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

Friday, January 17, 2025

"[You're Dead] Joseph Arthur Brown"

Our Poet: Edward Adolphe Sinauer de Stein (1887–1965) was born in London and educated at Eton and Magdalen College, Oxford. He was commissioned into the King’s Royal Rifle Corps and served in France during the First World War. He wrote several war-themed poems that were published in the Times newspaper and Punch and The Bystander magazines and earned De Stein the nickname "The Trench Bard." He was promoted to the rank of major and survived the war.  His wartime poetry collection, The Poets in Picardy, was published in 1919. He later became a merchant banker and was knighted in 1946.




Joseph Arthur Brown

By  E. De Stein


The name of Joseph Arthur Brown

By some profound mischance

Was sent right through to G.H.Q.

As “Killed in action, France”.


So when poor Joseph went to draw

His bully beef and bread,

“You’re not upon the strength, my son”,

The Quartermaster said.


To Sergeant Baird then Joseph went

And told his fortune harsh,

But Sergeant Baird on Joseph glared

And pulled his great moustache.


“Have I not taught you discipline

For three long years?” said he,

“If you are down as dead, young Brown,

Why, dead you’ll have to be”.


In vain the journal of his town

Was brought by friends to please,

That he might see his eulogy

In local Journalese;


For to the Captain Joseph went

With teardrops in his eye,

And said, “I know I’m dead, but oh!

I am so young to die!”

 

And at the Captain’s feet he knelt

And clasped him by the knee.

But on his face no sign of grace

Poor Joseph Brown could see.


“Then to John Bull I’ll write”, he cried,

“Since supplication fails”.

“But you are dead”, the Captain said,

“And dead men tell no tales”.


So reckless passion seized upon

The luckless Private Brown,

And with two blows upon the nose

He knocked the Captain down.


’Mid cries of horror and surprise

They led the lad away.

Before the Colonel grim and stern

They brought him up next day.


But when the Colonel sentenced Brown

With thund’rous voice and language choice

To thirty days F.P. [field punishment],


Across the trembling prisoner’s face

A smile was seen to spread,

As he replied, with conscious pride,

“You can’t, ’cos I am dead”.


Sources: The Poets in Picardy, 1919; Forgotten Poets of the First World War.

Thursday, January 16, 2025

Lonesome Memorial #10: Belgium's Appreciation of Herbert Hoover


I am that which was and is and
Will ever be, and no mortal has yet
Lifted the veil which covers me

This bronze, seven and a half foot tall statue Isis, Goddess of Life is the work of Belgian sculptor Auguste Puttemans. It was a gift from the people of Belgium in gratitude for Herbert Hoover's famine relief efforts on their behalf during the First World War. Isis wears a veil, a symbol of the mysteries of life. Her right hand carries the torch of life-its three flames represent the past, present, and future. Her left hand holds the key of life. 

An ancient Egyptian goddess and an American President are an unlikely pairing. But it provides a powerful visual link between Hoover's work in the First World War and his life's dedication to the welfare of others. It is now located at the Herbert Hoover National Historic Site near the former president's birth site in West Branch, Iowa.

After the war, Herbert Hoover was sent many gifts expressing the gratitude of the Belgian people for his humanitarian efforts. Many Belgian children, refugees, and soldiers contributed to a fund to create this work of art.

When the Belgians shipped the finished statue to California's Stanford University in 1922. It remained on campus until President and Mrs. Hoover brought it to West Branch in 1939. They wanted it to be placed in a position where it was contemplating the house, which is why Isis sits in her throne-like chair facing the Birthplace Cottage. The National Historic Site annually has about 100,000 visitors.


View of Hoover's Birth Cottage from Isis


Getting to the Herbert Hoover National Historic Site:

Take exit 254 on Interstate 80 to West Branch, Iowa. The Visitor Center is 0.3 mile north of I-80 at  110 Parkside Drive, West Branch, Iowa 52358; GPS coordinates: 637614, Y: 4614507.

Sources:  National Archives; National Park Service

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Kaiser Wilhelm's Left Arm and the Fate of the World


The Hetman of Ukraine with Kaiser Wilhelm II


Kaisers Wilhelm II's physical deficiency has often been identified as the key to his lust for military and imperial power, and it is interesting to speculate on the course European and World history might have taken had he not had such a traumatic entry into the world. Here's an excellent article on the causes and impact of the the disability on the Kaiser. The above photo is a rare one that clearly reveals his disfigurement. Some sources I've found state that publishing such revealing images during his reign was illegal in Germany. MH


By Julia Armfield

On 27 January 1859 in the Kronprinzenpalais in Berlin, Prince Friedrich Victor Wilhelm Albert Hohenzollern—Queen Victoria’s first grandchild—was born with his left arm around his neck. It took three days for anyone to notice the arm had been damaged, but it was a problem which the future Emperor of Germany and King of Prussia would spend the rest of his life trying to conceal.

