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

Sunday, July 12, 2026

After Rasputin – The Most Controversial Russian of the War Was Vladimir Sukhomlinov


Vladimir Aleksandrovich Sukhomlinov


Vladimir Aleksandrovich Sukhomlinov (born 1848—died 1926) was a Russian general and minister of war who was largely blamed for Russia’s premature and unprepared entry into World War I. [Note:  The late British Eastern Front historian Norman Stone has argued that excessive culpability for Russia's shortcomings has been laid on Sukhomlinov's reputation.]

Sukhomlinov graduated from Nikolayevskoye Cavalry School in 1867 and served in the Uhlans of the Imperial Guard Regiment based in Warsaw. He graduated from the General Staff Academy in 1874 and participated in the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878), serving for some time on the staff of General Mikhail Skobelev and was awarded the Order of St. George, 4th class. He subsequently advanced as a fast-rising field grade officer, a key assignment being as the highly visible head of the officer cavalry school in St. Petersburg from 1886 to 1897. At this time he certainly came to the attention of the future Tsar Nicholas II. At some point, Sukhomlinov—a charming and much-admired raconteur—became a favorite of  the tsar. He and his fourth wife, who was thirty years his junior, would also later become friends with Rasputin.

In any case, he was promoted the next year to general and his career advancement accelerated. Sukhomlinov became chief of staff of the army in  December 1908 and then—almost immediately— appointed Russia's Minister of War.  He served as war minister from 1909 to 1915, and it was under him that the Russian orders for mobilization were given at the outbreak of World War I. 

At the time of Austria’s ultimatum to Serbia, Sukhomlinov assured the government of the combat readiness of Russian troops. The partial mobilization soon revealed the demoralized and unequipped state of the nation’s armed forces. As the war progressed, Russian combat operations were increasingly hampered by shortages of arms, ammunition, and other war matériel, but Sukhomlinov continued to insist that the army was adequately supplied. 


Sukhomlinov (far left), accompanying Emperor Nicholas II during his 1911
trip to Ovruch, is present at the presentation of bread and salt to
Nicholas II by representatives of the city.


Sukhomlinov (far left), accompanying Emperor Nicholas II during his 1911 trip to Ovruch, is present at the presentation of bread and salt to Nicholas II by representatives of the city.

British Observer Major General Sir Alfred Knox recorded some interesting observations of Sukhomlinov's deceptions about artillery shell production in his diary: 

The Minister of War replied on September 28th that the question of the supply of ammunition in the Russian army gave no cause for anxiety, and that the Ministry of War was taking all necessary steps to provide everything required. At the same time the French Military Attache learned from an unofficial source that the output of factories in Russia then amounted to only 35,000 shell a month. Unfortunately, he had no means of ascertaining that the rate of expenditure at the front then averaged 45,000 a day, and he believed that the initial stock on mobilization was more than twice as large as it really was.

If General Sukhomlinov and his Staff had worried to appreciate the situation at the end of September, they must have known that the initial stock only provided shells for two more months of war, and they should then at once have taken adequate measures to cope with the difficulty by ordering from abroad.

It subsequently became known that the officials at Petrograd had received ample warning. On September 9th the Staff of the South-West Front had telegraphed to the Artillery Department : "It is essential to replace the almost exhausted supplies of shell." On October 26th Ivanov had telegraphed : " Supplies of ammunition are entirely exhausted. If not replenished, operations will have to be broken off and the troops retired under most difficult conditions."

Over a year later I learned on unimpeachable authority that in the middle of October General Kuzmin Karavaev, an honourable old man, whose nerves had been shaken by his immense responsibilities as Chief of the Artillery Department, went to Sukhomlinov, weeping, and said that Russia would have to make peace owing to the shortage of artillery ammunition. The Minister of War told him to "go to the devil and quiet himself."

. . .  I interviewed Sukhomlinov in Petrograd on December 16th [1914] to ascertain his views regarding rifles and shells. His first remark was: "As you know, the Germans have been preparing for this war since 1870. We never commenced preparation till five years ago, when I became Minister of War. We have done a lot since then, but I wanted two years more.

 

Sukhomlinov with a Contingent of Allied Officers
(Possibly That Is Sir Alfred Knox in the Rear)

As Minister of War, Sukhomlinov was never trusted by the Army Committee of the State Duma, led by Alexander Guchkov.  Guchkov challenged one of Sukhomlinov's allies to  duel, which turned out to be mutually non-fatal. Sukhomlinov was also resented by Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolayevich, the commander-in-chief of the Russian forces in the first phase of World War I. The hostile relationship between the army commander and war minister was intensified by the latter's association with purported spy Colonel Sergey Nikolayevich Myasoyedov, who was eventually executed for treason.

