WWI Battlefield Has Become a Wildlife Refuge," Atlas Obscura; "100 Years After WWI, Nature Is Finally Reclaiming A Historic Battlefield," DiscoverMagazine.com; Verdun Tourism.


Saturday, June 20, 2026

Lonesome Memorial #25 Memorial Germânico do Passo Pordoi

 

These Images Can All Be Enlarged by Clicking on Them


Fighting in the Dolomites during World War I was a brutal, high-altitude struggle against both the enemy and the elements. Soldiers faced freezing temperatures and harsh, unforgiving terrain. Avalanches were frequent killers. Combat involved intense artillery duels, cliffside tunnel warfare, and a never ending struggle to keep supplies arriving at the high altitudes. It's very fitting that the men who lost their lives in the "White War" should be honored at some of the highest war memorials in Europe. Those of the Central Powers are honored here at the Memorial Germânico do Passo Pordoi at altitude, 2,238m. sThe Italian equivalent memorial is farther east at Pocol,  near Cortina.



At Passo Pordoi, the second highest pass of Italy's Dolomite Mountains, is this ossuary and cemetery for the remains of the fallen of both World Wars. World War One casualties include 8,128 Austro-Hungarian and 454 German. There are also 847 German soldiers buried on the grounds who were killed during the Second World War. The detail that—despite having the majority of the fallen, neither Austria nor Hungary are mentioned in the name of the memorial—is due to postwar Nazi Germany being responsible for its construction, which did not begin until 1937. It was one product of a cemetery agreement concluded between the German Reich and the Kingdom of Italy in the same year. 



Designed by Robert Tischler,  the chief architect of the German War Graves Commission from 1926 until his death in 1959, the structure mimics a Totenburg (a Germanic "fortress of the dead"). It features an austere, circular, dark-stone design divided into three levels, with the center holding an octagonal crypt and a flaming bowl. On the side walls are larger-than-life figures of mourning soldiers. Among his other works, the most famous is the German Cemetery at Langemark, Belgium.



Getting There

The nearest city is Bolzano  to the west located on the Brenner Pass Motorway (A22).  Passo Pordoi is about 42 driving miles away on the Strada Dolomites (SS48).  It's a beautiful ride but somewhat complicated to get to, so have a map handy or some navigation aid with your car.  GPS coordinates are: 46°29'28.64"N; 11°49'41.35"E.  There is a small cluster of businesses at the Pordoi Pass (shown above), which includes a small war museum which is worth a stop. Just past the museum is a turn to the left marked "Deutscher Soldatenfriedhof". This will lead on to a narrow road  for .7 miles which ends in a parking lot. Then it's a short walk to the memorial.

Friday, June 19, 2026

Who Was John A. Hobson?


John A. Hobson (1858–1940) was a highly influential British economist, teacher (on the far outskirts of academia), elected official (twice Mayor of Derby), journalist, editor (Progressive Review) and social theorist whose critique of imperialism—later adopted by Lenin—fundamentally shaped intellectual debates surrounding the origins and aftermath of the First World War. His thinking on the war was greatly influenced by his time in South Africa as a war correspondent for the Manchester Guardian during the Boer War. Hobson concluded that the origins of the war lay in the operations of capitalist financiers, such as Cecil Rhodes, who were using their influence over both the press and the British government. 




His seminal work, Imperialism: A Study (published in 1902), through its core thesis provided a helpful, albeit radical, framework for understanding the economic "inter-imperialist" rivalries that led to the 1914 conflict. Applying his earlier analysis, he later argued that prior to the July Crisis of 1914:

  • Wealthy elites had accumulated massive excess savings but lacked profitable domestic investment outlets due to stagnant local demand. Stagnant because  wealth inequality had left the working classes unable to buy the goods they produced. 
  • This led to elites manipulating what we today would call the military-industrial complex to acquire foreign territories for securing overseas markets and investment opportunities.
  • The aggressive state-backed expansion that followed inevitably forced European empires into a direct geopolitical collision course, triggering World War I. 


When the War Came

When the war erupted in 1914, the Liberal Hobson vocally opposed British involvement. He redirected his efforts toward anti-war activism and institutional reform. He became a founding and executive member of the Union of Democratic Control, a prominent British anti-war organization. The group fought against wartime conscription, opposed state censorship, and pushed for parliamentary oversight of foreign policy. He may have also influenced Woodrow Wilson with his wartime volume Towards International Government in which he recommended a global body to settle disputes peacefully

Despite his anti-war stance, Hobson was so respected he was asked to lend his expertise to civil stabilization. He loyally and constructively served on the government's Whitley Committee (1917–1918) to design industrial relations frameworks and worked alongside the Ministry of Reconstruction to plan post-war societal rebuilding.


