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

Saturday, January 22, 2022

How Scotland, Ireland, and Wales Supported the British War Effort


Early Volunteers for Kitchener's Army



Scotland - There are many examples of Scottish patriotism during the war, including the hugely successful ‘tank campaign’ of 1917/18 in which battle-scarred tanks toured towns and cities to drum up sales of War Bonds and Savings Certificates. Several Scottish cities vied to outdo each other, and Dundee raised £4.5 million in one week. Yet a number of Scottish cities were also leading centres of the anti-war movement, and saw significant industrial and civil unrest, during and immediately after the war.


Pilot's at Scotland's Montrose Air Station


A Scottish location famously associated with the First World War is the Craiglockhart Military Hospital in Edinburgh, where officers suffering from shell shock were treated with ‘talking cures’ and other newly developed therapies. It is also where the poets Wilfred Owen and Siegfried Sassoon first met, inspiring each other to write some of the poetry that continues to shape the view of the war that so many of us have.


Ireland - Unlike the rest of Britain, there was no conscription in Ireland, yet around 140,000 Irishmen joined during the war as volunteers. Some joined up for the perceived justice of the cause, but Ireland in 1914 was deeply divided between nationalist and unionist political groups, and these more local considerations also played their part. Recruitment posters were crucial, and special effort was made by poster companies such as Hely’s in Dublin to appeal to Irish sensibilities. An estimated two million posters were displayed around Ireland, in railway stations, offices and on hoardings, and many featured Irish symbols such as the shamrock and the wolfhound, as well as messages targeted at Irish Catholics. 




Despite the complexity of Irish politics and individual responses to the war there were a number of significant and fascinating places that reveal other aspects of WW1. The airship mooring station in Whitehead for example, played a key role in the protection of shipping from German submarines or U-boats in the North Channel.


Wales - There has been a perception that the Welsh were less keen to go to war than people elsewhere in Britain. Recruitment figures for Wales, however, are on a par with those for England and Scotland, although there is some anecdotal evidence of farming communities being reluctant to give up their labour. In many parts of Wales the fear of ‘khaki fever’ (the supposedly overwhelming attraction felt by young women to men in uniform) led to some unsettling treatment of young women by the authorities. 


Welsh Munitionettes Mourning Fellow Workers

Women in Wales were policed under the Defence of the Realm Act, with arrests being made among those who were caught committing ‘indecent acts.’ Women in Cardiff faced a curfew, and concerned citizens in Swansea took things into their own hands when the Swansea Women’s Citizens Union launched a ‘Purity Crusade’ to ‘stem the tide of immorality sweeping over the town’. 

Source:  BBC "World at Home" Series


Friday, January 21, 2022

The Sergeant Stubby Memorial

By Kevin Crompton
Originally Presented in Connecticut in World War I, May 2019




Barking warnings of incoming shells and gas attacks, rescuing wounded soldiers, boosting the morale of comrades, and even capturing a German soldier, Sgt. Stubby is widely regarded as a World War I hero. The monument for Sgt. Stubby was unveiled just outside Veterans Memorial Park in Middletown, CT, on Memorial Day weekend, May 2018.

“The park is really to represent and memorialize humans,” said Curt Deane, grandson of Robert J. Conroy, the 102nd Regiment soldier who took care of Stubby during the war. “I just kind of felt like to have him inside the park, some people might take offense.”

The bronze life-size statue of Stubby at 2 feet, 6 inches tall, sits on his hind legs atop a granite base saluting visitors upon entrance into the park.  “Since his big deal was that he could salute, why not have him near the entrance where he’s saluting and honoring the families of the fallen veterans,” said Deane.

The monument, including the brick walk-way leading up to Stubby, cost about $84,000. A portion of the money was donated from the U.S. War Dog Association while $30,000 was provided, and raised, by Deane and his family. California artist/sculptor Susan Bahary designed, crafted, and built the statue. Deane said he and his family chose Bahary to design the statue after seeing her work on the “Always Faithful” war dog memorial which was originally unveiled at the Pentagon in 1994.

Bahary specializes in bronze, acrylic, and stainless steel. She used the plaster of Paris replica of Stubby, currently located at the Smithsonian The Price of Freedom exhibition in Washington, DC, as a model to help sculpt the monument and ensure the size was true to reality. The replica has Stubby’s ashes inside, while the monument and plaster of Paris replica both show Stubby fitted with a vest, embroidered with his name, rank, infantry, and unit.


Stubby and His Division Arrive Home


According to a 1919 article in the Hartford Courant, Stubby was found wandering the campus of Yale University in New Haven and was befriended by Conroy, a New Britain native. Deane said despite Stubby being found in New Haven, the war hero is enshrined in Middletown because Yale felt Stubby would pose a threat to their bulldog mascot.

“Yale didn’t want it,” said Deane. “We asked, we prodded, we tried, but Yale [athletic department] felt he was going to be unfair competition to their mascot.”

While Yale already had their bulldog mascot, Stubby became the first mascot for Georgetown University where Conroy attended law school after the war. Stubby was a mix-breed dog. Deane said Stubby was more Staffordshire terrier than anything else, but one breed cannot solely be used to describe Stubby. After Yale declined the request, Deane said he and his family thought New Britain would make logical sense as a home for the monument however, he said there was no appropriate place to put a statue.