Prince Wilhelm was left with Erb’s Palsy after a protracted breech birth during which the two attending doctors were hamstrung by royal etiquette forcing them to work beneath the mother’s skirts, and the message summoning Berlin’s foremost obstetrician got lost.  Permanent withering of the arm was probably caused by damage done to the nerves in his arm and neck by the forceps that dragged him out. Born blue, he was initially presumed dead and only brought round by vigorous rubbing that probably only made the nerve damage worse. It has often been speculated that oxygen deprivation at birth also left him with minor brain damage, a theory which certainly would explain the unstable personality for which he would become infamous.

In early infancy, it became clear that the young prince’s left arm was not growing properly.  His left hand was a claw and the arm a shrunken dead weight. Physical prowess was prized amongst the Prussian royals, so from the age of six months the prince began to undergo arcane but undeniably imaginative treatments intended to fix his damaged arm. Some treatments were inoffensively useless—the arm was sprayed with seawater, massaged, and wrapped in cold compresses—but others were more macabre. The practice of weekly “animal baths,” which essentially required the arm to be shoved inside the carcass of a freshly killed animal so that the heat might galvanise the shrivelled tissue, was thought by Queen Victoria to be revolting and idiotic. The method of binding the young prince’s good arm to his body so that his left arm would “have to work” did little except compromise his balance, whilst drastic electric shock therapy was administered when he was barely a year old. At the age of four, he was placed in a body-stretching machine akin to a medieval rack to correct the various muscular problems that had developed in his neck and shoulders.

As an adult, the Kaiser was semi-successful in hiding the withered arm. In formal pictures, he typically posed with his left hand resting on his sword with the right on top, and with gloves to provide distraction. His clothes were tailored with higher pockets to disguise the length of his left arm, and he grew adept at shooting and riding with his right arm. Historical videos show passable movement in his left arm and a 1915 edition of the Toronto World even claimed that  “a series of string and cords, acting like muscles…connected with the good muscles of the shoulder most adroitly, enable him to impart to it movements that are almost life-like.” 

"Treating the Kaiser’s Withered Arm", British Library Blog, 28 February 2014

Tuesday, January 14, 2025

The Secret Battle, A Tragedy of the First World War



By A. P. Herbert

Frontline Books, 2009

Originally, Methuen & Co. Ltd., 1919

Reviewed by Bruce Sloan


The Secret Battle is a novel, but it is based upon what the author saw as a soldier of the Great War. Alan Patrick Herbert (1890–1971) enlisted in the summer of 1914 as an ordinary seaman. Shortly afterwards, He was commissioned as a sublieutenant of the Royal Navy, and promptly turned infantryman in the Royal Naval Division. He fought at Gallipoli and the Western Front, where he took part in most of the major battles from 1916 onward. Herbert later served in Parliament and in WW II as a petty officer in the Royal Naval (Thames) Patrol, and he was knighted in 1945. He died on 11 November 1971, Armistice Day.

The introduction, by Malcolm Brown, is nearly as engrossing as the story, as it sketches Mr. Herbert's life and the political and social environment which kept this work from becoming popular right after the war. In the 1928 foreword, Winston Churchill wrote: "This story of a valiant heart tested to destruction took rank when it was first published a few months after the Armistice, as one of the most moving of the novels produced by the war. It was at that time a little swept aside by the revulsion of the public mind from anything to do with the awful period just ended." Bernard Montgomery considered it the best account ever written of frontline combat.


Click HERE to Order


The story is of Harry Penrose, a young officer whose wartime experiences parallel those of the author. Penrose is unsure of his courage, and in trying to sort himself out, his actions prove his valor. At Gallipoli, he assumes the role of scout, lying between the lines, night after night, and continues with incredible bravery when he is on the Western Front. 

After much wartime introspection and courage, due to politics and the intransigence of the British officers above him, Penrose is court-martialed over an inaccurately reported incident during a shelling and shot for cowardice.

The opening lines of The Secret Battle: "I am going to write down some of the history of Harry Penrose, because I do not think full justice has been done to him. . ." The reader will certainly agree, and it may be partly due to his reading of this novel many years before, that the death penalty was not reintroduced, by decision of Winston Churchill, in 1942.

The Secret Battle is alive with experiences of the trenches and the men who fought through the war. Although a novel, it reads like a firsthand account. After all, the author was there. 