John A. Hobson


Aftermath of War

At war's end he joined the Independent Labour Party and served on various think-tanks of the Party. According to an article in the Journal of Liberal History, as he aged, Hobson’s journalism became more infrequent, but conversely, his intellectual influence grew. Keynes later acknowledged a debt to Hobson for his ideas expressed in the  General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936).  His 1938 autobiography's title, Confessions of an Economic Heretic, nicely summarized his career. Ever a British patriot in any case, he wrote his last article for the New Statesman in December 1939 where he expressed the hope that America would join the war, which he believed would shorten the conflict to his countries advantage. John Atkinson Hobson died on 1 April 1940.

Sources: John Atkinson Hobson (1858–1940), Journal of Liberal History; Biographical Sketch, University of Exeter; Spartacus Educational 

Thursday, June 18, 2026

The Rise of the Arms Industry and the Coming of World War





By T. Hunt Tooley from "Merchants of Death Revisited: Armaments, Bankers and the First World War"


We may certainly say the First World War had many "causes," both proximate and distant. But arms manufacturers and salesmen were in the special position, both before and during the war, of playing the double role of monopolistic, rent-seeking, state-supported "bureaucrat-businessmen" at home, and freewheeling, all's-fair-in-love-and-war competitors abroad. In great measure because of this role, their influence on the coming and conduct of the war was enormous. Before the war, they helped create an increasingly unstable atmosphere in the world at large, first pushing in various ways for war, and later lobbying for its continuation, and eventually for American intervention once the Allies seemed exhausted enough to negotiate a peace. . .

Many of the arms merchants of the Great War had laid the basis for their twentieth-century wealth in the nineteenth century and even earlier. The Du Pont family arms business stemmed from a powder factory opened in 1802. The Krupps had a small steel business until the middle of the century. Thomas Vickers served an apprenticeship in the Krupp company and subsequently followed the Krupps in producing first peacetime products, and then, from the 1860s, armaments. The Vickers firm was as colorful and as sinister, perhaps, as any of the arms producers, at least after joining competition and the scandals produced by some of the company's leaders.  Most of the other great arms companies behaved in the same way.

As they did so, arms merchants almost always used the nature of their trade to achieve monopolistic relationships with governments and a free hand at fixing prices and delimiting markets throughout their industry. By 1905, Du Pont provided all the powder ordered by the United States government, and the company was able on its own to "fix" prices across the board. The government charged Du Pont with violating antitrust laws in 1907, calling for price-fixing and related practices to stop, but by this time, Du Pont had eliminated most American competitors with the assistance of the government. The company supplied an enormous share of the gunpowder used by the Allied forces in World War 1.




One key to the success of all the arms merchants was that they  held few national prejudices when it came to selling munitions and arms. So, for example, Irénée du Pont in some cases supplied both sides with munitions in the Latin American wars for liberation after the Napoleonic period. The Krupp family followed a similar pattern, as did Schneider-Creusot in France. The Vickers Company, the most politically powerful arms company in Britain, under Sir Basil Zaharoff's leadership supplied weapons to both sides in the Boer War, despite the company's position as a kind of national treasure.

[Banking connections were, of course, critical to both the survival and success of arms makers.] All arms makers have important financial connections. [For example, in America, the companies were a component of a larger economic universe.]  In the Morgan group were to be found the Du Pont Company, the Bethlehem Steel Corporation, the U.S. Steel Corporation, together with copper, oil, electric appliances, locomotive, telephone and telegraph interests. This tie-up also leads over into the great banks, including the National City, Corn Exchange, Chase National, etc. It was the Morgan group of corporation clients and banks which dominated the American arms industry.

Despite this tendency to supply all comers, the great arms companies all managed to secure a role as staunch patriots who enjoyed a special place in the "national" economy. Alfred Krupp had expanded the family steel business to arms production by the 1840s, and was selling cannon abroad. When the Prussian army underwent reorganization in the late 1850s and early 1860s, it adopted the new Krupp artillery. The company ballooned, through the Wars of Unification, from a small plant at Essen covering two and a half acres and employing a few dozen workers to a complex of 250 acres which employed 80,000 workers in 1914. The Krupp concern indeed, while continuing to sell weapons abroad, became a kind of unofficial part of Imperial Germany's government, protected from both economic competition and the scandals produced by some of the company's leaders.  Most of the other great arms companies behaved in the same way.




As they did so, arms merchants almost always used the nature of their trade to achieve monopolistic relationships with governments and a free hand at fixing prices and delimiting markets throughout their industry. By 1905, Du Pont provided all the powder ordered by the United States government, and the company was able on its own to "fix" prices across the board. The government charged Du Pont with violating antitrust laws in 1907, calling for price-fixing and related practices to stop, but by this time, Du Pont had eliminated most American competitors with the assistance of the government. The company supplied an enormous share of the gunpowder used by the Allied forces in World War 1.