“Just by serendipity, we got a call from Susan Martuchi, who was one of the founders of [Veterans Memorial Park in Middletown],” said Deane. “She heard through someone that we were thinking about doing a statue and she contacted me and I came down and saw [Veterans Memorial Park] and said ‘you know what it’s perfect.’”


A Salute from the Sergeant


Deane said Martuchi has plans to add a large plaque near the Stubby Monument detailing other military service dogs from various other wars. The goal for completion of that plaque is Memorial Day 2019. “It just all fell into place,” said Deane.

Stubby and Conroy were members of the 102nd Infantry Regiment, 26thYankee Division. Together they served 18 months of active duty in World War I, with Stubby later going on to meet with Presidents Woodrow Wilson, Warren G. Harding, and Calvin Coolidge. Stubby even has his own animated film, Stubby: An American Hero, released in April 2018.

“Our goal is to make people more aware of how important service dogs are and to send contributions in to organizations that train service dogs for returning soldiers with PTSD and who need help,” said Deane. “I promised my grandfather, before he died, that I would keep Stubby’s memory alive and this is how we’re doing it.”

Thursday, January 20, 2022

Why the Hindenburg Line Failed


The Hindenburg Line, as it was known by the Allied  armies, was the strongest defensive system built during the First World War. Its reputation for impregnability was matched only by its ambitious design. Jagging across most of the Western Front in Belgium and northern France, nothing like it had ever been seen before. Requiring an enormous amount of labor and material, its extensive fortifications included deep zig-zagging trench lines fortified with reinforced concrete shelters, heavily armed strongpoints, and wide belts of barbed wire combined to form an intimidating barrier for any attacking army and to maximize the firepower of war's two greatest killers—artillery and machine guns. 


This nearly complete section east of Lens show the main of the Hindenburg Line: a position commanding the countryside,  hidden concrete bunkers (see photo below), two thick belts of barbed wire, protecting the main position,  and thinner belts for the advance and communications trenches.


The fortifications also skillfully integrated natural topographic features such as ravines, villages, and waterways to afford every possible advantage to the defending troops and make any Allied advance as difficult and dangerous as possible. Perhaps its most ingenious use of terrain was creating the world's longest anti-tank ditch from the St. Quentin Canal. To drive the Germans from French soil, the Allies knew they had to overcome these obstacles—and it was a deadly task requiring new weapons and tactics. 

The origin of the Hindenburg, or Siegfried, fortifications lay in two major German defeats of 1916. The first was the Fifth Army's offensive at Verdun, which failed to weaken the French Army through attrition. The battle turned into a bloody six-month (February to July) stalemate that left both the German and French armies exhausted. 

The second was the Anglo-French offensive on the Somme that began in July and relentlessly wore down the German First and Second Armies and slowly pushed the front line back to create a salient. These two lengthy and intense battles inflicted more than 700,000 casualties on the German Army and consumed vast quantities of weapons and munitions, leaving it in a much weaker state relative to the British and French Armies.




The Hindenburg Line symbolized the quandary in which Germany found itself on the Western Front in the second half of the war. On one hand, it could not afford any more costly battles like Verdun or the Somme and it needed the fortifications to even the military balance. On the other hand, once the United States entered the war, Germany could not win the war by merely occupying fortifications and keeping its army on the defensive. 

The original purpose of the Siegfried positions was to conserve the German strength while inflicting unacceptable casualties upon the French and British Armies, possibly forcing the Allies to negotiate a favorable peace treaty while Germany still occupied Belgium and northern France. To that end, OHL's best option may have been to continue strengthening the fortifications and not abandon them for a desperate offensive that was uncertain of delivering a knockout blow to the Allies. But Germany did not have the resources to build an impregnable defensive front. After the initial round of construction that built the Siegfried and Wotan positions, the labor and material needed to build new, and maintain existing, fortifications steadily decreased.

Furthermore, the German Army was unable to realize the intended benefit of the fortifications. After withdrawal to the Siegfried-Stellung, casualties remained high throughout 1917 because OHL's defensive principles were unevenly applied and, perhaps more important, because Ludendorff was unwilling to authorize withdrawals before frontline units were depleted. Thus, at Arras in April and May 1917, German divisions steadfastly held long established, and often unfavorable, trench lines instead of withdrawing to reserve positions or the better-sited fortifications of the Wotan-Stellung.


A Reinforced Concrete Shelter Under Construction 


During the ill-fated Nivelle Offensive, German frontline units employing the new defensive tactics devastated two French armies, but as the French continued the offensive, the German victory was diminished because Ludendorff would not allow German units to withdraw before they suffered significant casualties.

Finally, the long bloody battle of Third Ypres cost the Germans dearly because, even with Lossberg directing the defense, the army could not pull back to escape British artillery fire. In all three 1917 battles, the Allies and Germans both suffered heavy casualties, but it was the Germans who could afford it the least.