Bruce Sloan

[Editor's Comments: This book was one of my first introductions (c. 1968) to some of the finest fiction of the war.  I had picked it out as a change of pace after reading the entire Lord of the Rings trillogy during a term break at college. Please read The Secret Battle if you haven't discovered it yet. Also, readers might be interested in our earlier article on the service and subsequent careers of author A.P. Herbert, HERE. MH]

Monday, January 13, 2025

Fact Sheet: The Austro-Hungarian Empire at War



General facts
  • Population: 48.5 million (1914)
  • Capital: Vienna (1914 population 2 million)
Head of State:
  • Emperor Franz Joseph I (2 December 1848–21 November 1916)
  • Emperor Karl I (21 November 1916–1921)
Head of Government:
  • Prime Minister Count Karl von Stürgkh (3 November 1911–21 October 1916)
  • Prime Minister Ernst von Koerber (29 October–20 December 1916)
  • Prime Minister Count Heinrich von Clam-Martinic (20 December 1916–23 June 1917)
  • Prime Minister Ernst Seidler von Feuchtenegg (23 June 1917–27 July 1918)
  • Prime Minister Baron Max Hussarek von Heinlein (27 July–27 October 1918)
  • Prime Minister Heinrich Lammasch (27 October–11 November 1918)




Participation in the War
  • Entered the war: 28 July 1914 (Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia)
  • Ceased hostilities: 4 November 1918 (armistice with the Allies)
  • Ended belligerent status: 10 September 1919 (Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye signed between the Allies and the newly formed Republic of Austria); 4 June 1920 (Treaty of Trianon signed between the Allies and the newly formed Republic of Hungary)
  • The republics of Austria and Hungary were the "rump" states left after the break-up of the Austro-Hungarian Empire saw the rest of its territory divided amongst Poland, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Italy, and Romania. The two republics inherited the obligations of and responsibility for the empire's role as a belligerent in the war for the purposes of the Paris Peace Conference at Versailles.


War Costs

  • Based on the estimates by Winkler and Teleszky, Austria’s war costs come to 65.1 billion crowns in current prices (15.4 billion crowns in 1913 prices), while Hungary’s amount to 32.7 billion crowns in current prices (7.8 billion crowns in 1913 prices). Overall, the war costs of Austria-Hungary are estimated at 97.8 billion crowns in current prices, or 23.2 billion crowns in 1913 prices. In other words, the war consumed more than three times Austria-Hungary’s GDP of the year 1913.


Click on Map to Enlarge



Army
  • Peacetime strength 1914: 415,000
  • Reserves 1914: 1.4 million
  • Full mobilisation 1914: 1.8 million
  • Total mobilised during the war: 8 million

Navy
  • Peacetime strength 1914: 20,000
  • Fleet (1914)
  • Battleships (Dreadnoughts): 4
  • Battleships (pre-Dreadnoughts): 12
  • Cruisers: 3
  • Light cruisers: 4
  • Destroyers: 18
  • Submarines: 14

Austrian, Hungarian, Albanian, and Bosnian
Soldiers of the Empire


Significant Military Operations (Not Comprehensive)
  • Serbian Campaign (1914):
The initial offensive against Serbia, which was the immediate trigger for the war, resulted in heavy losses for Austria-Hungary despite their initial success. 
  • Galician Campaign (1914–1915):
A series of battles fought in the region of Galicia against the Russian forces, with mixed results for Austria-Hungary. 
  • Gorlice-Tarnów Offensive (1915):
A major offensive alongside Germany against the Russians, achieving significant territorial gains in Galicia. 
  • Battles of the Isonzo (1915-1917):
A series of protracted and bloody battles against Italy on the Isonzo River front, with Austria-Hungary largely holding the line despite heavy casualties.  
  • Defense and Counterattack of the Brusilov Offensive (1916):
The largest and most successful Russian assault of the war. Despite eventually being contained by the Central Powers, it proved quite damaging to Austria-Hungary's forces.
  • Battle of Caporetto (1917):
A decisive Austro-Hungarian and German victory against Italy, marking their most significant success on the Italian front. 
  • Romanian Campaign (1916–1917):
Austria-Hungary, with German support, successfully occupied large parts of Romania. 

 


Crowd Waiting for the Local Coal Merchant,
Hütteldorf (Vienna), 1917


Casualties (Military)
  • Dead (all causes): 1.2 million
  • Wounded: 1,943,000
  • Prisoners of War: 2.1 million

Casualties (Civilian)
  • Losses for Austria-Hungary can be estimated at 460,000 caused by famine, cold, and epidemics (the Spanish flu additionally caused 250,000 victims).
Sources: 1914-1918 Online; New Zealand History; Various Wikipedia sites

Sunday, January 12, 2025

The Great Machine Gun War—It Wasn't Like Any Other

 

Russian Machine Gun, c. 1905

By John Beatty

Prelude: Mukden 1905

From 20 February to 10 March, 2,005 Russian and Japanese machine gunners blazed away at each other, sometimes at point-blank ranges. Among the 270,000 Japanese soldiers engaged were some 200 machine guns, firing 20.11 million rounds during the battle, which was more than the entire German Army fired in the Franco-Prussian War (1870–71). The Russians, with some 292,000 men in the battle, had just 54 machine guns. The decisive Japanese victory, observed by British, American (including John. J. Pershing), French, and German officers embedded on both sides, demonstrated the power of the machine gun in both the offense and the defense. It is worth noting, however, that most of Japan’s MGs were light and somewhat less than reliable.