Similarly, the Schneider family of the French company Schneider-Creusot came out of the French defeat at Prussia's hands in 1871 with huge profits. Having supported Napoleon III, the company was now equally supportive of the various Third Republic governments, especially those of a nationalist coloring. Meanwhile, the company relied on the state to suppress strikes and manage discontent at its factories, as it supplied the army with weapons. The Schneiders eventually managed to place one of their own, Eugene Schneider, in the Chamber of Deputies, where he served throughout a period crucial to arms makers: 1900 to 1925.  Hence, a pattern is clear: increasingly close association with the state, especially from the period of intense nationalism following the 1860s, and a tendency toward gaining access to public support for private profits.

Already high before World War I, profits soared during it. Before the third year of World War I, Krupp had more than doubled its huge profits of the immediate prewar period-to the level of 66 million marks annually. In Austria-Hungary, Škoda likewise doubled its profits during the early war years. On the other side of the Atlantic, profits surged still higher. U.S. Steel netted $105 million annually before the war, $239,653,000 during it. Du Pont's numbers in the same two categories were $6,092,000 annually before the war, to a staggering yearly average of $58,076,000 during the war. These results were repeated in dozens of smaller and subsidiary arms companies throughout the belligerent countries.

The internationalization of  boards and companies allowed banks and arms companies to have a purchase on any situation, no matter what ties of "loyalty" might be invoked. At the same time, their more-or-less constant relationship with any foreign government to which they sold arms allowed them easy access to the local press. Influencing the populace, and hence public policy, through propaganda became commonplace. When a war scare was needed, it was quite possible to create one by maximizing reports of existing tensions in the press.




[Did the arms lobby and their financial backers, the "Merchants of Death", cause World War One?]

A caricaturized version of the "Merchants of Death" thesis has tended to be the popularly known version, and in this version, arms merchants caused the war. Historians can and still do discuss the causes of World War I, but none would hold that any single cause could have touched off this great catastrophe. As Ludwig von Mises, a profound student of war and its causes, wrote in Human Action:

People do not drink intoxicating beverages in order to make the "alcohol capital" happy, and they do not go to war in order to increase the profits of the "merchants of death." The existence of the armaments industries is a consequence of the warlike spirit, not its cause.

Excerpted from Professor's Tooley's article in the Journal of Libertarian Studies, Winter 2005. Full article HERE.

Also, see our earlier article on the Nye Committee's pursuit of the "Merchants of Death" HERE.  


Wednesday, June 17, 2026

America's Children at War



America's schoolchildren served on the home front during World War I. Although American children were geographically removed from the physical destruction of the European front, World War I deeply impacted their lives.They were ceaselessly encouraged to actively contribute to the war's home front by planting Victory Gardens, collecting scrap metal, and participating in the Junior Red Cross to raise millions in war bonds. This, along with the government’s call for children to help with the war effort, meant, quite simply, that children were forced to grow up quickly. As a consequence, the war was life-changing for hundreds of thousands of children throughout the country.

Probably, most significantly, they were their nation's first generation to experience massive propagandizing. The Committee on Public Information (CPI) worked with schools and organizations, providing lesson plans and activities for teachers through their biweekly newsletter, National School Service. "Public schools are the most important agency" to "stimulate the patriotism of the child" as well as to advance "the cause of democracy." 



Four major themes were stressed: food production and conservation, thrift through War Saving stamps and Liberty bonds, patriotism, and service through organizations such as the Junior Red Cross. Teachers were encouraged to incorporate "true incidents of the war illustrating patriotism, heroism, and sacrifice" into story times for the younger children. Older students could have discussions around questions such as "Why save sugar?" and "What kind of world is safe for democracy?" 

------

"No one has got quite so much fun out of the war as Billy and his inseparable companions, Fritters, George and Bean-Pole Ross. Clad in the khaki uniform of the Boy Scouts, with United War Campaign, Red Cross, War Saving, first, second, third, and fourth Liberty Loan buttons, small American flags and service pins spread across their chests, they have lived the war from morning to night."

Florence Woolston, in a New Republic article, writing of her 12-year-old nephew Billy

--------

Children were also viewed as a conduit to adults: "Every school pupil is a messenger from Uncle Sam," encouraging parents to purchase Liberty Bonds and to participate in war efforts. Secretary of the Treasury William McAdoo appealed directly to children:

"Every little girl and every little boy and every big girl and every big boy in the United States can help their Government in this great war, and help our noble sons and brothers who are fighting this war for us, by saving their money and lending every cent of it to the Government."

How could children contribute? "They could sell and buy war bonds and stamps, plant gardens, help on the farm, save peach pits, knit sweaters, build cabinets, post bills... They could send old newspapers to troops... They could make Christmas gifts... They could mail music to the front... They could raise pigeons..." More than 11 million children joined the Junior Red Cross, others worked via the Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, YMCA and YWCA, and the United States School Garden Army.