When American troops first appeared on the front in late October 1917, Ludendorff decided (ironically, on 11 November) to return to the offensive, believing the time was right to defeat the exhausted British Army and bring the weary French and inexperienced Americans to the negotiating table. The 1918 spring offensives had some success, bringing the German Army within artillery range of Paris, but fresh American divisions arrived on the battlefield, denying victory and sapping German morale. By the time it became necessary for the German Army to fall back to the Siegfried, Wotan, and the other withdrawal positions, it was too weak and demoralized to properly defend them. The Allies, employing new combined arms tactics and weapons, especially the tank, were able to nullify any advantages the fortifications provided to the German Army. Germany's last line of defense was a forlorn hope. 

Source: Over the Top, January 2017, based on The Hindenburg Line, by Patrick Osborn & Marc Romanych. Highly recommended and can be ordered HERE.

Wednesday, January 19, 2022

The Great War's Impact on Canada

 

Temporary Canadian Graves on the Western Front


Originally Presented by the Canadian War Museum

Canada emerged from the First World War a proud, victorious nation with newfound standing in the world. It also emerged grieving and divided, forever changed by the war’s unprecedented exertions and horrific costs.


A Country Fundamentally Changed

The war united most Canadians in a common cause even as the extremity of national effort nearly tore the country apart. Few had expected the long struggle or heavy death toll. A war fought supposedly for liberal freedoms against Prussian militarism had exposed uneasy contradictions, including compulsory military service, broken promises to farmers and organized labour, high inflation, deep social and linguistic divisions, and the suspension of many civil liberties. Some women had received the right to vote, but other Canadians—recent immigrants associated with enemy countries—had seen this right rescinded.

Government had intervened in the lives of Canadians to an unprecedented degree, introducing policies that would eventually mature into a fully fledged system of social welfare. But it had not prevented wartime profiteering, strikes, or economic disasters, leading many to question the extent to which rich Canadians had sacrificed at all. A massive and unprecedented voluntary effort had supported the troops overseas and loaned Ottawa the money it needed to fight the war. The resulting post-war debt of some $2 billion was owed mostly to other Canadians, a fact which fundamentally altered the nature of the post-war economy.


Red Cross Packages for Canada's Soldiers in Europe


Politically, the war was also a watershed. Borden’s efforts to win the 1917 election and carry the nation to victory succeeded in the short term, but fractured the country along regional, cultural, linguistic, and class lines. English and French relations were never lower, and accusations of French traitors and English militarists were not soon forgotten. Quebec would be a wasteland for federal Conservative politicians for most of the next 40 years. Laurier’s forlorn stand against conscription lost him the election and divided his party, but helped ensure the Liberals’ national credibility, with a firm basis in French Canada, for decades to come.

Labour, newly empowered by its important role in supporting the war effort, pushed for more rights, first through negotiations, and then through strikes. Farmers seethed over agricultural policies and Ottawa’s broken promise on conscription. In the post-war period, both groups would form powerful new political and regional parties.


Autonomy and Foreign Policy


Celebrating Dominion Day


The war accelerated the transformation of the British Empire into the British Commonwealth and demonstrated Great Britain’s military and economic reliance on the self-governing dominions. Most of the principal Commonwealth heads of government recognized this, and saw clearly in their wartime contributions the route to greater independence and standing within imperial counsels.

Prime Minister Sir Robert Borden orchestrated a massive national effort in support of the mother country, but also demanded that Great Britain recognize Canada’s wartime sacrifices with greater post-war autonomy. Canada signed independently the Treaty of Versailles (1919) that formally ended the war, and assumed a cautious, non-committal role in the newly established League of Nations. London’s wartime agreement to re-evaluate the constitutional arrangements between Great Britain and its dominions culminated in the Statute of Westminster (1931), which formalized the dominions’ full control over their own foreign policy. Canada’s determination to do so regardless had already been made evident during the 1922 Chanak Crisis, when Ottawa insisted on a Parliamentary debate before considering possible support to Great Britain in a military confrontation with Turkey.


Unprecedented Status


Victorious Canada: Paris, 14 July 1919


Despite the social and political challenges of the post-war, most Canadians also emerged from the struggle believing they had done important and difficult things together. Their primary fighting force at the front, the Canadian Corps, had achieved a first-class reputation as one of the most effective formations on the Western Front. Their generals and politicians had played an obvious role in victory, and the country itself enjoyed an international standing that few observers in 1914 could have predicted.

Tuesday, January 18, 2022

Of Those We Loved: A Great War Narrative Remembered and Illustrated


By I. L. "Dick" Read
Pen & Sword Military, 2013. 
First published in 1994
David F. Beer, Reviewer


Author with His Training Mates at Alsdershot, 1914
Note: All His Friends Were Killed or Wounded in the War
(Click on Image to Enlarge)


A certain mystery hangs over the origin of this fascinating and highly readable memoir. We never learn what the author’s initials I. L. stand for, but we do know he died in 1971. The book was first published in England in 1994 and republished in 2013, copyrighted to "The Estate of I. L. Read." I can only surmise that someone took original notes or a diary, plus pencil sketches by the author, and fashioned this excellent final work—an idea bolstered by the statement inside the book’s cover that the contents have been “refined over the years.”

