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

Wednesday, March 14, 2018

WWI Atrocity Propaganda and Its Legacy


Report of the Committee Led by Viscount Bryce, 
Assessing "Alleged German Outrages", 1915

By Professor Jo Fox, British Library


Atrocity propaganda focused on the most violent acts committed by the German and Austro-Hungarian armies, emphasising their barbarity and providing justification for the conflict. 

Victims shot, bayoneted to death, killed with knives, arms lopped off, torn off, or broken, legs broken, nose cut off, ears cut off, eyes put out, genital organs cut off, victims stoned, women violated and killed, breasts cut off, persons hanged, victims burnt alive, one child thrown to the pigs, victims clubbed to death with butt ends of rifles or sticks, victims impaled, victims whose skin was cut into strips.

Professor R.A. Reiss, a prominent forensic scientist commissioned by the Serbian prime minister to conduct an enquiry into war crimes, thus categorised the numerous violent acts against civilians perpetrated by the occupying Austro-Hungarian forces in Serbia in 1914. His account bore striking similarities to French and British publications of the same period, notably Le livre rouge des atrocités allemandes and the Bryce Report. In painstaking detail, such reports recorded the crimes of 1914, individual acts of violence against civilians, troops and prisoners of war; looting and pillage; the use of weapons "forbidden by the rules and conventions of war"; the destruction of ancient libraries and cathedrals, and of homes and villages; rape, mutilation, and torture. Vivid illustrations and first-hand testimonies accompanied each description of the "crimes without name", while Liège, Louvain, Dinant, Antwerp, Reims, Arras, and Senlis were transformed into "martyred towns", ravaged by an uncompromising, inhuman enemy whose victims ranged from children to the elderly, from men of God to the injured and helpless. Such images dominated the early propaganda of the Great War, serving as a potent reminder of the justification for war and a vindication of the sacrifice it demanded.

The German Changes Clothes But Always Remains
a German, Remember! Italian Poster

Atrocity propaganda varied, appearing in books, newspapers, pamphlets, sketches, posters, films, lantern slides, and cartoons, and on postcards, plates, cups, and medals. It operated on many levels. Official government reports presented "evidence" that German troops had contravened the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907. Eyewitness accounts from victims and perpetrators made for compelling and convincing reading, and, although methods of investigation often fell short of legal standards, the reports appeared to be based on irrefutable facts. That respected experts led these enquiries (Bryce, for example, having served as a British ambassador to the United States, member of the House of Lords, and jurist) further legitimised the allegations.

Postwar Stamps from a French Organization
Dedicated to Remembering German Crimes

While the reports tended to adopt an objective tone, salacious stories were extracted from testimonies to form the basis of sensational newspaper articles, exhibitions (such as that by Louis Raemaekers in London in 1915), or popular books. This created a dynamic, transformative and self-reinforcing propaganda environment. William Le Queux detailed the suffering of the ‘honest, pious inhabitants’ of Belgium, at the mercy of ‘one vast gang of Jack-the-Rippers… frothing with military Nietzschism’ and excited by ‘a primitive barbarism’. Although initially a response to the invasion of Belgium in 1914, atrocity stories drew - as Le Queux’s account suggests - on pre-existing anti-German sentiments. These sentiments were strengthened by wider official and unofficial publicity campaigns that pitted German Kultur against Christian civilization and morality, and created an interpretative framework for subsequent events. The ‘assassination’ of Edith Cavell, the sinking of the Lusitania, the declaration of unrestricted U-Boat warfare, Zeppelin raids, and the use of gas in the trenches all seemed to confirm the fundamental depravity of the German character and bolstered the hierarchy of enemies. Thus German atrocities were afforded a particular prominence, whereas the Turkish slaughter of Armenians passed almost unnoticed. The power of atrocity stories derived in part from their ability to stand either alone, as singular acts of barbarism and moral depravity, or as a series of pre-meditated collective behaviours that condemned a nation. These shocking stories allowed propagandists to justify the war, encourage men to enlist, raise funds for war loans schemes, and shake the United States from its neutrality. The impact of such propaganda was enduring, lasting well into 1918 and beyond.

Depiction of German War Aims, British 1918

The German response

Allegations of atrocities proved difficult to refute. Any attempt to do so attracted further publicity, and explanations offered by the German and Austro-Hungarian authorities seemed only to confirm their guilt. The ‘Manifesto of the 93’, signed by leading German scientists, scholars and artists, including fourteen Nobel Prize winners, refuted charges of war guilt and legitimised the retaliation of German soldiers against illegal franc-tireurs (irregular forces, ‘free-shooters’), asserting that German troops had acted within international law. German propaganda pointed to the hypocrisy of ‘perfidious Albion’ (Great Britain), whose brutal Empire had perpetrated countless atrocities against the suppressed peoples of Ireland, India, Egypt, and Africa, and pointed to Germany’s own record of scholarly endeavour and social welfare.