Even babes and prenatal infants drew the war machine's attention, although they probably avoided most of the adult-directed propaganda. In April 1918, President Woodrow Wilson, alarmed at the high draftee rejection rate, proclaimed the second year of American engagement in World War I as “Children’s Year.” The motto of the nationwide program was to “Save 100,000 Babies.” Children’s Year represented a multi-pronged child welfare campaign aimed at gathering data on best practices regarding maternal and child health promotion, documenting the effects of poverty on ill health, reducing the school drop-out rate, ensuring safe play spaces for children, and addressing the unique needs of targeted populations such as orphans and delinquents. Thousands of communities across the country participated in Children’s Year, which was overseen by the Children’s Bureau and the Woman’s Committee of the Council of National Defense.



The children of the First World War would live to see another, even larger war.  Some would serve in the military, others in industry, and those with children would see them drawn into similar activities as they had endured over America's 19 months of war.

Sources: University of Washington Digital Archives; Ohio Memory; The 1918 Children’s Year and Its Legacy", The National Library of Medicine; Children in History.


Tuesday, June 16, 2026

The First World War in the Baltic Sea: Volume I: Essen’s triumph, 1914 to February 1915

By Mark Harris

Helion and Company, 2025

Reviewed by Jim Gallen


Russian Armored Cruiser Rurik, Launched 1908

Roads to the Great War readers are more familiar with its theatres and lore than most, but The First World War in the Baltic Sea: Volume 1: Essen’s triumph, 1914 to February 1915 is likely to expand the ken of even the more seasoned followers. Contrary to the customary focus on ground combat in the Eastern and Western Fronts or the Dardanelles campaign, the book chronicles naval action in waters that seemed to hold significance in the early months of the war, but became, literally and figuratively, a backwater as great battles raged elsewhere.

The author begins with an introduction to Russian and German naval policy from 1880-1914, their bases, defenses, fleets and war plans and the steps leading to mobilization and declarations of war.

The belligerents were Germany, Russia, and Britain.  The scene is the Baltic Sea, the northern inlet washing the shores of Russia, Germany, and Sweden.  Its prime significance was that its eastern reaches provide access to the Gulf of Finland, on which the then Russian capital of Petrograd sits, while its western extent threatened to carry Russian hordes into Germany. It was home waters for the Russian fleet, the Baltiyskiy Flot, still rebuilding from its disastrous war against Japan, while to the Germans it merited vessels that could be spared from the anticipated showdown with the Royal Navy. That notwithstanding, German command was entrusted to Prinz Heinrich, brother of the Kaiser. Russian commanders, led by Admiral Nikolay von Essen, had less memorable names and pedigrees. Vessels engaged ran the gamut from battleships, armored cruisers, protected cruisers, light cruisers to destroyers, minelayers, torpedo boats and submarines. 


 Russian Admiral Nikolay von Essen Issuing Orders

At the commencement of the War, Russia and Germany were uncertain of the other’s plans and objectives.  Russia envisioned a war in which its Navy could not escape the Baltic and that of its British ally could not get in.  Russia’s goal was to protect Petrograd and its trade routes.  Viewing Britain as its great naval rival and anticipating Russian attacks, the Germans planned light raids to keep Russian troops at bay and took care to maintain Swedish neutrality.  Both sides were prepared for defensive warfare in the region, though offense was often an operation of choice. Russia employed mine fields and surface ships to defend its capital and Germany relied more heavily on mines and U-boats.  After indecision in the German command, war came to the Baltic on 18 August 1915, when, after three days of mutual stalking, German cruisers escorting minelayers heading for the Gulf of Finland, engaged the Russian fleet.

Strategy was complicated by the interests of neutral Sweden, whose potential intervention on the German side was a subject of speculation. German reliance on Swedish iron ore influenced policy in this war and presaged its importance in the next. Movement of the Flot toward Swedish waters preceded an announcement of Swedish neutrality in conjunction with Norway.

By September the Russians had a better idea of German intentions and took the initiative in fleet actions. The entry of British submarines in September and October changed the Baltic narrative and gave new importance to undersea warfare. By February 1915, engagements had left the Russians with the upper hand in the Baltic. The nature of naval combat had changed.  In the words of Rear Admiral Ehler Behrin written to his commander, Prinz Heinrich, in the wake of the loss of his armored cruiser Friederich Carl, “naval warfare in its current form, with submarines, torpedoes and mines has lost its poetry.  However, that cannot be helped, and one must accept it.” As in other theatres, the war would go on mechanically, impersonally, unpoetically.


Order HERE


This work is limited to a theatre of the war that, though possessing the possibility of decisive actions at the beginning, evolved into one mostly important for its interdiction of supplies and trade. Author Mark Harris has crafted a deeply researched volume chronicling in great detail maneuvers, actions and shifting advantages in which the text is supplemented by maps and photographs. The appendices document the organization and vessels of the opposing fleets. The subtitle identification of this as Volume I and its limited scope, 1914 to February 1915, suggests that the saga will be continued in future volumes. It is amply indexed but the scarcity of English sources is reflected in the bibliography and enhances respect for the author’s efforts.  The First World War in the Baltic Sea will be attractive to Roads readers with a deep interest in naval aspects of the Great War beyond Jutland and those desiring a thorough appreciation of all segments of the war who want to leave no stone unturned.  More general or casual readers may find it to be excessively detailed and esoteric. 