French Machine Gunners, 1914


Opening Shots in Europe

There were a meager 12,000 machine guns in Europe by the time World War One broke out in 1914. The level of machine gun issue in the armies of the major powers in 1914 was roughly equivalent, but the most effective user of machine guns in the first year of the war was the German Army. In 1914, each German infantry division comprised two brigades, each of two infantry regiments. A single infantry regiment comprised three battalions plus a machine gun company of six heavy (P08 Maxim) machine guns. The machine guns formed the thirteenth, separate company of each three-battalion regiment. This meant that instead of being distributed piecemeal to the three battalions of the regiment, the machine guns remained under the direct control of the regimental commander, grouped together in action. Besides the machine gun companies of infantry and cavalry regiments, eleven independent machine gun detachments originally meant for conjunction with the cavalry were available to corps commanders. Because of this organization, Allied observers credited the Germans with more machine guns than they possessed. The Germans’ effective use of the guns was in stark contrast to the general prewar tendency for everyone else to underestimate the potential effect of machine gun firepower.

One of the earliest lessons learned was that concentrating machine gun fire at crucial points enhanced their effectiveness. At Tannenberg, the concentrated fire of just six machine guns shattered a Russian counterattack. At Le Cateau, 84 closely massed German machine guns in offensive roles dislodged a larger British force.

Thus, 1914 solidified the role of the machine gun as not merely a defensive weapon to supplement the infantry but as a lighter-weight version of the light artillery that had accompanied the foot soldiers since Napoleon’s day. The changes they would work on ground combat would be so profound that warfare would become irrevocably deadlier than ever before.


German Machine Gunners, 1918


The Marriage Made in Hell

In 1916, when the Western Front had solidified into a siege with barbed wire entanglements spreading for acre after acre, British and their Commonwealth allies developed barrage (indirect) fire that allowed troops to fire over the heads of their own soldiers. Even though pioneered by the Germans, this technique opened up the way for both planned and unexpected attacks and responses to SOS (emergency) calls from the infantry that were quicker than calling for artillery support. Ultimately, machine guns were more effective than artillery because a single machine gun could deliver 200–400 rounds a minute into their killing zone as long as they had ammunition. Some barrages reached into enemy reserve trenches for hours at a time, restricting troop movement. Others pounded obstacles during attacks, and still others formed the marriage made in Hell of machine guns combined with barbed wire to form impenetrable infantry killing zones. The machine gun came to be known as “essence of infantry,” and “the machine tool of death.”

While most guns had an effective range of about 3,000 yards with new barrels (changeable during combat), the French 8 mm Hotchkiss could reach 4,000 yards consistently from the beginning of the war. Late model .303 Vickers guns could reach 4,700 yards under ideal conditions but usually engaged at 3,500-4,000. A single machine gun might have a beaten zone (area of impact) of 5 x 5 yards from 2,000 yards away, putting a bullet in every square foot about every ten seconds. A platoon of eight guns might have a beaten zone of 50 x 50, a company of 16 guns might cover 100 x 100, and a battalion of 36 guns could cover two football fields with bullets every ten seconds and do it for hours on end. Though the last was rare (but the first three were common), it happened toward the end of the war.

By late 1917, the Germans created elite sharpshooter machine gun attachments in their specialized attack (storm) units specifically tasked with destroying enemy machine guns. In that same year, the Germans reported that 90 percent of their small arms ammunition was going into the chambers of their machine guns; it would be no stretch of the imagination to say the French and British could report the same. Machine gunnery became a specialized skill handled by those who developed new firing methods that revolutionized land warfare and infantry tactics.


American Machine Gunners, Marne River, 1918


The Gunner’s Laments

The machine gunner, however, didn’t just mount his gun and pull the trigger. Gunners relied on an assistant gunner and an ammo bearer, at minimum, just to carry the weapons—most weighed over 150 pounds with tripods. Ammunition was heavy; a wooden box of 200 8 mm rounds weighed nearly 70 pounds. But, because machine guns had ranges like light artillery, range and height estimates weren’t good enough—they needed precision, requiring range and height finders. And because the guns broke down and barrels needed changing, each gun needed a tool kit and spare parts. Altogether, each man in a three-man crew might carry a minimum of 100 pounds each, besides his personal equipment and rations.