In June 1915 the thoroughly discredited Sukhomlinov was dismissed and replaced by the able General A.A. Polivanov. Despite Sukhomlinov’s close ties with the tsar, public sentiment ran high and charges of malfeasance, corruption, and treason were brought against him by the Duma. He was arrested in April 1916, freed in October at the tsar’s instigation, and rearrested after the Revolution by the provisional government. At his trial in the autumn of 1917, he was found guilty and sentenced to life imprisonment at hard labor. He was freed by an amnesty granted by the Bolsheviks and went to Finland and later to Germany, where he composed his memoirs, Erinnerungen, published in 1924. He died in poverty in Berlin in February 1926.

Sources:  Encyclopedia Britannica;  "Terrible Internal Enemy", Military Review, January 2015; Wikipedia; With the Russian Army, 1914-1917,  Major General Sir Alfred Knox.

Friday, July 10, 2026

Eyewitness: A Badly Wounded Private Allan (CEF) Is Taken Prisoner, 2 June 1916


Canadian Prisoners of War with a German Guard

Given the size of the Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF) and the nature of the First World War, the number of Canadian prisoners of war (POWs) was surprisingly small. According to the Report of the Ministry, Overseas Military Forces of Canada, published in London in 1919, some 3,747 men, including 236 officers, were captured by enemy forces and interned in Germany or in occupied France. The Overseas Ministry reported that 301 died in captivity; 438 were repatriated prior to the end of hostilities; and 100 men, including one officer, escaped during the war. 

Private Alexander Millar Allan (1887–1968) born in Wishaw, Scotland, was an organist and choirmaster by profession when he enlisted in the Canadian Expeditionary Force in Collingwood, Ontario, on 24 September 1915, service number 475313. He originally joined the 4th University Battery but was transferred to the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry.

He was wounded at the battle of Mont Sorrel and went missing 2–4 June 1916. He lay injured on the battlefield for two days, surviving multiple artillery bombardments, before becoming a prisoner of war and eventually being repatriated to England, and later Canada, during the war.

. . . for I walked right into a number of Germans. Not a soul spoke they all watched me with staring eyes. I looked at them for a few minutes examining the focus of every one, then signed to them that I wanted water. Still nobody spoke; when I saw that they weren’t likely to have water to give me, I crawled on my way through them all, and not one offered to stop me. I continued on my way with the idea of getting to a place where I knew we had water; very soon I met an officer and some men; when he saw me he yelled ‘the enemy’! Now, I thought, here is where I get it; he calls me the enemy; not much hope there.

I slid down on to the ground and waited to see what was going to happen. He gave a few sharp orders. I looked up to see what he was about to do and I must say I was surprised; he was looking at me with sympathy clearly marked on his face. His orders were to one of his men to take me along to the dressing station and see that I was properly attended to.

Private Allan's lower left jaw was badly damaged and initially treated by the Germans. He was returned from Germany and admitted to the Queen Alexandra Hospital (Millbank) in London, England, on 9 December 1916, where a rib bone was grafted to his jaw, after which he was transferred to the CCAC Shoreham and then on to Hastings. On 10 March 1917, he was transferred to the Eastern Ontario Regimental Depot at Seaford before being invalided to Canada on 25 May 1918 via Liverpool. Upon his return to Canada he was admitted to the Davisville Military Hospital in Toronto on 7 June 1918 for further treatment and was discharged on 12 September 1918. As a result of the damage to his jaw he required special dentures and could no longer sing but returned to being an organist. Allan died in Toronto in 1968.

Source: Canadian War Museum


Thursday, July 9, 2026

Haubourdin Aerodrome — The RAF's Landmark Mass Air Attack


A Royal Aircraft Factory SE5a (L) and Sopwith Camel (R) on the Attack

The first massed low-level attack by the Royal Flying Corps on an enemy airfield was carried out on 16 August 1918, when 65 Royal Aircraft Factory SE5as, Sopwith Camels, Bristol Fighters, and de Havilland DH4s flown by Australian and British pilots attacked the German aerodrome at Haubourdin, located on the southwesterly outskirts of Lille, France. The raid was part of a campaign to reduce the concentration of airfields around Lille, which had been a German stronghold for nearly the entire war. The attacking aircraft carried  incendiary and explosive bombs and all the machine-gun ammunition it could carry.  No British aircraft were lost.


Damage to the Aerodrome During the Attack

The Post-Raid Communiqué 

“A raid was carried out on Haubourdin Aerodrome by Nos 88 and 92 Squadrons and 2nd and 4th Squadrons A.F.C. Sixty-five machines in all took part, dropping 136 25-lb and 6 40-lb bombs and firing a large number of rounds from a height varying from 400 to 50 feet. Three large hangars containing machines were completely burnt, and two machines standing outside were set on fire. Several fires were started in huts, and what is believed to be the officers’ mess was blown up and burnt. Several other hangars, in addition to those burnt, received direct hits. The station at Haubourdin was also attacked with machine gun fire from low height, causing confusion among the troops. Two staff cars were fired at, one of which upset in a ditch and another ran up a steep bank; the occupants were not observed to leave. A train was also shot at, which stopped. Considerable casualties were caused among personnel at the Aerodrome who were seen rushing take refuge in a hospital. All machines returned.”