Jim Gallen


Monday, June 15, 2026

The Men Who Brought the Doctrine of the Offensive à Outrance to the French Army


The Siege of Paris, 1871 by Jean-Louis-Ernest Meissonier


By Charles W. Sanders, Jr.

The Disgrace of Sedan

The search for doctrine was a major occupation of the best minds in the French Army at the turn of this century. Intelligent, dedicated and experienced French officers in major commands, on the faculty of the Ecole de Guerre and on the General Staff, studied the histories of past conflicts and the likely characteristics of future ones; thought and debated various options; and—in near consensus—developed and promulgated a clearly defined doctrine which was splendidly executed by French soldiers in the opening battles of the Great War. Unfortunately, it was exactly the wrong doctrine for the French Army to employ in 1914. It was a doctrine which very nearly resulted in the death of France. . .

The search for doctrine by the French Army did not begin in the glamour and swirl that was France at the turn of the century. It began in 1870. In that year, the dull, gray Prussian mass crushed the descendants of the great Bonaparte in a war which lasted just six weeks. The completeness of the disgrace and bewilderment of the nation which considered itself to be the premiere warrior race of Europe was epitomized by Louis Napoleon himself, trailing sick and defeated through Metz, jeered by old soldiers along the route, on his way to captivity in Germany. 

The disgrace of the defeat was surpassed only by the harshness of  Prussian peace terms. France was to surrender Lorraine and Alsace, two of her richest provinces, and pay reparations to the Prussians on a scale never before demanded. There was even to be constructed on the Siegerstrasse in Berlin a Victory Column topped with the mighty figure of Germania victorious. The column was to  be garnished with scores of captured French cannons—dipped in captured French gold. All this was—for the French Army—too much to bear. The degradation would not be forgotten. The spirit of revanche was born.

The French recovery from the war was as rapid and complete as the war had been terrible. The stale, inhibiting monarchy of the Second Empire was expunged and, by the time of the Paris exposition in 1878, the Prussian Army of Occupation had departed. The hated reparations payments were being paid off ahead of schedule and Paris again was a city of light, gaiety, and excitement. A new sense of confidence was in the land. Nowhere was this sense of confidence more evident than in the Army. In response to the poor showing of the French General Staff during the war significant reforms had been enacted. The Ecole de Guerre was established in 1875 and selection for attendance was by merit.

Graduates, following the German model, would form the État Major de 1'Armee (the General Staff) and would alternate assignments between line and staff positions. The "fops" of the Second Empire were replaced by dedicated young officers who sought to learn from the past and possessed a passion for the study of the profession of arms. Gone were the days when MacMahon had threatened to "remove from the promotion list any officer whose name I read on the cover of a book."  Many old Army values and standards changed as well. But the thirst for revenge remained.


George Gilbert

Part and parcel of the new spirit in the Army was the grim determination to set right the damage done to its honor. French officers, whose forefathers were at Austerlitz, Jena, and Friedland, awaited impatiently the opportunity to redeem their honor, to dispel the clouds of 1870 and to show that theirs was again a first class army. 

This preoccupation with things military extended beyond those in uniform. The government, after great debate, voted to spend considerable treasure to construct a barrier of forts to replace the natural barriers of the Rhine and the Vosges lost in 1870 along with Alsace and Lorraine. In the arts, the paintings of de Neuville and Detaille (unlike the painting at the top of this page) depicted in beautiful detail the bravery, sense of duty, sacrifice, and above all, the gloire of the French soldier.  The poetry of Deroulede exalted "the bugler who sounds the charge." A government sponsored committee was established to recommend a program of military and patriotic education in French schools. Deroulede, selected as a member, saw the job of the committee as one of converting "the youth of our schools into a legion of brave Frenchmen" who would "follow the cult of the flag" and develop a true "taste for arms." Al1 of this was underpinned by the popular philosophy of Henri Bergson with its emphasis on élan vital

By the nineties,  Captain George Gilbert, a member of the first graduating class of the new Ecole de Guerre, who had retired from the army due to medical problems, had become a highly visible commentator on military affairs. Prior to his  illness, Gilbert was considered a future leader of the Army.  His message was uncomplicated. He taught that the primary responsibility for the defeat of 1870 lay in the French Army's defensive state of mind, which had allowed the Germans to gain and maintain moral superiority throughout the war. This, quite simply, was the reason for the loss and the problem could be easily corrected.

Gilbert spoke and the Army listened. He told his eager listeners that defensive thought and defensive action alone had cost France the victory. His words were calming and soothing to an army that desperately wanted to believe in itself and to be told that everything was all right. Gilbert's ideas became the ideas of the Ecole de Guerre. He coined the phrase furia francaise and the initials "G.G." were the most famous in all military writings of the time.  