The German Foreign Ministry’s ‘White Book’ sought to exonerate German troops as the victims of an illegal and unrelenting ‘people’s war’ conducted by Belgian civilians. This strategy proved unsuccessful. The Académie française condemned the Manifesto, while the ‘White Book’, highly selective and deploying unconvincing evidence, seemed to confirm German crimes and was demolished by the Belgian Livre Gris (1916). Attempts by the Austro-Hungarian Government to justify its troops’ actions met with similar criticism: Reiss condemned the ‘tardy excuses of the Austrian officials [which] fall to the ground’. By simply responding to Allied accusations, German and Austro-Hungarian propaganda was purely reactive: it failed to exploit the Allies’ own contraventions of international law, handing to them the moral high ground and ultimately the more convincing explanation for the outbreak of war.

Legacy

In the inter-war period, investigations into the nature of war propaganda suggested that atrocity stories had been fabricated by the Allies in order to justify the war and to encourage enlistment. Although more recently historians such as John Horne and Alan Kramer have illustrated the importance of the franc-tireur myth to the German military mind-set and highlighted the contravention of international law entailed in the murder of c.6000 Belgian citizens in 1914, for many years doubts about the veracity of Allied claims and the memory of the franc-tireurs remained. 

A True Report of Atrocity from World War II, That Overlooked or
Discounted Because of the Experience in the Earlier War

When German forces once again occupied Belgium in 1940, monuments to civilian resistance in 1914 were destroyed, while researchers sought evidence of the existence of a citizen army in the Belgian and French archives. Liberal democratic propagandists of the Second World War were divided over the memory of the Great War: some invoked the experience of 1914 to demonstrate Germany’s continual threat to a peaceful Europe (Lord Vansittart’s Black Record, 1941, for example), while others pointed to the uniqueness of Nazism. While seeking ‘another Edith Cavell’ for their campaigns, they were limited by the popular memory of ‘false’ 1914 atrocity stories. As a result, they feared exposing themselves to charges of exaggerating Nazi atrocities in Europe from 1941, with the consequence that the plight of the Jews and others was largely ignored and public attention directed elsewhere.

Source: https://www.bl.uk/world-war-one/articles/atrocity-propaganda

Tuesday, March 13, 2018

Winged Warfare
Reviewed by James M. Gallen


Winged Warfare

by Lt. Col. William A. Bishop
Forgotten Books reprint, 6 September 2012

Billy Bishop in the Cockpit

Historians can research records and artifacts, but only the veterans can write from experience of the sights, sound, smells, and emotions of combat. Winged Warfare is the collected recollections of Billy Bishop, greatest Canadian and second greatest British Empire flying ace of the Great War. When he was 17, Billy's parents sent him to the Royal Military College at Kingston, Ontario, for some military discipline.

This work is Bishop's stream-of-consciousness wartime memories. Like many early aviators, Bishop transferred from another service. In July 1915, after the 15-day crossing on an old cattle boat with 700 seasick horses he became a cavalry officer with the Mississauga Horse of Toronto of the Second Canadian Division in England. His ambitions were elevated when, knee deep in the dank, slimy, boggy mud of the cavalry camp he saw an airplane overhead. He quickly concluded that being an observer in the air was better than commanding a division on the ground. Confiding his ambition to fly to a friend in the Royal Flying Corps was the first step in taking flight. The initial assignment of new aviators was to be an observer who, well, observed. His training included what to observe and what to ignore. Once his observer wing was on his uniform he was off to France with a burning desire to become a pilot. His "machine" would fly over German lines for an hour or more, as he noted and photographed enemy positions. The machine gun he had by his knee went unfired during his four months as an observer.

After a knee injury sidelined him for several months Bishop got his chance to fly. Ground school led to elementary training in the air. He describes his first solo as the greatest day of his life. Although expecting to be assigned to zeppelin hunting over England, he applied for duty at the fighting front.

The 7th of March, 1917, was the day Billy Bishop returned to France for his second tour at war. In his inaugural mission he was assigned to bring up the rear of a formation over German lines. Eighteen days later he would record the first of his 72 kills. After his last five kills, on 19 June 1918, Bishop was sent to England on leave from which he would, to his disappointment, not return to France. He describes the ceremony during which the King invested him into the Order of St. Michael and St. George.