But I’d rather talk about the book than play literary detective. Dick Read joined the Leicestershire Regiment in 1914 at the outbreak of war. He was an enthusiastic patriot with an extremely positive attitude. This attitude seems to have stayed with him throughout the war no matter what. He sees early combat in northern France and later at the Somme. He is wounded in the leg and recovers. In 1917 he’s commissioned into the Royal Sussex Regiment and is sent to Egypt to join his new battalion. The lengthy trip, by train and then boat, is described in detail and is one of considerable discomfort and fatigue. On arrival in Egypt he is almost immediately ordered back to France, so back he goes, spending some three months on his total travels. He arrives in time for the Second Battle of the Marne, where his valor earns him the Croix de Guerre, is in the Final Advance, and remains in the army after the Armistice, seeing duty with the British Army on the Rhine.

Although we encounter most of the main battles of the war in this memoir, more valuable in my opinion are the personal insights and attitudes we get from the text. Some are quite earthy. Read is told early on by an old salt about the gas masks they used at Ypres: “Them bloody things are no good—If Jerry sends over gas, piss on a spare sock and tie it over your nose and mouth. That’s what we did” (p. 21). There are scenes of devastation and dead soldiers, of course, but Read does not dwell on the ghastliness and horror of combat. He chooses the general rather than the detailed in his descriptions:

Soon after midnight the Nissen hut in the transit camp which we occupied near Mendinghem station had a narrow escape, a bomb dropping nearby which riddled the roof like a sieve, snuffed our candles, and knocked us all over. Upon the road outside lay two American soldiers, unfortunately past aid…It was said that a cook had left his campfire uncovered, and that a passing flight of German Gothas en route for Calais or Boulogne had reminded us of the fact (p. 338).


Author's Sketch from Arras Sector


Only once in his narrative does the author express anger. It’s not toward the enemy but toward a group of his own countrymen: conscientious objectors, or "Conchies," as they were called. He sees a group of them at a depot while back in England for a spell:

An old colour sergeant was endeavoring, without success, to form them into two ranks as they stood about, many with hands deep in trouser pockets. They appeared so unusually slovenly that I commented on this to the sergeant of the guard on the main gate. ‘Them? Them there? They’re a bloody lot of Conchies…I’d shoot the bloody lot—look at ‘em!’ I looked, and saw them slouching around the perimeter…as they deliberately flouted authority by studied insolence and nonchalance amounting to open defiance. They had all refused to put on uniform…If hate is the word, I hated these figures of men just then, far more than any Germans. At least the Germans were worthy of respect as fighters (p. 276).

It seems that despite the dangers and discomforts, Read rather enjoyed his war. His "mates" or comrades as an NCO and later as a second lieutenant, mean a great deal to him. They’re all generous and supportive, ready to laugh at anything remotely funny or absurd, and they have plenty of fairly innocent adventures together whenever possible. In fact, I feel this book is an effective counterpoint to the myriad accounts that emphasize the horrors of the Great War and the abject misery of those who fought and died in it.

That Dick Read’s companions meant so much to him shines through the book. This is reflected of course in the title, Of Those We Loved. It’s also expressed at the beginning of Chapter 8, "The Somme," with the subtitle “To Our Comrades of the Somme, 1916,” followed by a quotation from The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam: .

For some we loved, the Loveliest and the Best.
That from his Vintage rolling Time hath pressed, .
Have drunk their Cup a Round or two before, .
And one by one crept silently to Rest. .

According to information on the dust cover of the book, each year on the anniversary of the Somme until he died, Read had these lines inserted in the Leicester newspapers in memory of his WWI pals.

Not only is this book a splendid read that easily holds our attention, but it also contains many black and white pencil drawings by the narrator plus photos of him as a young soldier. The sketches intrigued me, the stark black and white contrasts evoking an almost haunting response to impressions of soldiers marching, bathing, or relaxing in their temporary billets. Several sketches of maps are included, roughly hand-copied from official maps of locations and battle plans.

I haven’t been able to find out much about I. L. Dick Read other than what he tells us in his narrative. It would be interesting to know who "refined" the text over the years after his death and who made the decision to publish it in 1994. Nevertheless, Of Those We Loved is a highly readable memoir that should be better known than it is. I highly recommend it and feel it deserves the recognition given to the more popularly esteemed publications in this genre.

David F. Beer

Monday, January 17, 2022

New Addition to Our World War I Tattoo Collection: #2 Barbed Wire & Poppies



 

Collection Number & Title: 

#2 Barbed Wire & Poppies


Description:  Floral piece with two dramatic blossoming red poppies set atop rolls of barbed  wire.

Location:  Lower Left Leg

Tattooee: John S. Sproul

Artist: Amanda Pepper, in St Louis MO, website: bemycanvas.com

Background: Details from John and Linda Sproul

I've been entranced by the Great War for about 20 years; when I met my wife, Linda, she got the bug. We've been to the Western front seven times, once a year from 2014 to 2019. Our first trip over was to Sarajevo in 2014; we were on the site of the assassination on the 100th anniversary of the deed.  From there we flew to London and then into France. I proposed to Linda at the Lochnagar crater, and we were married on Veteran's/Armistice Day that year, at 11:00 a.m., in Kansas City. We then went to the museum in period clothes and were taken for actors. 


