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

Sunday, June 16, 2024

A Primer on War Communications During World War I


Marine Signallers in World War One


From the National Museum of the Marine Corps

From the very beginnings of military warfare communication often holds the keys to victory. Communicating with your allies while knowing where your enemies are is one of the most crucial parts in war. After all, in military ranks the common saying is that, “knowing is half the battle." Military communication has evolved throughout the ages from flaming arrows, drum beats, smoke signals, messenger pigeons, to modern satellite enabled communication devices.

During the First World War, (WWI) communication technology was changing very quickly. For the first time, much of the world was using electricity, and this new source of power was utilized for communication in the form of telegraphs, telephones, signal lamps, and radio. However, this new technology was not always the best way to communicate with the Marines on the front lines. Weather, terrain, and the enemy could break the electric lines that connected the Marines to their commanders. While instant communication was preferred, Marines often had to use proven methods of communication, many that were invented well before the Revolutionary War. Here we will explore the different types of communication used by the Marines, the United States military, and their allies throughout WWI.


Signal Flags

Before the inventions of the telegraph, telephone and two-way radio, ships would communicate with a series of signal flags.

Signal flags are a uniform set of easily identifiable nautical codes used to convey visual messages and signals between two ships or from ship to shore. They are based on an internationally recognized set of codes referred to as the International Code of Signals published in nine different languages; English, French, Italian, German, Japanese, Spanish, Norwegian, Russian and Greek. 

Naval flag signaling can be traced back to medieval times but the first well documented case of communication by signal flags was that of the British fleet during the Napoleonic Wars. Signal flags have been used for both communicating between different ships at sea as well as between ships and shore. Whenever forming and preparing to use naval tactics, it is imperative that different ships be able to communicate with one another in order to complete complicated maneuvers. For example, during the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805, British naval forces under the command of Admiral Lord Nelson effectively used flag signals to form 27 British ships under his command into complex battle formations before meeting a superior force of 33 French and Spanish ships. Upon meeting enemy forces, Admiral Nelson had a flag signal raised that read “England expects that every man will do his duty”, providing the patriotic encouragement needed to win the battle.

Click on Image to Englarge

Nelson's Famous Trafalgar Signal

Flag signals may also be used to communicate messages between different ships that are close to one another. Often this occurs because they are performing  dangerous operations, such as when refueling at sea (and thus a sitting target). While it may be possible nowadays to make a radio message that a ship is refueling, it is incomplete if it does not provide information as to where that specific ship is located in order for it to be avoided. Signals between two ships or from ship to shore  are based on an internationally recognized set of codes referred to as the International Code of Signals published in nine different languages; English, French, Italian, German, Japanese. 

Signal flags are a uniform set of easily identifiable nautical codes used to convey visual messages and signals between two ships or from ship to shore. They are based on an internationally recognized set of codes referred to as the International Code of Signals published in nine different languages; English, French, Italian, German, Japanese, 2 Spanish, Norwegian, Russian and Greek. Naval flag signaling can be traced back to medieval times but the first well documented case of communication by signal flags was that of the British fleet during the Napoleonic War


Signal lamps

Another form of communication in use by the U.S. military was the electric signal lamp. Communication by signal lamps are similar to flag signals in that it is a visual signal and is often times restricted by one’s line of sight. Signal lamps are a focused lamp which can produce a pulse of light to send a message to another. In large versions this pulse is achieved by opening and closing shutters that are mounted in front of the lamp via a manually operated pressure switch. With smaller hand held lamps a mirror is tilted by a trigger to focus the light into pulses. The light pulses transmitted by the signal lamp were most often sent in the form of Morse code. Initially pioneered by the Royal Navy in the late 19th century, signal lamps offer a means of secure communication during periods of radio silence where stealth is of vital importance. Communicating by signal lamp was particularly useful during the Battle of the Atlantic and the initial years of the Second World War, where Allied ship convoys needed covert means to communicate with one another amid the threat of German submarine attack.


Signal Lamp


Heliograph communication is like signal lamps in that it relays a message using flashing dots and dashes. Unlike an electrically powered signal lamp a heliograph transmits flashes of reflected sunlight. The heliograph is a simple but effective instrument for instantaneous optical communication over long distances and was mainly used to send messages for the Army in overland campaigns, such as during the U.S. Indian Wars. Heliograph was used for long-distance communication without a fixed infrastructure during the Geronimo campaign which encompassed U.S. Army forts all across the country. Heliograph equipment was also very portable and required no restrictive power source, making it an ideal means of military communication. Despite the many benefits of heliograph communications, it is very limited by the terrain and weather in which it operates. 


Electricity and war communications during World War I

At the turn of the 20th century, the world was being introduced to an array of new technology utilizing electricity. Scientists had been researching electricity and ways to harness it well before the 1800s, but it was scientists like Samuel Morse, Alexander Graham Bell, Thomas Edison, Nikola Tesla, George Westinghouse, and many others who turned the mystery of electricity into a usable form. By the time WWI began, electricity was in use in major cities worldwide. The electric telegraph, the telephone, wireless radio, and the light bulb would completely change how the world would conduct warfare.

At the outbreak of WWI, each side had many different communication options. Non-electrical systems of communication such as carrier pigeons and dispatch riders were used alongside and sometime interchangeably with modern communication systems such as the telephone and wireless telegraphy.


Telegraph and Morse code

The electric telegraph sends an electric current to a receiving station. When the sender presses on the telegraph key he interrupts the current creating an audible pulse that is heard at the receiving station. It cannot carry voice or other data and relies only on pulses to communicate. The receiver on the other end decodes the pulses to decode the message. Several electric telegraphs were being developed in Europe, and in 1836 Samuel Morse and Alfred Vail developed their own prototype.