What I like about this book is the detail that can only be described by a veteran who has lived the events recorded in its pages. Bishop's casting as a member of the British Royal Flying Corps and his obvious pride as he looked own on "We Canadians" as they attacked Vimy Ridge and elsewhere all provide insight into an age when Canadians were gaining a grasp of their national identity. The second-by-second narrative of the dogfight seizes the reader's imagination. The intense cold that could stop hemorrhaging can only be intellectually experienced in the first person. The perceived distinction of going up against the Red Baron's squadron, the immense red birds with graceful wings and painted a brilliant scarlet from nose to tail, hints at the romance retained by this form of warfare. Only Bishop could convey his thoughts on downing an enemy aircraft:

While I have no desire to make myself appear as a bloodthirsty person, I must say that to see an enemy going down in flames is a source of great satisfaction. You know his destruction is absolutely certain. The moment you see the fire break out you know that nothing in the world can save the man or men in the doomed aeroplane.

Later he would observe:
The idea of killing was, of course, always against my nature, but for two reasons I did not mind it: one, and the greater one, of course, being that it was another Hun down, and so much for good in the war; secondly, it was paying back for some of the debt I owed the Huns for robbing me of the best friends possible. Then, too, in the air one did not altogether feel the human side of it. As I have said before, it was not like killing a man so much as just bringing down a bird in sport.

Winged Warfare is a short read composed by a warrior, not a professional writer. We read it for its detail and the spirit of its author, not its research and analysis. It pays to open this time capsule from the Great War.

All in all, an extremely good and enlightening read.

James M. Gallen

Monday, March 12, 2018

Backstory: Setting the Stage for an "Irony of Fate"



It would be an irony of fate if my administration had to deal chiefly with foreign affairs.      
Woodrow Wilson, 1913

The Republican Ticket: Taft and Sherman

In June 1912, former president Theodore Roosevelt sought the Republican nomination at the party convention in Chicago. He was infuriated by what he took to be a betrayal of his progressive program by his personally chosen successor, the incumbent William Howard Taft. The delegates chose Taft anyway, with former New York congressman James "Sunny Jim" Sherman as his running mate.


Roosevelt and his supporters bolted, then formed the Progressive Party, popularly known as the Bull Moose Party. [T.R.—"I am as strong as a bull moose."] At their convention in August, California governor Hiram Johnson was selected as T.R.'s running mate. [One of their campaign managers in Contra Costa County, California, would be your editor's great-uncle,  Superintendent of Schools William Hanlon.] 

The Progressives: T.R. and Hiram Johnson
The Democrats were elated by the Republican split, realizing that their opponents' 16-year rule was at an end. The only real suspense was generated around the question of which Democrat would be the next president. Favorite son candidates were put forth from all sections of the country. The strongest appeared to be House Speaker Champ Clark of Missouri, the personal favorite of the influential William Randolph Hearst. Despite widespread support, Clark was unable to gain the necessary two-thirds vote in the early balloting. 

The turning point occurred when the still influential William Jennings Bryan switched his support to New Jersey governor Woodrow Wilson, an advocate of moderate reform. Bryan would later be appointed Wilson's secretary of state as a reward. After 46 ballots, the exhausted delegates finally selected Wilson and Indiana governor Thomas R. Marshall as his running mate. 

Destiny's Ticket: Democrats Wilson and Marshall

Wilson won a lopsided electoral victory in November 1912. His election was nearly assured from the beginning because of the Republican split. Against all his predispositions, he would eventually embrace the role of the nation's war leader, and, later self-designated world shaper.  Fate proved to have a fine sense of irony.

Material from: U-S-History.com

Sunday, March 11, 2018

A Roads Classic: "Hurrah for the Next Man Who Dies!"

Click on Image to Expand



When I was the membership chairman of the old Great War Society, we asked our new enlistees what got them interested in the First World War.  I was surprised at how many mentioned the 1938 film The Dawn Patrol with Errol Flynn, Basil Rathbone, and David Niven.

The "show stopper" scene in that movie is not any of the combat sequences but in the mess when the pilots drink a musical toast to the next man who dies. The lyrics used in the movie are an adaptation of a 19th-century poem out of India titled "The Revel" by Bartholomew Dowling. Here are the pilots singing their song:

Click on Image to Expand

Errol Flynn Leads the Singing


We meet ’neath the sounding rafter,
  And the walls around are bare;
They echo our peals of laughter
  It seems that the dead are there.

So,  stand to your glasses, steady!       
  This world is a world of lies.
Here's a toast to the dead already—
  Hurrah for the next man who dies!