Wedding Day for John and Linda


Over the next six years, we returned to the front yearly to mark 100th anniversaries of the Somme, Verdun, and other spots; we used what was a great touring company, The War Research Society and were devastated when its leader Ian Alexander passed.  We were there in Longueval when his memorial bench was dedicated. Our final trip was in 2019, to the Palace of Versailles, on the anniversary of the signing of the treaty, and were dumbfounded that the French did precisely zero on that spot, on that day. We hope to return after COVID, and in the meantime, we're members and supporters of our World War I Memorial and Museum in Kansas City, and we voraciously read and collect trench art, medals, things that used to go bang, and so forth. . .

When preparing for the tattoo, I described to the artist that what I was wanting: a collage of poppies and barbed wire. She emailed me a photo of a sketch she had drawn, and I loved it. When applying it, she did it freehand, without a stencil... quite the feat.



Here's a picture of the oil painting of the tattoo my wife Linda gave me as a gift after I got the tattoo, painted by the original tattoo artist; she used a piece of wood from an old church pew as her "canvas." 


Sunday, January 16, 2022

Sveta Gora: Holy Site Destroyed in the Great War


Sveta Gora Today

Along the Soca (formerly Isonzo) River just north of the Slovenian/Italian border city of Gorizia,  is a  2,240-ft. peak named Sveta Gora ("Monte Santo" in Italian, "Holy Peak" in English).  It is the site  of the basilica of the Assumption of the Virgin and an important seat for the Roman Catholic Franciscan Order. For five centuries  it has been a sacred destination for Christian pilgrims. Among its most important religious elements is the image of the Madonna  of Sveta Gora on the main altar, a work of the painter Palma il Vecchio from the 16th century. Founder of the Franciscan Order, St. Francis of Assisi, is also honored at the site, with an elegant, modern sculpture.


The Madonna of Sveta Gora


The mountain owes its name to the apparition of the Madonna to the shepherdess Orsola Ferligoi of Gargaro in 1539 . A church was built on the top of the mountain already in the 14th century, which was then destroyed by the Turkish invaders and rebuilt in 1544. In 1786, Emperor Joseph II ordered the demolition of the church, which was later rebuilt.


St. Francis of Assisi


In  1917  the holy site of Sveta Gora, like Monte Cassino in World War II, were leveled out of military necessity during heavy fighting between Austrian and Italian armies. After the war, the basilica was rebuilt again, and the sacred artifacts—that could be removed and hidden—returned to the site. Sveta Gora was in similar jeopardy during the Second World War but was spared from bombing by [possibly] miraculous severe weather. In 1992, Pope John Paul II visited the site and blessed the famous painting of the Madonna.


Aerial View of the Complex Showing How Challenging
It Would Be Taken in an Assault from Across the River


The mountain, in a dominant position on the Gorizia plain, was an important strategic objective since the opening of the Isonzo front hostilities, during the First World War. The sanctuary was in fact damaged by the Italian bombardments of June 1915 . Its importance as a military objective, however, became crucial only after the sixth battle of the Isonzo, when the Italian troops conquered Gorizia and the stronghold of Mte. Sabotino, located on the opposite bank of the river. Sveta Gora, together with the peaks of Vodice, San Gabriele, and San Danieleit formed the new well-armed northern defense line created by the Austro-Hungarians with the aim of stopping the Italian advance towards the Carso and Ljubljana. During the following four offensives, the Italian Army was unable to make the summit of the mountain its own due to the very serious losses. Even in the tenth battle of the Isonzo, which saw the Italian conquest of Kuk and Vodice, Monte Santo remained firmly in Austro-Hungarian hands despite its temporary conquest by the infantry of the Campobasso brigade on 12 May 1917.


Top: Austrian Defender Atop Sveta Gora
Bottom: Typical Italian Assault in the Soca (Isonzo) Sector


On 22 August of the same year, during the eleventh battle of the Isonzo, the Italian troops finally managed to conquer Sveta Gora and the saddle of Dol below. Despite the successful outcome of the Italian offensive on the Bainsizza plateau, the strategic scope of success was very limited. After the disaster of Caporetto, which occurred only two months after the Italian conquest, Sveta Gora returned to Austrian hands until the end of the war. 


1917 Damage to the Basilica


Sources: Wikipedia, Sveta Gora – Pilgrimage Basilica

Saturday, January 15, 2022

Remembering a Veteran: Lt. Everett McKinley Dirksen, 19th Balloon Company, 328th Field Artlillery, AEF

 

Lt. Everett Dirksen Wearing the Aerial Observer Wing

Future U.S. Senator from Illinois and Senate Minority leader Everett Dirksen (1896–1969) was born in Pekin, Illinois, where he attended public schools.  He would later receive his law degree from the University of Minnesota.  During the war he had the extremely hazardous job of observing artillery fire an observation balloon. He did observer duty in both the St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne Offensives and later served as an intelligence officer during the occupation of Germany.

When he returned home, he reflected on how he wanted to spend the remainder of his life:

I was not sure that I wanted to return to school and complete my law course, but I did know that I wanted to do something to end the madness of conflict and the insane business of arbitrating the differences of men and nations with poison gas and high explosive shells.