But that was just the beginning. In quiet periods, a machine gun might have to move every three hours to keep enemy snipers and artillery observers, not to mention their machine gunners, from locating and targeting the guns. During an operation, a gun might move every ten minutes for the same reasons. Gunners had to recalculate their target areas each time. Gun crews had to be both strong and smart. Typically, a machine gunner on the Western Front had a life expectancy of about ten hours’ firing time before he became a casualty. One in five did not survive the war. At the Second Battle of the Marne in 1918, a lone U.S. machine gun battalion halted German attacks for three days practically unassisted, losing half their 730 men and ten of their 18 machine guns in the doing.


Coming Soon:  John Beatty's Steele’s Battalion: The Great War Diaries

John Beatty's Steele’s Battalion, due out next April, is a story of how one American soldier learns how different this machine gun war was, and how to use those deadly machine tools to win. Roads to the Great War will review the volume when it is available for purchase and provide information on ordering it.




Saturday, January 11, 2025

The Exciting Lives of Balloon Observers

 

Click on Image to Enlarge
An American Balloon Squad Training Stateside


Of the AEF's 35 balloon companies then in France, with 446 officers and 6,365 men, there were 23 companies with 265 balloons serving with the armies at the front. U.S. Air Service depots to supply the squadrons and balloon companies at the front were in full operation and supported by a production plant, where some 10,000 men were employed in assembling airplanes and in repairing airplanes, engines, and balloons which had seen service at the front.

Those balloons at the front made 1,642 ascents and were in the air a total of 3,111 hours. They made 316 artillery adjustments, and reported  thousands of shell bursts, sightings of enemy airplanes, balloon ascents, battery positions, and road and rail traffic. All of this was accomplished by air observers who were frequently (sometimes chronically) beset by air sickness.


Vanquished by the Boche Plane
George Harding Matthews


Used primarily for artillery spotting by the AEF, the hydrogen-filled balloons were prime targets for enemy attack aircraft.  Despite being protected both by Allied fighters and anti-aircraft guns the balloons were in constant danger of igniting from enemy (and sometimes friendly) fire, especially incendiary bullets. When the bag was hit, the observer—who had to be alerted to any imminent danger  by ground crew—needed to evacuate immediately by parachute. World War I observation crews were the first to use parachutes, long before they were adopted by fixed wing aircrews. A Western Front Association article describes the process:

These parachutes were a primitive type, where the main part was in a bag suspended from the balloon, with the pilot only wearing a simple body harness around his waist, with lines from the harness attached to the main parachute in the bag. When the balloonist jumped, the main part of the parachute was pulled from the bag, with the shroud lines first, followed by the main canopy.




American operated balloons were attacked by enemy airplanes on 89 occasions; 35 of them were burned during such attacks, 12 others were destroyed by shell fire, and one blown over enemy lines [48 total losses]. Observers were forced to jump from the baskets 116 times; in no case did the parachute fail to open properly. One observer lost his life because pieces of the burning balloon fell on his descending parachute. On the opening day of the Meuse-Argonne Offensive, 26 September 1918, Lt. Cleo Ross of Titusville, PA, and the 8th Balloon Company,  would become  the only balloon observer killed in the war. Later, the Titusville American Legion Post was named in his honor. [Reader Brian Culross has pointed out that very quickly after his death, Lt. Ross also had an airfield named after him in Arcadia, California, that the Army operated until 1926.]

Also see our article on the adventures of balloon observer Lt. Jimmy Higgs of the 7th Balloon Company, who was forced to make four balloon jumps.

Sources:  "Observation Balloons on the Western Front". The Western Front Association. 29 June 2008; National World War I Museum.

Friday, January 10, 2025

Tommies and Their Officers


1915 British Trench


The men flung themselves into the blood baths of no-man's land because it was their duty, because they could not let the side down, and because they did not want to appear unwilling in the eyes of their comrades and officers. The notion that every man did his duty for God and Country regardless of the cost may only appear as so much rhetoric [a century] after the fact, but for the men who were on the spot it was a very serious matter of honour and pride. . .


It was the officer's responsibility to ensure that the men did their fighting with a will, and the knowledge that so many of the soldiers would not survive made this responsibility a hard one to carry. It was to their officers that the men looked for leadership, and if they were calm and confident men, these qualities would be transmitted to the men; but if the officers were "windy" (unsure and afraid), the men looked to their N.C.O.s and each other for leadership. John Keegan describes the relationship between the officers and men of the New Armies as one of being "... the ardent desire on the one hand to teach, to encourage, to be accepted, on the other to learn and be led which made intercourse between them (the officers and men) possible." Keegan goes on to include Siegfried Sassoon’s  description of how his own life was changed by the expression of  total trust and self surrender visible in the faces of his men as  they: "... looked up at him as they squatted cross legged, while he inspected their feet after a route march."  