Cut off from the land that bore us,
  Betray’d by the land we find,
The good men have gone before us,
  And only the dull left  most behind.

So,  stand to your glasses, steady!       
  This world is a world of lies.
Then here's a toast to the dead already—
  Hurrah for the next man who dies!

Saturday, March 10, 2018

About Those Tommies




  • "Tommy" as a name for British soldiers came from the name in the sample paybook given to new recruits in Wellington's time: Thomas Atkins.



  • The original 1914 British Expeditionary Force was composed of six infantry and one cavalry division, totaling 150,000 men.



  • 5,704,416 Tommies from the United Kingdom (Great Britain & Ireland) eventually served in the war.

Tommies As We Recall Them

  • About 2,670,000 volunteered, of which 1,186,000 had enlisted by 31 December 1914.



  • About 2,770,000 were conscripted.



  • 724,000 Tommies were killed; 2,000,000 were wounded; and 270,000 were POWs,

Tommies Heading Down That "Long, Long Trail A-Winding"


  • Besides the regulars, the British Army overseas was supplemented by "Territorials", volunteer reserves, originally intended for home defense but who could opt for "Imperial Service" overseas.



  • "Pals" battalions were special units of the British Army composed of men who enlisted together in local recruiting drives, with the promise that they would be able to serve alongside their friends, neighbors, and work colleagues ("pals").



  • By one count, there were 643 Pals battalions.

Source: The British Soldier of the First World War, Peter Doyle

Friday, March 9, 2018

100 Years Ago: Gotha Raids on Paris Accelerate


A Gotha Bomber Ready for Take-Off

Between January and September 1918 the German Gotha bombers flew 483 separate sorties over Paris.  March 1918 featured an acceleration in the bomber raids on France's capital. A Gotha raid on Paris on 8 March 1918 resulted in the death of 13 and the injuring of 50 from over 90 bombs dropped. Another raid, on 11 March, caused the death of 34 and injury to another 78 persons.  Ten raids in total were mounted against the city during the peak of the air raids, between 8 March and  1 July.

Damage on Lille Avenue, Paris, from the 29 March Raid

The bomber missions were supplemented in late March with fire from the secret Paris Gun located 75 miles away in the forest north of Laon.  When the first shells landed, the city's air raid sirens where sounded—no one could conceive of an artillery piece that could  fire from behind the enemy's lines, the closest of which was over 50 miles from the city.

Thursday, March 8, 2018

Historic Images of the Meuse-Argonne American Cemetery

I recently received a wealth of wonderful information and imagery from the staff of the American Battle Monuments Commission. I'll be sharing it with our readers throughout the Centennial.  These images tell a story by themselves. I've just included some text and captions as needed.

From the ABMC Website:
Within the Meuse-Argonne American Cemetery and Memorial in France, which covers 130.5 acres, rest the largest number of our military dead in Europe, a total of 14,246. It is located just east of the village of Romagne-sous-Montfaucon, Meuse, France, approximately 26 miles (42 kilometers) northwest of Verdun.  Most of those buried here lost their lives during the Meuse-Argonne Offensive of World War I. The immense array of headstones rises in long regular rows upward beyond a wide central pool to the chapel that crowns the ridge. A beautiful bronze screen separates the chapel foyer from the interior, which is decorated with stained-glass windows portraying American unit insignia; behind the altar are flags of the principal Allied nations. The cemetery required almost two decades to complete.  It was dedicated on Memorial Day, 1937.

Click on Images to Enlarge





Remains of the Fallen Were Gathered from Field Cemeteries


En Route to Romagne


A Ceremony Was Conducted When the Original Coffins Arrived for Interment


General Pershing Inspects the Cemetery in the 1920s


The Completed Temporary Cemetery Which Held 23,000 Burials


An Exhumation from a Temporary Grave
Families Could Choose to Have the Fallen Return Home for Burial
The Temporary Burials Were Also Exhumed for Preparation for Final Burial 


The Final Design with Over 14,000 Burials Took Almost 20 Years to Evolve


Some of the Final Markers with Photos of the Interred Super-Imposed


General Pershing at the Formal Dedication, Memorial Day, 1937


World War II GIs Visiting the Cemetery


Today the Cemetery Is the Site of Frequent Remembrances


Display at the New Visitors Center

From the ABMC Website:
A renovated, 1,600-square-foot center visitor center reopened in November 2016. Through interpretive exhibits that incorporate personal stories, photographs, films, and interactive displays, visitors will gain a better understanding of the critical importance of the Meuse-Argonne Offensive as it fits into the Great War.