But Gilbert was no longer on the active list. A serving officer of  some influence was needed to preach the ideas within the Army. This officer would have to be a soldier of considerable intellectual stature, and he would need an official forum from which to preach. The perfect officer for this role turned out  to be Ferdinand Foch. His forum was to be no less than the Supreme War College, the Ecole de Guerre.


Ferdinand Foch




Foch attended the Ecole de Guerre in 1885 and, only nine years later, in 1894, was assigned to the school as Professor of Strategy and Tactics. He served as an instructor for six years and was easily one of the most popular instructors at the school. Dapper, full of daring ideas and a fiery speaker, he rapidly attracted a devoted following of the brightest students at the college.  In 1901 he ran afoul of the post-Dreyfus "Catholic bashing" of Minister of War Louis Andre and was relieved of his post. He would return to the college a scant six years later, this time as  commandant.

In his lectures Foch, who had always dealt extensively in mystique, now blended the spiritual views of elan and esprit as expressed by Gilbert with the teachings of the philosophers Joseph de Maistre and Kolmar von der Goltz. "Victory = Will" was the centerpiece of his teachings. He told his students that battle was a struggle between two wills  and the only time a battle was lost  when one believed it was lost.  Therefore, battles could  be won as long as one did not believe himself beaten. Modern battle, even  with its new weapons of great destruction, would be no different. From a narrow reading and interpretation of the works of Du Picgq, Foch took the notion that "No enemy awaits you if you are determined and never are there two equal determinations." He conveniently ignored Du Picq's admonition that in any equation of wills the will of the enemy should not be forgotten.

Foch did not teach that the "blind offensive" was the answer in all cases. In his two books, The Conduct of War and Principles of War, he wrote extensively of flexibility, security, and economy of forсе. He believed that the commander who immediately went into action at all points upon sighting the enemy would rapidly face stalemate because he would have no reserve forces with which to exploit the situation as it developed. Rather, he said, the commander should economize his forces and strike with his reserve at the point of enemy weakness. This would maintain the "will to conquer" of his men.

Some historians today argue that Foch never intended to become the "priest" of the offensive à outrance  which he—in fact—became at the Ecole de Guerre. Indeed, he himself later maintained that his thoughts had been misinterpreted, and in the midst of the slaughter of the initial battles of the war he cried out that all this was not what he  intended. History, however, can be a cruel judge, and the fact is that it was Foch who started the fire at the Ecole de Guerre.


 Louis Loyzeau de Grandmaison



The impact of the teachings of Foch was enormous. By 1914 the  majority of the hundreds of students he had taught at the Ecole de Guerre, the best and the brightest of the French Army, commanded divisions and brigades or held senior staff positions. Among these was a favorite pupil, Major Louis Loyzeau de Grandmaison.   In 1906 de Grandmaison, predictably, was assigned to the General Staff. In the same year he published a book, his second, entitled Dressage de L'Infanterie en vue du Combat Offensif (Infantry Training for Offensive Combat). Using both his experiences as a commander in combat and his own study of the recently completed Russo-Japanese War, de Grandmaison concluded that the direct offensive was still the best tactic and that the primary reason  [for its outcome] was the Japanese offensive spirit.


The argument has been made that there was another, more prudent side to de Grandmaison and that crediting him as the chief disciple of  the offensive à outrance  is unfair. While it is true that he, on occasion, displayed a more logical and realistic approach to tactics, de Grandmaison did not display these aspects of his thought for general public consumption.  The words that did reach the public [and most of the army] were unequivocal: "For the attack, only two things are necessary; to know where the enemy is and to decide what to do. What the enemy intends to do is of no consequence. " The mission of the French forces was simple. They were to ". . . charge the enemy with the bayonet in order to destroy him (realizing that). . . this result can be obtained only at the price of bloody sacrifice. All other conceptions should be rejected as contrary to the very nature of war. What of plans? No plans were needed. One had only to locate and then "fly at the throats of the enemy." What of security? De Grandmaison answered that "imprudence is the best security.  To Liddell Hart it was a theory "based on the sentimental assumption that Frenchmen were braver than Germans." "The strategy of the matador," he said, "had been replaced with the strategy of the bull."

Still, the ideas of the offensive à outrance spread slowly until February 1911 when, in a single stroke, de Grandmaison was able to wed the French Army irrevocably to its fate. In that year General Victor Michel, Commander-in-Chief of the French Army, proposed a radical change in Plan XVI, the existing French war-fighting plan. Without getting into the specifics, to the disciples of the school of the offensive, this proposal was completely unacceptable for two reasons. First, it proposed the use of reservists in front-line assignments. The spirit of the old long service professional army was still very much alive and the regulars harbored feelings of both distrust and jealousy toward reservists "Citizen soldiers" were seen to be "unfit" for the furious offensive operations planned by the General Staff.  They lacked the unquestioning zeal needed to wage war with the bayonet. Anyway, they would not be required. The war, although sure to be bloody, was going to be a short one decided in the first violent battles by regular troops attacking always and everywhere.