If John Keegan's portrayal of the relationship between officers and men appears somewhat idyllic, Robert Graves paints an entirely different, and somehow more believable, picture of young officers suffering from nervous collapse and turning to alcohol for the strength to carry on: "I knew three or four who had worked up to the point of two bottles of whisky a day before being lucky enough  to get wounded." Graves also includes several accounts of officers  maltreating their men and physically beating them, and occasions when  officers forced their troops to "go over the top," even when they  knew that the attack would serve no purpose and could have been avoided. As a result, there were isolated incidents of especially harsh  officers being killed by sniper bullets which came from suspicious directions; something which is not surprising when one reads of an officer admitting that: "In both the last two shows I had to shoot  a man of my company to get the rest out of the trench."

[Rank did have its privileges]  To be sure, brothels were to be found in or near the rest areas, and it is worth noting that, even there, military  decorum was preserved with the provision of red lamps over the establishments available for rankers and blue lights for the officers. Robert Graves writes that he remembers seeing a queue of 150 men waiting outside a red lamp brothel, each to have his turn with one of three women in the house. The cost was eight shillings a man. . .   

Source: "The Private Soldier in the First World War" by Otte Rosenkrantz, The Mirror, 1983

Wednesday, January 8, 2025

Surprising, Shocking, or Unusual Photos from the Great War

I've presented these images in my various publications over the years.  Hope you enjoy.  MH


Belgian Armored Cars Deployed to the Eastern Front



French Mine Explodes Under German Trench, Vosges Sector, Western Front



Russian Troops in Armenian Mountains
Advancing on Tblisi, March 1916



Aftermanth of the Halifax Explosion of 6 December  1917



Inventor John Browning (L) with Winchester Arms Expert Inspecting his Browning Automatic Rifle, a Standard U.S. Weapon for 50 Years, Introduced in WWI



Essex Farm Dressing Station North of Ypres: 1915 on left,;2007 on right John McCrae's Duty Station When He Wrote "In Flanders Fields"




The really long one is the 210 mm "Paris Gun," which had a range of 80 miles and was used to shell Paris in 1918. The insert shows the 420 mm siege gun, nicknamed "Big Bertha," used to great effect in reducing forts early in the Great War. Both were manufactured by the Krupp Works in Essen.



Rat Catchers—Team Germany



Indian Army Cavalryman, Flers Road, Somme, 15 September 1916


German School Girls Knitting for Soldiers








The Ever-Popular Ration Delivery Squad




Wine Ration, However Was at an Industrial Scale


Tuesday, January 7, 2025

Laugh or Fly: The Air War on the Western Front 1914–1918



Pen & Sword, 2024

By Peter Hart and Gary Bain

Reviewed by David F. Beer

For I dipt into the future, far as human eye could see,
Saw the vision of the world, and all the wonder that would be….
Heard the heavens fill with shouting, and there rained a ghastly dew
From the nations' airy navies grappling in the central blue.

Tennyson, “Locksley Hall,” 1842


Tennyson’s poetic vision (almost exactly a century before the Battle of Britain) would also have applied to the air war of 1914–1918, as is vividly shown in the material Peter Hart and Gary Bain present in this highly informative book. In 12 chapters, the authors take us from the first days of aerial combat, when it was primarily a case of the blind leading the blind, to the final day of victory, when Lt Leslie Semple “took considerable pleasure in carrying out his last bombing raid on the night of 10 November 1918” (p. 229). He was even more gratified when he found he was the last Great War pilot to drop bombs on enemy territory.

The details of WWI aircraft, air and ground crews, combat, life, and death in this book are convincing because they are entirely taken from the words of the men involved. Hart and Bain have thoroughly trawled numerous sources, including the Imperial War Museum, the RAF Museum, letters, diaries, memoirs, and dozens of books. They have brought us the actual lives, thoughts, and fears of the “men in their flying machines” who experienced the thrills and terrors of flight plus the pleasures and security of a relatively safe social life on the ground. Pilots, observers, air gunners, mechanics, and other ground personnel all have their say in this panoramic look at the people who made up the RFC and then the RAF from 1914 to 1918.

Nobody was ready for an air war in 1914, and it took a little time before the idea that one could get in an airplane and fly off to shoot down an enemy with a pistol was discarded. Soon the intricacies of combat flying had to be given due attention with serious study and coursework:

[Cadets] studied the inner mysteries of aero engines, the complexities of airframes and rigging, and the working of flying instruments. They also had to master simple navigation and meteorology, wireless signalling and Morse code; the basics of aerial photography and artillery observation; and finally, an introduction to armaments including the Vickers machine gun, the Lewis gun and bombs. This was a heavy workload for any young man, and some faltered (p. 30).