Later review of the German war diaries suggest that Jasta 43 had five aircraft destroyed and two damaged and was grounded until 3 September. Jasta 63 also had one destroyed and a number of others damaged.

Sources: Royal Air Force Museum;  Wings, August 2015; HistoryNet


Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Notable Medical Researchers from World War I

Some of the greatest medical researchers of the 20th century served in World War I, often gaining insights and motivation for their later accomplishments from their wartime experiences.  Medicine and medical research are two of the many specialties of our regular contributor James Patton. You can find his fascinating in-depth articles  HERE.


Capt. Frederick Banting, Canada:



Surgeon, Canadian Army Medical Corps; wounded in action and decorated for heroism; co-discoverer of insulin; Nobel Prize 1923; killed in plane crash en route to service in WWII.


Grenadier Gerhard Domagk, Germany:



Volunteer with Leibgrenadier Regiment of Frankfurt; wounded on the Eastern Front; transferred to the Medical Corps and worked in numerous cholera hospitals; became M.D. after the war; world's leading researcher in chemotherapy; awarded Nobel Prize in 1940; Nazis forced him to decline award, but he was able to accept it in 1947.


Capt. Alexander Fleming, Great Britain:



Royal Medical Corps, Wound Research Center, Hospital 13, Boulogne, Fr.; inspired by his observations and experiments on the practical effects of antiseptics, he shortly thereafter led effort to develop penicillin; Nobel Prize 1945.


Lt. Herbert Gasser, U.S.A.:



Chemical Warfare Service; did research on traumatic shock; credited with theory unifying nerve physiology and electro-physics; Nobel Prize 1944.


Capt. Paul Dudley White, U.S.A.:



Medical Corps American Expeditionary Force; later assisted Red Cross in fighting a typhus epidemic in Macedonia; pioneer in electrocardiography, heart disease research, and vascular medicine; gained fame when called in as consultant on President Eisenhower's heart attacks; early advocate of exercise and proper diet to prevent heart problems.

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Million Dollar Barrage: American Field Artillery in the Great War


By Justin G. Prince

University of Oklahoma Press, 2021

Dr. Michael Boden, Reviewer


U.S. 75mm Battery at Château-Thierry
By Jack Duncan
 


Originally presented in Army History, Fall 2023

The numerous innovations in the conduct of war at the start of the 20th century are well known to most people who study the military history of the era. Technological advancements, tactical and operational developments, growing global political rivalries, and other conditions all contributed to the changing character of war. Justin Prince tackles one particular dimension of this environment, the origins of the U.S. Army’s Field Artillery branch, in his work, Million Dollar Barrage: American Field Artillery in the Great War. 

To Prince, this period was of primary importance to the service’s coming of age. Prince notes that “these formative years, from 1907 to 1923, saw the establishment of a modern field artillery branch, and through the missteps, failures, problems, debates, and successes, the field artillery gained a new primacy in the minds of American military thinkers” (189). 

To support this assertion, throughout his narrative Prince consistently focuses on three particular areas of development: doctrine, technology, and “the debates about open warfare.”  The book progresses chronologically, for the most part, although there are some overlaps in chapter focus depending on the issue under consideration.

After the introductory chapter, chapters 2  and 3 focus on conditions that necessitated a dramatic change in the application of American field artillery. The second chapter hones in on those developments from 1897 to 1913 that frame the American experience, including such key events as the introduction of the French 75mm gun in 1897,  the separation of field artillery from coast artillery in 1907, and the establishment of the School of Fire at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, in 1911. The third chapter aligns closely with  these initial parameters as Prince emphasizes American technological and training challenges in the years leading up to the First World War. One constant in this period is the importance of the Field Artillery Journal and the centrality of the Fort Sill experience and curriculum in shaping American artillery development. The fourth chapter emphasizes the challenges associated with arming the branch and the friction that developed between the Ordnance Department and the Field Artillery branch in procurement prior to American entry into the war.  This friction resulted, to Prince, in numerous comprehensive shortcomings that persisted through the war, such as the lack of heavy artillery development and the slipshod attempt at developing a standard American field piece.

The following three chapters address the substantial qualitative developments experienced by the force throughout combat operations in Europe. The issues and themes at the forefront in the previous three chapters come together in the fifth, on artillery training after the American entry into the war. The sixth chapter focuses particularly on American observation of fire issues, of which the lack of quality observation methods and poor air coordination were two of the most significant. The seventh concentrates on the application of previous training and development during the Meuse-Argonne Offensive. 