Morse code is a system of sending messages by a series of on-off tones, lights or clicks. Each letter is represented by a unique series of short dots (dits) and longer dashes (dahs). The duration of a dash is three times the length of a dot. Each word is separated by silence in the equivalent of one dash. It is very important that the transmitter be consistent, or the message might be misread completely! Morse developed his code after seeing the optical, or semaphore telegraph, in Europe.

The widespread use of telegraph was quickly accepted, as it allowed information to be transmitted between telegraph stations almost instantly, rather than the weeks it took for a horse and rider. The technology was also accepted worldwide, with extensive systems appearing across Europe. By 1866 the first permanent telegraph cable was laid across the Atlantic Ocean.

During WWI, electric telegraphs were used throughout the war, on both sides. They were used to communicate from the front line trenches to the officers, and from nation to nation via telegraph lines throughout Europe and across the Atlantic, telegraph machines allowed governments and their leaders to instantly receive information on troop movements, battle outcomes, and other crucial information.


SOS: The internationally accepted distress signal  

···  - - -   ···

First adopted in Germany in 1905, the SOS three letter message quickly became the internationally recognized message for distress. While it is often thought it means “save our ship,” it actually does not stand for anything. The three letter message is easy to remember, which is crucial during emergencies. SOS remained the official maritime distress signal until 1999, when the Global Maritime Distress Safety System was created. SOS is still recognized as a visual signal of distress. 


Telephone

Army Officer Using a Field Telephone

The telephone was developed by improving the electric telegraph. A telephone converts sound (from our voice) into electronic signals suitable for transmission via cables or other transmission media over long distances and replays those signals simultaneously so we can hear them. The first patent for the telephone was given to Alexander Graham Bell in 1876. During WWI, on the Western Front, telephones were used to communicate between the frontline Marines and soldiers and their commanders. The U.S. Army Signal Corps constructed 2,000 miles of telegraph and telephone pole lines using 28,000 miles of wire and 32,000 miles of French communication poles. They also installed 40,000 miles of combat lines and established 134 permanent telegraph offices and 273 telephone exchanges, but heavy artillery bombardment meant these lines of communications were easily broken. They were also easily intercepted by the German Army, as were the basic wireless telegraph sets. However, despite the risk of interception, the speed of telephone and telegraph communication meant they were the most commonly used telecommunications systems.

Away from the trenches, navies faced similar problems of reliable communication and interception of their signals. For short-distance communications, the navy  relied on semaphore flags, while using more modern but also more easily intercepted wireless telegraphy sets for long-distance communication.


Wireless Telegraph (Radio)


Radio made its debut years before World War I. It was often used by ships transmitting messages via Morse code, and in 1912, operators on the Titanic depended on radio to communicate with other ships and with onshore radio stations.

The biggest improvements radio offered over message systems like Morse code were the speed and accuracy afforded by the use of voice communication. Advances in radio technology such as oscillators, amplifiers, and the electron tube made reliable voice communication possible. The "wireless" (as early radio was sometimes called) quickly proved invaluable to wartime efforts. Radio operators with portable transmitters were able to warn soldiers of an attack of poisonous gas, giving them time to put on their gas masks.


Animal Messengers

During WWI, the U.S Army Signal Corps also used homing pigeons to maintain frontline communications. A field commander would have one or two pigeons with him, and if other lines of communication were not available, he could write a message on a small piece of paper secured in a small canister attached on the bird’s leg. The bird would then fly back to its home, behind the lines, and deliver the message. By 1917, there were two detachments of U.S. Army “pigeoneers” in France, and the birds were used in several battles, including the St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne offensive. Pigeons successfully delivered 95 percent of the messages delivered to them.

In October 1918, approximately 500 men of the U.S. Army 77th Infantry Division were trapped behind enemy lines after an attack on German forces in the Argonne Forest. They became surrounded by German forces and were receiving friendly fire from Allies unaware of their position. Communication was difficult, as the messenger dispatchers became lost or ran into German patrols. Carrier pigeons became the only method of communicating with their headquarters. After two pigeons were shot down, Major Charles Whittlesey sent his last bird, Cher Ami, with the message: 

WE ARE ALONG THE ROAD PARALLEL 276.4. OUR ARTILLERY IS DROPPING A BARRAGE DIRECTLY ON US. FOR HEAVENS SAKE STOP IT. 


Cher Ami

Despite being wounded, Cher Ami flew the 25 miles back to headquarters in 25 minutes, saving the lives of the 194 survivors. He was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his actions, and he is currently on display at the Smithsonian American History Museum in Washington, DC.

While pigeons could fly out messages to headquarters, dogs were also extensively used as messengers during WWI. Their speed, size, and senses allowed dogs to navigate the trenches and battlefields much easier than human messengers. In addition to sending messages, dogs were used to find wounded soldiers, warn of incoming shells, act as guard dogs, and as a source of comfort and  companionship. 

Source:  This is a somewhat abridged version of the original article sans some technical material.  The full version can be accessed HERE.  


3 comments:

  1. One more form of communication you forgot - Runners (messengers) were frequently used - as often the only means of communications with the front lines. Also one of the most dangerous duties for any soldier.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hitler's job was being a runner.

      Delete
  2. Anyone interested in the intricacies of signal pigeon acquisition and use - and the likelihood that the Smithsonian's famous Cher Ami is NOT the same bird that Major Whittlesey dispatched from the Argonne pocket - should read Frank Blazich' Jr.'s "Notre Cher Ami: The Enduring Myth and Memory of a Humble Pigeon," The Journal of Military History (July 2021), 646-677. It is absolutely exemplary for its primary-source research.

    ReplyDelete