Order This Book HERE



Careful training paid off as pilots became more skilled—and crafty. In reading Laugh or Fly you will fly with aircrew in various types of airplanes over every major and minor battle fought by the British on the Western Front from 1914 to 1918. You will read of their intimate fears, skills, and triumphs, and of the realities of loss after grueling air battles:

The few of us who were left sat down at mess that night and cried like children as we looked around at the vacant chairs. In two days, we lost fourteen men out of a complement for twenty-seven. As I write the names of my late comrades, it is hard to believe that they are dead. With me, they set out in possession of life and glorious health—within an hour or so they were charred and mangled remains. (p. 217).

Thus aerial combat resulted in the “ghastly dew" of Tennyson’s poetic vision of 1842, as it still does today. The people who fly, kill, and die are indeed a breed apart—as Peter Hart and Gary Bain well illustrate in this outstanding collection of personal accounts from the men who flew dubious aircraft in the Great War.

David F. Beer

Monday, January 6, 2025

Rethinking the “Lessons” of the First World War by Michael Neiberg




Originally presented on Lawfare, June 2018

History can be a good friend of confirmation bias. We often look to the past for lessons that support beliefs that we already have instead of the ones best supported by a deep analysis of the evidence. For most of today’s pundits and those academics who use the past to imagine the future, the origins of the First World War generally present one of two sets of “lessons.” The first, taking its cue from a recent best seller, characterizes the leaders of that age as “sleepwalkers” who were unusually incompetent and out of their depth. A second set of lessons argues that a presumed similarity between our times and the years prior to 1914 makes conflict today more likely, or even inevitable. These “lessons” need nuance and historical context if they are to provide any insights for today’s policymakers. 

We’d like to believe that the First World War began because of the mistakes of a singularly incompetent generation or over some long-buried dispute like Alsace-Lorraine. If that were true, then there would be nothing for us to learn from that catastrophe. But, as I have argued elsewhere, the real lessons of 1914 for strategists and politicians today are far more disconcerting and terrifying because that year’s perfect storm of alliance obligations, public messaging, outdated strategic assumptions, and misperceptions could well repeat. The war that results, moreover, may be quite different from the one that military and political leaders imagine.

Historical analogies are tempting and provide an easy heuristic for processing information, but they can also be quite dangerous. The world of 1914 does indeed bear many similarities to 2018, but, as always, the parallel is far from exact. As that fateful summer began, few people expected great power conflict. Long, drawn-out crises in Morocco, Sudan, and the Balkans had recently come and gone with little impact on the peoples of Europe. The literature of the day featured numerous books predicting an end to major wars; experts perceived them as being too expensive, too unproductive even for the winners, or no longer a tool that so-called civilized nations used to pursue state interests.

If there were to be a crisis, most Europeans expected it to come either on the Rhine River between Germany and France, or in the North Sea between the British and German fleets. But the French and Germans had resumed normal, even productive, relations after the 1911 Morocco crisis, and the Germans had largely ended their attempt to challenge the Royal Navy. In late June 1914, when Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife arrived in Sarajevo, sailors from the two fleets were getting drunk together at Fleet Week in Kiel. Winston Churchill, who was there, later observed that no one in Kiel could have imagined that they would be at war within a few short weeks. 




The shooting of an obscure archduke ought not to have changed this placid picture; indeed, for most Europeans, it did not. Within a few days, the story of a supposedly deranged teenager’s act in a faraway city had largely disappeared from the front pages of newspapers in London, Paris, Berlin, and even Vienna. When European newspapers did discuss their fears of an impending war, they most commonly referred to the possibility of civil war in Ireland after the passage of a controversial Home Rule act in Parliament. If anything were to come out of the latest crisis in the Balkans, it would involve Austria-Hungary and Serbia only, and even then only if the Austrians could prove their allegations that Serbian officials had been behind the plot.

But the Austrian higher leadership read something different into the assassination. They believed that Franz Ferdinand’s assassination amounted to what we would today call state-sponsored terrorism. In their eyes, this meant that Austria found itself in a strangely advantageous strategic situation. All European governments and most European peoples sympathized with the murdered archduke and his wife. If Europeans knew anything about the couple, they knew that Franz Ferdinand had married the woman he loved, despite the fact that she was not a Habsburg. As a result, they had made a modern marriage for love instead of power, even though the emperor’s disapproval led them to be snubbed at court and their children excluded from the line of succession.