Only in the final campaign does Prince perceive that the service addressed many of the issues faced by American artillerymen. To the author, the Meuse-Argonne “was the crucible that shaped American artillery into an effective  military weapon” (164).

The final two chapters summarize the developments of the immediate postwar years (to 1923) and the lessons learned by the American field artillery branch. During these five years, in the immediate aftermath of the First World War, Prince identifies pivotal developments in the American field artillery service, with relatively swift and broad espousal of lessons learned in the conflict. Prince concludes that training shortcomings were the primary cause of concern for the development of the field artillery service, although not a shortcoming that existed in a vacuum, as they included doctrinal, technological, and fiscal issues. This open attitude helped provide the foundations for acceptance as an equal branch of service on the modern battlefield and the transition from follower to leader in terms of global tactical and technological innovation in the interwar years.

Prince’s approach on a few aspects of methodology should be noted. These are not necessarily critiques but rather observations on his process. For instance, Prince’s discussion of actions in the war occupies a limited frame of the work as a whole—parts of only three chapters. There is less in the work that reflects the long form of the title, American Field Artillery in the Great War, than one might expect. The only chapter that  considers the conduct of combat operations looks solely at the Meuse-Argonne Offensive. One wonders if similar American operations, such as the earlier III Corps operations around Soissons (with the French) or the II Corps actions on the Somme (with the British), experienced the same model of growth and progression that Prince sees in the larger campaign.

Prince’s analysis consistently considers those topics previously noted throughout the work—doctrine, technology, and open warfare. Within that analysis, Prince focuses more on systems as opposed to the role of individuals. Individual agency, though not completely absent, takes a back seat to the roles of institutions and agencies. There are a few exceptions, to be sure. The postwar chief of artillery, Maj. Gen. William J. Snow, was a prominent early advocate for the branch in the prewar years, and Maj. Gen. Charles P. Summerall’s advocacy for artillery development is noted throughout the narrative.


Order HERE

In developing and presenting his argument, Prince is to be commended for his attention to detail. He is adept at demonstrating how particular issues (e.g. the lack of a standard American field piece for the war) caused friction and challenges in numerous other aspects of wartime development—in this case, training, procurement, and doctrine. A reader with a degree of  experience in the history of American field artillery will find many insightful contributions in these pages. However, for those with little or no prior knowledge, much of the significance of these passages and their detail will be difficult to fully ascertain. Prince also relies a great deal on the articles and arguments presented in the Field Artillery Journal and does an excellent job of demonstrating why that source must be of primary importance when looking at the era’s developments. Aside from these minor observations, anyone interested not just in American field artillery but also in the First World War or in early challenges of combined-arms operations will find Prince’s book of significant value.

Dr. Michael Boden

Monday, July 6, 2026

The Great War's 101 Defining Events,
Part 2: 51 – 101



51 — 101

Click on Page Image for Easier Reading











Source: Over the Top Magazine: May 2008


Sunday, July 5, 2026

The Great War's 101 Defining Events,
Part 1: 1 – 50



1 — 50

Click on Page Image for Easier Reading










51-101 Presented Tomorrow

Source:  Over the Top Magazine: May 2008

Saturday, July 4, 2026

The 4th of July 1918 for the AEF



The Fourth of July holiday is an occasion for the United States of America to celebrate and commemorate the birth of the nation. It is interesting to recall how this holiday was celebrated during the years America participated in World War I. The entry of the United States into the war provided a massive boost to the Allied powers and marked a significant moment in the conflict. In 1917, the earliest arriving new Doughboys paraded upon their arrival, most famously in Paris on 4 July, when the U.S. 16th Infantry provided men for the ceremonial event. 



By the 4th of 1918, however, with America massively committed on the battlefields, excitement about the Yanks was heightened. In London, American soldiers and sailors played a baseball game with the King in attendance and participated in parades around the British Isles. But in Paris, a parade like the 1917 event was planned, but this time it would involve "blooded" American veterans of the recent fighting in France. Jointly marching with French Poilu units, American soldiers who had fought at Cantigny, Marine veterans of Belleau Wood, and a detachment of Red Cross nurses made up the U.S. contingent. They were led by an Army band, playing tunes like "Over There." Notably, as part of the proceedings, a ceremony was held to mark the renaming of Avenue du President Wilson.



The New York Times reported on July 4, 1918 that:

Paris turned out today as almost never in its history to celebrate the Fourth of July. The French capital not only extended a royal welcome to the Americans here, but made a thorough holiday of the day on its own account. . . The walls of the Louvre, which has looked very gray and grim with locked doors and hidden treasure since the beginning of the war, are now ablaze with the colors of the two Republics, and the black mourning which has draped the statue of the city of Strasbourg in the Place de la Concorde … is relieved by the red, white and blue of America. . . The American troops marching through the city were welcomed by crowds of people that jammed every available inch of space and every window in the buildings along the line of march, on roofs, and even in trees, cheered themselves hoarse’. 