President Eisenhower with Senator Dirksen in the Oval Office


By 1933, he was ready to run for office.  Here's a summary of his next 36 years of public service:

Everett Dirksen, represented central Illinois in the U.S. House of Representatives, 1933–1949. He later won four elections to the U.S. Senate, beginning in 1950. He rose through the leadership ranks of the Republican party in the Senate as chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee (1951–1954), Republican whip (1957–1959), and Senate Minority Leader (1959–1969). Dirksen played key roles in passing the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (1963), the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Voting Rights Act of 1965, and the Open Housing Act of 1968.

Sources: The Doughboy Center, Peoria History Center, Dirksencenter.org

Friday, January 14, 2022

Who Was Eric Geddes?


Sir Eric Campbell Geddes (1875–1937)


Eric Geddes  was the  driving force behind the reorganization of the British Expeditionary Force’s (BEF) logistics on the Western Front and the political head of the Admiralty in the final 18 months of the war. Under Lloyd George's premiership, Geddes was the preeminent troubleshooter of the British war effort.


Early Life and Career

Born in India, the son of a Scottish civil engineer, Eric Campbell Geddes (1875–1937) was a directionless youth more interested in rugby football than education. He attended a series of British public schools before gaining employment first in the United States with the B&O Railroad and then in India. Geddes joined the North-Eastern Railway (NER) in England in 1904. By 1914, his drive, energy, and aptitude had seen him promoted to the role of deputy general manager of the NER, and rewarded with the highest salary of any senior executive of a British railway company.


World War One


Geddes and Admiral Duff Welcome American Admiral
William Benson and Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels


In September 1914, Geddes was responsible for the raising of a battalion of men, the 17th (Service) Battalion, Northumberland Fusiliers (NER Pioneers) from among the NER’s employees. It was not until the following June that Geddes was able to take a direct role in the British war effort. As a deputy director of munitions supply at the Ministry of Munitions under David Lloyd George (1863–1945), Geddes helped increase production of rifles and machine guns, before in December 1915 he became responsible for the new national filling factories. His work in this role was rewarded with a knighthood in 1916.

Geddes was sent to France to report on the transport situation facing the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) in August 1916. After a brief tour, Geddes recommended an overhaul of the British logistical organization and the creation of a new staff officer at General Headquarters styled the director-general of transportation. Geddes was asked to head the new directorate by Sir Douglas Haig (1861–1928), and to act as director-general of military railways at the War Office by Lloyd George. In this unique dual role, Geddes’s key achievements were the construction of a 1,000-kilometer light railway network to improve supply to the BEF and the integration of the ports, railways, roads, and canals that served the Western Front. Geddes’s contribution to the “general excellence” of the BEF’s transportation was recognized by Haig in his final dispatch of the war in 1919.


A WWI Convoy Successfully Crossing the Atlantic

In May 1917, Geddes became controller of the navy before he was installed as First Lord of the Admiralty by Lloyd George on 6 July. In this role, Geddes assisted in the implementation of a convoy system to combat the German submarine menace, and upgraded the security of the English Channel line of communication to France.   He was also  instrumental in the dismissal of the First Sea Lord, Admiral Sir John Jellicoe (1859–1935), in December 1917. Following Jellicoe’s removal, Geddes requested a return to transport duties but was denied the opportunity to coordinate the movements of allied manpower and material on the Italian Front. He spent the last year of the war reorganizing the board of the Admiralty and on missions to Italy, north Russia, and the United States.


Postwar Career

Following the war, Geddes remained in government until 1922, first overseeing the demobilization of British troops, then as Britain’s first minister of transport, and finally as chairman of the committee on national expenditure that oversaw a retrenchment in public spending that became known as the “Geddes Axe.” The Geddes Axe was the drive for public economy and retrenchment in UK government expenditure recommended in the 1920s by a Committee on National Expenditure chaired by Sir Eric Geddes and with Lord Inchcape, Lord Faringdon, Sir Joseph Maclay, and Sir Guy Granet also members. Apart from defense where there were widespread reductions, the blade of the Geddes Axe fell primarily on education and social housing. But the effect was not permanent. After cuts in the financial years between 1921 and 1924, expenditure again began to creep back up. 


Geddes at a Post War Imperial Airways Event


Geddes’s postwar interests included working as chairman of Dunlop Rubber Company and as part-time chairman of Imperial Airways. He died following a long illness in June 1937.

Sources: Encyclopedia, 1914-1918; Wikipedia



Thursday, January 13, 2022

General Pershing, Meet the British High Command


Arrival in Liverpool, 8 June 1917



By Dr. Tyler R. Bamford

For nearly all active U.S. Army personnel, World War I marked the first time they came into contact with their British counterparts. It was also the first time the U.S. Army had ever deployed to Europe. Only once in the two armies’ histories, during the brief Boxer Rebellion of 1900–1901, had they fought side by side. Yet between April 1917 and November 1918, hundreds of thousands of American officers and men would train and fight with their British comrades. . .