To the senior leaders of the empire, the sympathy pouring into Vienna meant that, for the first time in decades, Austria-Hungary appeared as an aggrieved party in a Balkan crisis. They therefore believed that European public opinion would permit them to push matters with Serbia a bit further than they had been able to do during past crises. Moreover, the absolutist regime in Russia might hesitate to support a state that backed regicide, even if the Russians publicly posed as Serbia’s nominal protector. Britain, meanwhile, was distracted by events in Ireland, and the French were enraptured by the final days of the trial of Henriette Caillaux, the wife of a prominent politician who had shot a newspaper editor. (Her lawyer claimed, for the first time in French legal history, that she was not guilty by reason of mental defect because, her husband having refused to challenge the editor to a duel, her female brain could not adjust to playing the male role of having to defend the family’s honor.) In any case, both Britain and France had shown themselves reluctant to get directly involved in past Balkan crises. Austria-Hungary’s leaders had every reason to believe that officials in London and Paris would move slowly during this one.

For senior Austro-Hungarian officials, the military situation created by the assassination was almost ideal. They guessed that no regime in Europe would jump to Serbia’s defense, not even Russia. The British, French, and Italians would likely stay neutral or, in any event, not intervene while Austro-Hungarian forces moved south. If those forces moved quickly and crushed the Serbians, they might present Europe with a fait accompli before the great powers could stop them.

Their German allies read the situation in much the same way. Senior military leaders in Berlin worried about Russian military and industrial growth. Within a few years that growth would render most German military planning obsolete, confronting the Germans with a two-front war that most assumed they could not win. Although only a few people knew it, the German war plan tried to get out of that dilemma by sending seven of its eight field armies against France no matter what diplomatic crisis triggered war. In this particular one, therefore, France might be caught sleeping, Britain might declare neutrality, and, for once, the Austrian ally in whom they had so little faith might have a motivation to fight well. The stars would likely never line up so favorably again.

Thus did Germany issue a “blank check” of support to Austria. If, as expected, Russia remained neutral, then Austria could inflict a devastating blow onto Serbia and Germany would gain by association without having to do anything. If Russia mobilized, then Germany could enact its war plan under extremely favorable circumstances, most notably by quickly attacking a distracted France, most of whose people saw no link whatsoever between themselves and an assassination in Sarajevo. Perhaps most crucially, the German regime could defend its efforts to the German people as a purely defensive response to Russian provocation.

Having drawn these conclusions, the Austro-Hungarians delivered their now infamous ultimatum to Serbia on July 23. It gave Serbia just 48 hours to reply, meaning that the long, slow diplomacy that had taken months to resolve and defuse recent crises in Morocco and Sudan had no time to work. Serbia tried to be conciliatory, but the Austrians, with German backing, wanted war on terms that they assumed were as favorable to them as they could ever hope to get.

Europe was stunned by the ultimatum, not the assassination; for this reason we call the crisis leading to war the July Crisis, not the June Crisis. Soldiers, including many senior leaders on leave in countries soon to be their enemies, hurried home to their units. Statesmen canceled vacations, and many foresaw that Europe was about to go to war over an issue that did not actually affect the vital interests of any of them except Austria-Hungary. They did not so much sleepwalk as awaken from a deep and pleasant slumber by a terrible fire that they could neither extinguish nor escape.


Mobilization


This is why the war that began in 1914 became the First World War instead of the Third Balkan War. The crisis hit too quickly and did not conform to the intellectual idea Europeans had of future war. It had not begun over a German-French confrontation as expected, yet the Germans were sending hundreds of thousands of soldiers to invade France and neutral Belgium. Perhaps more importantly, because Russia had mobilized first, every nation in Europe could defend its actions as essentially defensive in nature, and therefore just.

Europe, and by extension much of the world, was now at war for reasons no one could quite explain, except to say that they were fighting to protect themselves from an enemy immoral and inhuman enough to break the peace. Thus even socialists and most pacifists initially supported what they saw as a just war. Within a few dizzingly short weeks, the initial premise of Austria-Hungary’s demands on Serbia had fallen aside and the war had become a total war, fought for national survival and the complete destruction of the enemy. Unlike many past wars, there were no limited war aims to compromise over or to stop the fighting once attained. Thus were future mediation efforts by the Vatican, the Socialist International, and U.S. President Woodrow Wilson doomed to fail.

The causes of the First World War do not belong to a dead past of ancient ethnic grievances or governments ruled by incompetent aristocrats. Instead, the war began because of fatal miscalculations and unexpected contingencies. Put bluntly, strategists had planned for one set of crises, but got another. Their world, much like our own, had changed far too quickly for their plans or their intellectual preconceptions to adjust. In effect, they fought the wrong war, but all of the great powers could plausibly claim (at least in August 1914) that they had fought for the right reason, self-defense.

The lesson, therefore, is to underscore the need for constant reevaluation of assumptions through critical thinking. In our time, rapid change in the international and domestic order might mean that crises do not conform to the intellectual preconceptions of the strategists. Without critical thinking, especially about the so-called lessons of history, leaders may not be supple enough to adjust their thinking in time to avert war. And, as in 1914, once begun, wars often continue until nations and empires lie in ruins without anyone able to explain why.

Michael Neiberg