On the same day, while the parade was underway, American troops of the 33rd Division were fighting alongside Aussies to liberate the village of Hamel north of Paris. 

Sources:  Troy University Archives, WWI Centennial Commission; NY Times Archives.

Friday, July 3, 2026

Professional Actors Read WWI Letters (Videos)



Peter Capaldi 

Reads a letter from Captain Reginald John Armes to his wife on the Christmas Truce.

HERE



Charles Dart 

Reads a letter to a mother from Corporal W. J. Woolfrey about her son Herbert Wiseman's death on a Belgian battlefield during the First World War.

HERE



 Colin Firth & Taron Edgerton 

Read Rudyard Kipling's letter exchange with his 17-year-old son Lt. Jack Kipling.

HERE


Source:  Letters from World War I: In Their Own Words

Thursday, July 2, 2026

The Chemistry of World War I Gas


The Gas Alarm Is Sounded

James Patton

An enduring hallmark of WWI, along with the trenches and the mud, is the large-scale use of chemical weapons, commonly called simply "gas." Although chemical warfare caused less than one percent of the total deaths, the treatment of many thousands of gassed soldiers was a significant drain on manpower. The "psy-war." or fear factor, was itself a formidable weapon. Chemical warfare was subsequently prohibited by the Geneva Protocol of 1925. Chemical warfare has been occasionally used since then but never in WWI-scale quantities. Although deployable inventories have been largely eliminated, production of some of the subject chemicals continues as they have peaceful uses—for example, phosgene is an industrial reagent, a precursor of pharmaceuticals (including some anti-cancer drugs), certain plastics, and other important organic compounds.

Several chemicals were weaponized in WWI. It began in August 1914 when France deployed gas grenades against the Germans. The Germans followed, gassing the Russians in January 1915. The agents used by the French was ethyl bromo acetate (BrCH2CO2CH2CH3 ) described as "fruity and pungent," while the Germans used xylyl bromide ( C6H4(CH3)(CH2Br)). which is described as smelling "pleasant and aromatic." Both are colorless liquids and have to be atomized. Both are lachrymatory agents ("tear gas"); they irritate the eyes and cause uncontrolled crying. Large doses can cause temporary blindness. If inhaled they can cause gasping. These symptoms usually resolve within 30 minutes after contact. 

The German set up a gas warfare program, headed by future Nobel Laureate Fritz Haber (1868–1934), who had previously developed the process by which nitrates could be made from atmospheric nitrogen. Haber’s first chemical weapon was chlorine gas (Cl₂,) which was debuted in April 1915. Chlorine gas is diatomic, about two and a half times denser than air, pale green in color and with an odor which was described as a "mix of pineapple and pepper." If inhaled, it will react with moisture in the lungs to form hydrochloric acid (HCl), which will quickly lead to death. Even at lower concentrations, it can still cause coughing, vomiting, and eye irritation.


Early Depiction of Gas Attack at Second Ypres, 1915

Chlorine can be deadly against unprotected soldiers, and it’s estimated that over 1,100 were killed in the first use during the Second Battle of Ypres. But that day the Germans weren’t prepared for how effective the gas  would be and were therefore unable to exploit the gap in the line that was created.

Chlorine’s usefulness was short-lived. Its color and odor made it easy to spot, and since chlorine is water-soluble, even soldiers without gas masks could reduce its effects by placing water-soaked rags over their mouth and nose. It was reported that Canadian soldiers at 2nd Ypres used urine-soaked hankies for protection, but the chemistry of the chlorine reacting with the ammonia in the urine produces two additional irritants: chloramines (such as NH2Cl),  which can cause coughing, nausea, and even trigger asthma attacks, and cyanogen chloride (CNCl), which irritates the eyes, nose, and bronchial tract.  Releasing the chlorine gas as a cloud was very hard to manage, as the British learned to their detriment when they released chlorine gas at Loos in September 1915. The wind shifted on them, carrying the gas back onto their own men.

Phosgene, carbonyl dichloride (COCl2), was Haber’s next product, probably first used by the Germans in December 1915 at Ypres. Phosgene is a colorless gas, with an odor likened to that of "musty hay," but for the odor to be detectable, the concentration has to be at least 0.4 parts per million, or several times the level at which harmful effects will occur. Phosgene is highly toxic due to its ability to react with proteins in the alveoli of the lungs, disrupting the blood-air barrier and causing suffocation. 