Pershing’s stop in London was more than just a formality. It also acquainted him with the leaders of Britain’s Army and the political struggles within Great Britain. Pershing met with General Sir William R. Robertson, the British chief of the Imperial General Staff (CIGS); Field Marshal Viscount French (formerly Sir John French), the commander in chief, Home Forces; Maj. Gen. Sir Francis Lloyd, the general officer commanding the London District; and General Sir John S. Cowans, the quartermaster general of the British Army.  These meetings allowed the leaders to get the measure of one another and set the tone for their partnership.


Robertson


General Sir William R. Robertson


Perhaps the most important was with the CIGS, Robertson, whom Pershing described as “a rugged, heavy-set, blunt soldier.”  Robertson began his career as a private and became the first British soldier to ever rise from that rank to field marshal. In Robertson’s first meeting with Pershing, he explained the advantages of having American soldiers serve with or near British units. Pershing politely replied that it made far more sense to have American units serve near French units since it was French ports, railways, and materiel on which the U.S. Army would rely most heavily. Pershing neglected to mention that he, President Wilson, and Secretary of War Newton D. Baker had already decided that the AEF should have a closer affiliation with French rather than British forces. This decision stemmed both from American public sentiment and from the necessity of relying on French assistance in establishing the AEF. Pershing instead asked Robertson whether extra British shipping could be found to help bring the U.S. Army into the fight sooner. To this request, Robertson and other British leaders revealed the full extent of their enormous shipping losses to German U-boats in recent years, which greatly surprised Pershing.

In many ways, this exchange encapsulated t he relationship between AEF and British Army leaders over the next year: professional and friendly, yet plagued by disagreements. Robertson headed an army that had expended more than 400,000 lives before the Americans entered the war. The CIGS repeatedly had to defend the offensive plans of Field Marshal Douglas Haig, the commander of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF), against criticisms from Prime Minister David Lloyd George, who feared escalating casualty rates.  Meanwhile, Robertson asked for more men to be drafted from his already depleted nation. Pershing stepped into this struggle promising help but without a definite timeline for his forces to enter combat. Moreover, his request for shipping above and beyond Great Britain’s previous commitments asked his allies to risk shrinking their food stores in the face of the German submarine peril.

Robertson and other British leaders’ appeals for American troops to serve with the British were perfectly reasonable from their standpoint. Such a proposal had the potential to relieve the British manpower crisis and get American soldiers into battle quickly. Pershing found the suggestion a nonstarter, however, in light of American national sentiment and the U.S. Army’s desire to build an independent field army in France. The problem was that building such an army required British help, and there was no guarantee the AEF would be ready in time to prevent the Allies’ defeat. Pershing’s initial meetings with British commanders resolved none of these issues. Fortunately, these disagreements did not sour the attitudes of all British and American officers even as they repeatedly strained relations between the armies’ commanders.  


Haig


Generals Haig and Pershing


A few days after landing in France, Pershing visited his most important British colleague for the duration of the war, Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig. Along with Colonel Harbord, Col. Benjamin Alvord Jr., and Pershing’s aide-de-camp, Capt. George S. Patton, Jr., General Pershing arrived at Haig’s headquarters in an old chateau nestled among a grove of chestnut trees near the village of Saint-Omer.  Haig and his staff gave the Americans a warm welcome. To Harbord, Haig appeared “a very good-looking man of fifty-six, not as tall as I had expected, but very dignified and soldierly as well as cordial in his greeting.”  

Haig also took the opportunity to size up Pershing. The BEF commander wrote, “I was much struck with [Pershing’s] quiet gentlemanly bearing—so unusual for an American. Most anxious to learn, and fully realises the greatness of the task before him.” This observation likely reflected Haig and other British officers’ assumptions that American officers would be uniformly arrogant and outspoken.

Over lunch, Pershing enjoyed reminiscing with British Lt. Gen. Sir George H. Fowke, the adjutant general of the British armies, whom Pershing had known in 1905 when they were both observers in the Russo-Japanese War in Manchuria. Meanwhile, Patton chatted with Haig about their shared interests in hunting, polo, and sabers.

That afternoon, Haig and his staff treated Pershing and the other  American officers to a tour of the British headquarters. It gave the Americans the opportunity to observe the functioning of Haig’s command structure and ask many questions about the BEF. Harbord thought “the afternoon with the General Staff was most interesting and instructive and left us with a great respect for the splendid organization of the great army our virile imperial cousins have put in the field.”  

Pershing also found the visit informative. He recalled in-depth discussions about the organization, recruitment, and records of the British Army. Pershing wrote in his memoirs that “although our military system had been practically copied from the British a century and a half earlier, it was surprising to find so few points of difference after this lapse of time.”  These similarities only increased as the war progressed and U.S. Army officers borrowed freely from the British.

The three-day visit accomplished a great deal. It allowed American and British leaders to take stock of one another and express their opinions on the war and how best to prosecute it. Haig and his staff knew the scale of the task Pershing faced in assembling an army, supply organization, and headquarters from scratch. Haig worried it might take years before such a force could join the fight, and he wondered if the American officers had enough  experience to handle such an undertaking.

Pershing remained determined to construct the AEF as an independent force, and although he rejected Haig’s suggestion to incorporate American units into British divisions, Pershing saw the U.S. Army could learn much from the British. This meeting marked the start of a strong professional relationship between the two commanders, albeit one that was strained periodically by heated disagreements. 