Second, the proposal called for the [temporary] abandonment of large portions of the provinces of Alsace and Lorraine, lands which had assumed an almost mystical quality since they had been "stolen" by the Prussians in 1870.

De Grandmaison, now a Lieutenant Colonel, and the Chief of the Troisieme (operations) Bureau in the war ministry, seized upon the debate  surrounding   Michel's proposed plan to precipitate a rebellion of the "Young Turks." He scheduled and delivered two lectures at the new Center of Higher War Studies in which he called not only for the rejection of Michel's plan, but for Army-wide acceptance of the offensive à outrance doctrine as well. He argued passionately that what France needed to fight the Germans was a doctrine which had as its  centerpiece the straightforward offensive, an offensive to the bitter end, every man's offensive, to be conducted simultaneously and everywhere. There was no further need for complex movement of and no need forces, for the use of reservists. Instinct was superior to intelligence.

The effect of de Grandmaison's lectures was electric and he succeeded in his aims beyond his greatest hopes. Not only was Michel's plan defeated, but Michel himself, long held by the "Young Turks" to be an impediment to the new ideas sweeping the Army, was sacked. General Gallieni refused to serve as his replacement on the grounds that he had helped unseat Michel. General Pau, the government's second choice, was an ardent Catholic and therefore unacceptable to many of the deputies in the government. 


Joseph Jacques Césaire Joffre




By default, the position then went to Joseph Joffre, the government's third choice as Commander-in-Chief and an enthusiastic supporter of the new doctrine. De Grandmaison, selected for command of the 153rd Infantry Regiment at Toul, could depart for his command knowing that there would be no turning back now. Doctrine and supporting regulations and plans would be rewritten. The way was clear for the doctrine of the offensive à outrance to become law. 

All that now remained was for the new doctrine to be codified and institutionalized within the Army. This was accomplished by the release three important documents in 1913 and 1914: The Regulations for the Conduct of Large Units (28 Оctober 1913), The Decree on the Service of Armies in the Field (2 December 1913) and The Regulations for Infantry of  Maneuver (20 April 1914).

Joffre brought these about following his dissatisfaction with the army's grand maneuvers of 1913. He assessed the Army to be in a poor state  of readiness in several key areas.  What was needed, he felt, were regulations that were more prescriptive and left no room for misinterpretation or doubt. Further, the new regulations should reflect the new mood in the Army, the mood best expressed by de Grandmaison. Under the new regulations, old ideas were to be discarded: "The passive defense is doomed to certain defeat; it is to be absolutely precluded."  He approved a new war strategy, "Plan XVII", based on the new principles.

When war came in 1914, the French soldiers fought exactly as they had been trained. Upon meeting an enemy force, they attacked, full of the furia francaise, and without regard to the enemy situation. During a single day (22 August 1914) the French Army suffered 27,000 fatalities, more than the British Army on its legendary "First Day of the Somme."  Major General Edward Spears, then a British liaison to Joffre's staff, was present at the slaughter of August 1914. He wrote later: "The senses of the tragic futility of it will never quite fade from the minds of those who saw these brave men, dashing across the open to the sound of drums and bugles. . ." During August 1914 the French army suffered over 300,000 casualties (a conservative estimate of killed, wounded, and captured), in the spirit of  offensive à outrance.  

Après le Déluge 

What of those individuals most responsible for the failed Doctrine of the  offensive à outrance?

  • Former Captain George Gilbert lived until 1901(?). [Editor's note. I've not discovered anything  online or in my personal library comparing the actual events of the war with his theories.  Possibly, this is due to the broad discrediting of his ideas.]
  • Colonel Ferdinand Foch, provided brilliant leadership during the Battle of the Marne, but he stuck with his relentless offensive tactics during the 1915 campaign. Eventually, he discarded the Offensive à Outrance about the time of the Battle of the Somme.  He would be called upon to coordinate the Allied victory offensive of 1918 as Generalissimo. History would remember him as the greatest French general of the war.

  • Since his intervention in the war planning had been generally favorably received, Lt. Colonel Louis de Grandmaison's rapid career advancement continued when he returned to line service.  He was  commander of the 153rd Regiment when war broke out and managed to get wounded three times within 24 hours. Nevertheless, he was promoted again to the command of the Fifth Army Reserve Group. On 18 February 1915, while inspecting front-line trenches near Soissons, Grandmaison was struck in the head by shrapnel from an exploding German artillery shell. He died the following day at the age of 54, becoming a casualty of the brutal, high-firepower trench warfare that his prewar tactical doctrines had deemed impossible.
  • General Joseph Jacques Césaire Joffre, continued to serve as Commander-in-Chief of French forces from the start of World War I until the end of 1916. His reputation today remains stellar because of his masterful leadership in changing the course of the war at the Battle of the Marne.  His subsequent Western Front operations of 1915, however, showed he still had faith in Élan, and an underappreciation of the killing power of artillery. In 1915 alone, the French Army suffered approximately 349,000 deaths, its worst year of the Great War.