Aftermath of Actual Gas Attack at Fromelles, 1916

As a weapon, phosgene was much more effective and deadly than chlorine, though one drawback was that the symptoms could sometimes take up to 48 hours to manifest. The immediate effects are lachrymatory. Subsequently, it can cause the build-up of fluid in the lungs, leading to death. It’s estimated that as many as 85 percent of the estimated 91,000 gas deaths in WWI were a result of phosgene or a similar agent called diphosgene trichloromethane chloroformate ( ClCO₂CCl₃), which is a liquid at ambient environmental temperatures, so has to be deployed as an aerosol. 

The most commonly used gas was "mustard gas," (bis(2-chloroethyl sulfide) (C₄H₈Cl₂S). When pure, this is colorless, but in WWI impure forms were used, which had the mustard-like color. There is no chemical relationship between mustard gas and the condiment, although mustard gas has an odor reminiscent of garlic or horseradish. Mustard gas is an irritant and a strong vesicant (blister-forming agent); it causes chemical burns on contact, with the blisters oozing yellow fluid. Initial exposure is symptomless, and by the time skin irritation begins, it is too late to take preventative measures. Like diphosgene, it is a  liquid and has to be deployed as an aerosol, but it can linger on surfaces such as clothing for a long time. The mortality rate from mustard gas was only two to three percent of cases, but those who suffered chemical burns and respiratory problems required long hospitalizations and, even if they recovered, UK sources say they turned out to be at higher risk of developing cancers during later life. 

Akin to mustard gas, the U.S. Chemical Warfare Service had developed the vesicant aerosol chlorovinyldichloroarsine (C2H2AsCl3  ), known as "Lewisite." Often referred to as "the dew of death," it smelled like geraniums and exposure caused massive skin blistering, eye damage and severe respiratory distress, and if it was absorbed, it could cause systemic arsenic poisoning. In 1940, it was discovered that injections of dimercaprol (C3H8OS2 ) are an effective antidote.


German Medic Equipped for Gas Warfare

German-developed chloropicrin (Cl3CNO2), diphenylchlorarsine (code-named Clark 1) ((C6H5)2AsCl), and diphenylcyanoarsine (C13H10AsN) (code-named Clark 2), both colloquially known as "sneezing oil," plus the American-developed diphenylaminechlorarsine (C12H9AsClN), familiarly called Adamsite or DM, were aerosols widely used as "mask-busters"—irritants that could get through the gas mask filters, thus making soldiers have to remove their masks, thereby exposing themselves to the phosgene barrage that would shortly follow. Today DM remains present in the inventories of riot control agents.

After the mostly unsuccessful and sometimes disastrous releases of gas from pressure tanks, such as at Loos, chemical attacks were delivered in artillery shells or by projectors that ejected canisters that burst on contact. The gaseous agent(s) were in liquid form under pressure in glass bottles inside the warhead, which would break on contact, and the liquid would quickly evaporate. The aerosols used a small explosive charge to disperse the liquid as drops.

Different types of gas were often used in combinations, so to enable their appropriate use, the artillery shells were color-coded: green cross shells had the pulmonary agents—chlorine, phosgene, and diphosgene; white cross had the tear gases; blue cross had the "mask-busters; gold (or yellow) cross had the mustard gas; and red stripe was for the Lewisite. 


Imperial War Museum's Collection of WWI Gas Respirators

Although mustard gas was never used in combat in WWII, all sides had inventories available. On 3 December 1943, a German air raid on the port of Bari, Italy, destroyed 28 Allied ships. One of these was the American Liberty Ship S.S. John Harvey, whose cargo of munitions included 2,000 M47A1 mustard gas bombs, each holding 60–70 lbs of the agent. The munitions on the Harvey detonated, causing a huge release of mustard gas in both liquid and aerosol forms. There were 628 cases of mustard gas poisoning of U.S. personnel,  83 of which were fatal. No figures are available for Italian civilian casualties. The incident was covered up; all of the official records were sealed until 1958. 

While we’re on the subject of gas in WWII, it should be made clear that Zyklon B, the agent used to kill millions at Auschwitz (and other sites) wasn’t used in WWI. It hadn’t even been invented yet. Chemically, Zyklon B is a gaseous version of hydrogen cyanide (HCN), commonly known as prussic acid, which blocks respiration by inhibiting the production of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). It wasn’t discovered by Haber (it was first isolated in France in 1752), but it was developed in the 1920s by men who had worked in Haber’s chemical weapons lab during WWI. Zyklon B was first patented (for use as a pesticide) in 1926. HCN (not in the form of Zyklon B) is still used today as a precursor in the production of certain plastics and pharmaceuticals. 