Though Pershing and Haig’s interactions guided relations between their armies, the two met only occasionally during the war. On a daily basis, their liaison officers served as the representatives of the armies to each other. At Haig’s headquarters, Lt. Col. Robert H. Bacon, the former U.S. ambassador to France, represented Pershing. A wartime volunteer, Bacon’s diplomatic experience made him an asset to the American commander in chief, and he quickly gained the trust of British officers. Haig wrote that from the first time he met Bacon, “He struck me as a most honest, upright man, and absolutely to be trusted.” Haig treated Bacon as a member of his own staff and readily informed him about British plans. This personal trust was vital to cooperation between the two armies.

For this reason, Pershing handpicked the men who served as his liaisons. Bacon and other liaisons needed to understand their hosts and maintain their trust while also remaining dedicated to their own commander and his interests.

At AEF headquarters, Col. [later General] Cyril M. Wagstaff acted as Haig’s liaison. Wagstaff was commissioned into the Royal Engineers in 1897 and served with Australian troops on the staff of General William R. Birdwood during the Gallipoli campaign in 1915. Charles à Court Repington, a reporter for The Times of London and a former lieutenant colonel in the British Army, described Wagstaff as “a good practical man and a typical English soldier, who appears to me to carry out his delicate duties with great tact and good sense, and to make himself helpful to all.”  Upon visiting AEF headquarters  at Chaumont in October 1917, Repington observed, “The American officers are constantly seeking [Wagstaff’s] advice. They come to his room one after another without ceasing.”  After the American attack on the Saint-Mihiel salient on 12 September 1918, Wagstaff submitted a detailed report on the operation that praised American planning and the troops’ quick movement.

He noted that although American methods differed from those of the British Army, they successfully caught the Germans off guard and captured large numbers of prisoners.  As Repington observed, liaison officers not only relayed messages between their commanders, but they coordinated activities and answered questions about their respective armies. They worked hard to smooth out disagreements, clarify miscommunications, and create favorable impressions in each other’s headquarters—and they largely succeeded. 

Still, the most persistent source of discord between the  two armies’ leadership was the issue of amalgamation. . .

Note:  We presented an extensive discussion of the amalgamation issue on Roads to the Great War HERE.

Source: Excerpted from "United in a Great Cause: U.S. and Allied Military Relations in World War I," by Tyler R. Bamford, Army History, Summer, 2020. The full article can be read online HERE.


Wednesday, January 12, 2022

America's Moms Played a Big Role in World War I

 

Eddie Rickenbacker's Mother Welcomes Her
Son Home from the War


By Patri O'Gan and Mallory Warner, National Museum of American History

When people think of World War I, they often think of soldiers fighting in trenches. But soldiers weren't the only ones doing the work of war. In honor of Mother's Day and the centenary of the Great War, we examine some of the roles mothers played in World War I.


Mothers Were Recruiters



Wartime propaganda artists recognized the power of mothers in recruiting soldiers. They used mother figures to remind men of their duty to their country and family, and to assure them of how proud their mothers (and wives) would be when they became soldiers.


Mothers Were Fundraisers


Hand-spun and hand-woven Navajo blanket with 48-star American flag motif, made by Hosteen Nez Basa for
her son, a soldier in World War I, and
donated to the Red Cross for a fundraising raffle.


Mothers who remained at home while their sons and daughters served overseas had much to do to keep the household running, to fill in for soldiers in the workplace and support war production, and to help raise funds for the war effort. One mother, Hosteen Nez Basa, a Navajo woman from New Mexico, donated this blanket to the Red Cross for a fundraising raffle. According to the donor, Ms. Basa originally made this blanket for her son, a soldier serving in Europe during the war. Convinced that her son would die serving, Ms. Basa made this blanket to be used for his burial. When her son returned from the war front alive, she donated the blanket to benefit the local Red Cross, raising close to $1,500 in war relief. 


Mothers as Nurses [or Nurses as Mothers?]



According to this Red Cross poster, the nurses of World War I acted as great "mothers" to all of the soldiers fighting in the war. Scholars have noted that the nurse's pose mimics that of another famous mother, the Virgin Mary cradling the body of Jesus in the Pietà. The strength, grace, and purity evoked by Mary were all traits held by the ideal World War I nurse. An American text from 1917 on surgical war nursing listed these "motherly" personal qualifications of a nurse: "patience, kindness of heart and manner, a power of unremitting attention and that indescribable quality called tact."


Mothers as Memory Keepers


Man-in-Service Flag


The devastating loss of life in World War I meant that many mothers were left with the heartbreaking task of mourning and memorializing their dead. One way of memorializing those killed in action was the Gold Star. Families hanging a Man-in-Service flag in their window would cover the blue star with gold fabric, symbolizing their loss. Women were encouraged to forgo traditional mourning garb in favor of a simpler black armband with a gold star. Woodrow Wilson referred to these women as gold-star mothers. After the war, in 1928, the organization American Gold Star Mothers was founded. To this day, mothers who have lost a child in military service wear a gold star pin to honor the deceased.

Adapted from "Mothers in World War I," Website of the National Museum of American History