Source:  Excerpted from "NO OTHER LAW: THE FRENCH ARMY AND THE DOCTRINE OF THE OFFENSIVE," Charles W. Sanders, Jr., March 1987, RAND Corporation


Sunday, June 14, 2026

Eyewitness: "I Saw Rheims Cathedral Burn"


 Click on Images Below If Reading on Small Device









The Cathedral Today

Source:  The Great War, "I Was There" – Undying Memories of 1914-1918


Saturday, June 13, 2026

Remembering a Veteran: Captain Robert Gee, VC, MC, 2nd Battalion Royal Fusiliers



Born on 7 May 1876 in Leicester (England), Robert Gee  was orphaned at age nine and lived in a workhouse and orphanage until he joined the 4th Queens Own Hussars in 1893. However on 18 October he went Absent Without Leave and the next day under an assumed name (Sydney Evershed)  he enlisted with the 2nd Battalion Royal Fusiliers (City of London Regiment). He reverted to his real name later in the year after being tried for fraudulent enlistment. Despite this poor start, Robert rose through the ranks rapidly, from lance corporal in 1896 to warrant officer by 1911. He was finally commissioned as a 2nd lieutenant in 1915.  

On 5 September 1915, Robert joined the 2nd Battalion in Gallipoli. Within a few days he found himself an acting captain. Robert survived the flooding at Suvla Bay on 26 November, which killed many men (both British and Turkish) who were drowned in their trenches or died of frostbite as the temperature dropped rapidly. [After the war, he published a dramatic account of this episode.]  On 5 January 1916 the Battalion was evacuated and withdrawn to Egypt.


The November 1915 Storm at Gallipoli Featured Both Frost and Flooding

Gee’s next significant action was on the Somme. On the 1 July 1916, the first day of the Battle of the Somme, the 2nd Battalion attacked Beaumont Hamel. Robert was severely wounded in the thigh and—also suffering from shell shock—was evacuated to the UK. His actions during the attack had been noted and he was subsequently awarded the Military Cross. His citation for this award reads:

For conspicuous gallantry in action. He encouraged his men during the attack by fearlessly exposing himself and cheering them on. When wounded he refused to retire, and urged his men on till, after being blown in the air by a shell, he was carried in, half unconscious. 

He returned to France in February 1917 and was wounded again during August but returned to duty within a fortnight. Captain Robert Gee would next be awarded the Victoria Cross, the highest recognition in the British and Commonwealth Armed Forces, for his bravery during the Battle of Cambrai (1917).  

It was there that, after the enemy succeeded in capturing his brigade's headquarters and ammunition dump, Captain Gee found himself a prisoner of the German troops. He managed to quickly escape, however, and organize a party of the brigade staff with which he attacked the enemy. Closely followed by two companies of infantry, Gee cleared the locality and established a defensive flank. Then, finding an enemy machine gun still in action, with a revolver in each hand, he went forward and captured the gun, killing eight of the crew. He was wounded but would not have his wound dressed until the defense was organized. The image of Gee with one revolver in each hand charging at an enemy machine gun was probably an epic sight for everyone that witnessed that moment.  


British Infantry at Cambrai, 1917

His Victoria Cross citation reads:

For most Conspicuous bravery, initiative and determination when attacked by a strong enemy force pierced our line and captured a Brigade Headquarters and ammunition dump. Capt. Gee finding himself a prisoner killed one of the enemy with his spiked stick and succeeded in escaping. He then organized a party of the Brigade Staff, with which he attacked the enemy fiercely, closely followed by two Companies of Infantry. By his own personal bravery and prompt action, he, aided by his orderlies, cleared the locality. Capt. Gee established a defensive flank on the outskirts of the village, then finding that an enemy machine gun was still in action, with a revolver in each hand and followed by one man, he rushed and captured the gun killing eight of the crew. At this time he was wounded, but refused to have the wound dressed until he was satisfied that the defense was organized. 

It was only after the action that Gee allowed himself to be taken to an aid station to receive treatment for the gunshot wound. He returned to France during April 1918 but was evacuated home suffering from his previous injuries.  On 11 November 1920, Robert was one of 100 service men and the only Royal Fusilier chosen to form the Honor Guard at the internment of the Unknown Warrior at Westminster Abbey.


Captain Gee Shows His Victoria Cross to the Boys of Cottage
Homes Orphanage Where He Had Been Raised


After unsuccessfully studying for The Bar, Gee decided to pursue a career in politics, initially  narrowly defeated in December 1918 for the seat representing Consett, Co. Durham. On 2 March 1921, he ran again, defeated future prime minister Ramsay MacDonald and became Unionist Member of Parliament for Woolwich East. He lost his seat in 1923 but won another election in 1924. Gee remained in politics until 1927 when he resigned his seat as M.P. for Bosworth, Leicestershire, although by this time he had already migrated to Western Australia. He died in Perth, Western Australia, aged 84.

Source: The Fusilier Museum London; The Great War: Personal Stories