Souces include the BBC magazine http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-31042472 Some of this material was previously published by the author at the University of Kansas Medical Center’s Webpage Medicine in the First World War, now archived at  https://www.kumc.edu/school-of-medicine/academics/departments/history-and-philosophy-of-medicine/archives/wwi.html 


Wednesday, July 1, 2026

110 Years Ago Today, the 141 Days of the Somme Began

 


Some Random Thoughts

By Editor/Publisher Mike Hanlon


One summer day in 2016, I had a wonderful time in Sacramento, CA, making a presentation on the coming centennial of the Battle of the Somme for the city library's World War I Revisited Project. The turn-out was a "full house" and the audience was engaged and knowledgeable about the war. Our host, James Scott, could not have been more hospitable and helpful. I made some notes for my PowerPoint presentation. Here are some of my comments and images I used during the presentation, somewhat revised over the ensuing decade. Please keep in mind these are my views alone.  In the past, Roads to the Great War has published numerous articles on the famous battle; at the bottom you can find some tips on how to quickly access them.

1.  In the English-speaking world the Somme remains the war's signature battle. It gave the 20th century its most haunting image (at least before the mushroom cloud), a soldier rising out of a trench mowed down in no-man's-land in his tracks.

 
Men of the Newfoundland Regiment, 29th Division, 1 July 1916
In a Short Time 90 Percent of These Men Will Be Dead, Dying, or Wounded

2.  The First Day on the Somme is a story told over and over, but the next 140 days of the battle are the more important part of the tale. In the larger British sector, where the original intention was the rupture the German line, the battle seamlessly evolved into a war of attrition. The 60,000 killed and wounded they suffered on 1 July 1916 was multiplied by a factor of seven. Furthermore, in some dance of death, the German Army—despite having all the defensive advantages—managed to closely parallel the British losses.

3. Many authors focus blame for the incredible casualties on either Douglas Haig or 4th Army commander, Henry Rawlinson. Another entry in that discussion should be none other than General Joffre. Recall that France was the dominant member of the 1916 coalition and led (forcefully) the planning for that year's campaign. It was to be a joint French-British attack, originally with 39 French divisions committed. The requirements of dealing with Verdun did not inhibit Joffre's drive for the attack to proceed despite:

a.  An ever diminishing availability of French divisions, and

b. The skepticism about the whole affair from the northern sector commander, Ferdinand Foch.


Thiepval, Now Site of the Largest Somme Memorial
Close to the Front Line But Not Captured Until September 1916

4.  General Foch was one of the victims of the Somme. After the failure of the five-month battles and losses that accumulated at the same rate as Verdun, he found himself in disfavor and was pushed to the side in favor of the rising star, Robert Nivelle. Luckily, Foch was rehabilitated in time to become the most important Allied general of the 1918 campaign.

5.  The rolling, apparently open country of the Somme looked like the perfect location to attempt a major breakthrough. However, the Germans had been in the sector since October 1914 and converted every village, rise, ridge, and forest into a defensive stronghold. After the failure of the first day's assault, following the sound military principle of reinforcing success, rather than failure, Haig's staff decided to push south of the Albert-Baupame Road where there had been some modest, although incredibly expensive success around Fricourt village, and the singular fully successful British operation of the day, the capture of Montauban village.  The valley they chose to move through had a horseshoe of five small forests: Mametz, Bazantin, High, Delville, and Trones Woods. Each was a superb defensive position on a plateau, commanding the gently rising surrounding countryside. Readers know the story of Belleau Wood for the U.S. Marines. The middle phase of the Somme was Belleau Wood times five for the British Army.

6. One mystery about the Somme that I've never seen satisfactorily explained is how the German Army, which had minimal casualties on 1 July, managed to catch up to the grand total for the British Army over the next 140 days, despite being on the defensive throughout. They started out with all the advantageous positions, and they knew the Allies' intentions. Didn't the machine gun and massed artillery give the defenders a decisive advantage? Everywhere else they did. (I've concluded since I first wrote this section that a good portion of the German losses must have been due to their commanders obsessive practice of immediately counterattacking to regain any lost ground.)


Vigil at Thiepval Memorial, July 2016

7.  The Pals Battalions and, in general, the commitment of the under-trained New Army divisions are part of the tragic dimension of the Somme and elements of its compelling mythic heritage with its soccer balls, the Leaning Virgin, sacred trees, and countless memorials and cemeteries of varied design. The near-annihilation of the experienced 29th Division (with eight months continual combat at Gallipoli) in trying to capture the mine site on Hawthorne Ridge and Y-Ravine, however, shows that there were more fundamental flaws in the initial concept that the inexperience of the troops.


Hull Commercial Pals Approaching the Somme, 28 June 1916

8.  The poor bloody infantry suffered the most, of course. But the failure of the campaign was due to the poor performance of the artillery. To begin with, the Royal Artillery simply lacked enough guns, especially larger pieces. None of their major missions—cutting the wire, destroying trenches and redoubts, supporting the advancing infantry, and suppressing enemy artillery—were accomplished to an acceptable level. Plus, they suffered a high number of duds, many of which came from American suppliers.

9.  The Somme is the Great War's most remembered battle (at least in the English-speaking world). Last time I checked, the U.S. Library of Congress catalog had 289 citations for the "Battle of the Somme" and only 161 entries–combined–for the three biggest American battles of the war, the Second  Marne, St. Mihiel, and the Meuse-Argonne Offensive. I'm sure the ratio would be much greater in, say, the British Library. Why the Somme fascination? Some speculations:

a.  It was almost inhuman in scale. The casualties for the British on that first day, and for both sides for its duration are draw-dropping. Beside those wounded, crippled-for-life and killed, there is no better symbol of the Somme than the Lochnagar Mine Crater shown above, which was fired on the first morning of the battle.

b.  Much of what we know about the battle comes from British sources, and the Somme sent shock waves through the British Empire like few other events in  history (India Mutiny?, Fall of Singapore?). It affected every level of their stratified society from the working class Pals of Accrington to the graduates of the "playing fields of Eton." (Over 1,100 Etonians died on the Great War's battlefields.) It drew-in and touched every corner of the empire.  Canadians, Anzacs, South Africans, and even Indian Lancers, served and died at the Somme.


Robert Graves
Alan Seeger

c. The Somme marks a literary fault line. The early war poets, like Rupert Brooke, John McCrae, and Alan Seeger, wrote of tradition, duty, and sacrifice. Well, Seeger dutifully met his "Rendezvous with Death" at the Somme on 4 July 1916, while serving with the French Foreign Legion. About the same time, two junior officers of the 38th Welsh Division named Siegfried Sassoon and Robert Graves were in the neighborhood of  Mametz Wood, where their units would encounter a brutal fights. They would later help initiate what has become the more famous school of war writers, the rejectors of the past, who saw the war as futile and a great betrayal. Graves later wrote, "I found in Mametz Wood a certain cure for lust of blood" and aptly titled his war memoir Goodbye to All That.

10.  Final Irony

After all that happened in 1916, what happened next truly must have seemed to have made the whole effort appear futile. The red area on the map below marks all the territory captured by British and French forces in the 1916 battle. The green line marks Operation Alberich, AKA, the retreat to the Hindenburg Line (9 Feb–20 Mar 1917). The Allies were "gifted" with three times the territory they had bled barrels for, and the Germans were manning a shorter and much more defensible front line.




Roads to the Great War
Has Much More on the Battle of the Somme

Just enter "Somme 1916" in the search box at the top of the screen and you will find over two dozen articles we have presented in the past on the battle.

Revised from my earlier two-part version of this article, which have been removed from the site. MH

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Recommended: The World War One Historical Association's Special BOOKS! Issue

I just stumbled across an excellent resource for those of you who are always looking for some fresh World War I titles to read. In 2018 Dana Lombardy of the Association put together a special and eclectic edition of their journal which has reviews of over 100 books of many categories, plus other resources (including Roads to the Great War) where you can find other recommendations. Just click on the link below to download the 36-page pdf file.  MH



 Download HERE

Monday, June 29, 2026

T.E. Lawrence on Desert Fighting with the Arabs

 

Lawrence Driving Talbot Automobile in Wadi Itm with
Emir Feisal bin Husain al-Hashimi Seated in the Front Passenger Seat


From the Arab Bulletin, 20 August 1917

  • Do not try to trade on what you know of fighting. The Hejaz confounds ordinary tactics. 
  • Learn the Bedu principles of war as thoroughly and as quickly as you can, for till you know them your advice will be no good to the Sherif (ruler or prince). Unnumbered generations of tribal raids have taught them more about some parts of the business than we will ever know. 
  • In familiar conditions they fight well, but strange events cause panic. Keep your unit small. Their raiding parties are usually from one hundred to two hundred men, and if you take a crowd they only get confused. Also their sheikhs (tribal leaders), while admirable company commanders, are too 'set' to learn to handle the equivalents of battalions or regiments. 
  • Don't attempt unusual things, unless they appeal to the sporting instinct Bedu have so strongly, unless success is obvious. 
  • If the objective is a good one (booty) they will attack like fiends, they are splendid scouts, their mobility gives you the advantage that will win this local war, they make proper use of their knowledge of the country (don't take tribesmen to places they do not know), and the gazelle-hunters, who form a proportion of the better men, are great shots at visible targets. 
  • A sheikh from one tribe cannot give orders to men from another; a Sherif is necessary to command a mixed tribal force.
  • If there is plunder in prospect, and the odds are at all equal, you will win. 
  • Do not waste Bedu attacking trenches (they will not stand casualties) or in trying to defend a position, for they cannot sit still without slacking. The more unorthodox and Arab your proceedings, the more likely you are to have the Turks cold, for they lack initiative and expect you to. 
  • Don't play for safety.
Also see: "Eight Rules of Leadership from T.E. Lawrence" HERE