Watch the Video  Never to be Forgotten: Soldiers of the Meuse-Argonne and
Listen to General Pershing Here

Images selected from:  American Battle Monuments Commission Archives, Library of Congress, and the Film Never to be Forgotten: Soldiers of the Meuse-Argonne.


Wednesday, March 7, 2018

Weapon of War: The 155mm French Schneider Howitzer



A 155 Deployed in the Field



Sources: Top: Cantigny Museum; Lower: National WWI Museum

Tuesday, March 6, 2018

1914: Fight the Good Fight. . .
Reviewed by Bruce Sloan


1914: Fight the Good Fight, Britain, the Army & 
the Coming of the First World War

by Allan Mallinson
Bantam Press, 2013


The BEF on the Way to France, August 1914

Allan Mallinson spent 35 years in the British Army and is the author of Light Dragoons–a history of four regiments of British Cavalry (one of which he commanded), numerous historical novels, as well as the acclaimed The Making of the British Army. He has written on defense matters for the Times, and has regularly reviewed for the Times and the Spectator. He was a year at the Staff College and was posted to the Directorate of Military Operations, in the branch concerned with war in Europe.

With the author's access to prominent military figures and the War Office papers in the National Archives, this history is researched with exactitude. In my opinion, 1914 stands up very favorably with, and supplements, The Guns of August, with regard to the reasons, the treaties and the bumbling beginnings of the war.

Mallinson takes us through the preparations and mobilization of the BEF and General Sir John French's leadership through the retreat from Mons (which General Haig's I Corps doesn't manage to get to) to the battle at Le Cateau, the Race to the Sea, and to the Marne, where probably the last lance-to-lance cavalry battle was fought on 7 September at Le Montcel.

He relates incidents and decisions leading to and within World War I from Waterloo, the Zulu War and the disaster at Isandlwana (which General Smith-Dorian survived—he thinks because he had a blue jacket), the Boer War, and the Russo-Japanese War.

It was pleasing to find that the author, an infantryman and cavalryman, spends a fair amount of time on the decisions regarding the British Navy and the fledgling Royal Flying Corps and the usefulness of both. The friction between commanders, both British and French, is explored, with the resulting actions and repercussions. He pulls no punches when analyzing their decisions and motivations, and he addresses other analyses when he has subsequent or contrary evidence. (He is not overly friendly to Sir John French.)

All in all, an extremely good and enlightening read.

Bruce Sloan

Monday, March 5, 2018

Impressions of the YMCA at War


A Soldier Enjoying Music at  a YMCA Canteen

By Mark Hauser
From the Hoover Institution Website
https://www.hoover.org/news/silas-palmer-fellow-examines-role-wwi-doughboy-american-mass-culture

In France, YMCA huts provided soldiers with record players and movie theaters; again, soldiers’ responses were more complicated than those anticipated by Y officials. John Wister, a horticulturist from Philadelphia, wrote home to his family that at the Y "they never show anything but the oldest, cheapest and worst. I have seen good American pictures in Bordeaux by going to the French theatres at about 4 francs, but never anything good in the Y yet, but of course tastes differ and some like them.”

YMCA Sponsored Baseball League
Although Army and welfare officials struggled to organize entertainment, YMCA workers were more effective at organizing sports leagues; sports had been an important part of the Y’s services in the United States where officials encouraged men to participate in sports as a form of “muscular Christianity". Birge Clark, a Palo Alto native and former Stanford student who served as the captain of a balloon company during the war, wrote in his diary of the popularity of the Y baseball league, which three times a week attracted ten percent of his company to a nearby French town. Baseball was so popular in Clark’s unit that even though the Y had spent millions of dollars on sporting goods it was unable to supply his soldiers with enough equipment; Clark’s company eventually built their own machine to sand lumber into bats. However, over time athletic programs transformed from mass participation into mass spectatorship, a change welcomed by many soldiers. Independence Day celebrations in 1918 featured huge baseball games designed to showcase the best soldier talent, yet also turned the non-participants into a crowd that watched the games with enthusiasm. Roy Davis, an ambulance driver from Los Gatos, CA, recorded in his diary the experience of attending his first football game alongside thousands of other soldiers, writing “I am willing to frankly admit that I did not know the first thing about football. However, after the ‘kickoff’ at 2:30, the points of the game soon became apparent to me and when things became especially exciting I found myself yelling and waving my arms with as much gusto as some of the one-time-stars of the game.” Winning new fans like Davis was important for football but even more important for a controversial sport like boxing; boxing’s popularity soared after the war in large part because of soldiers’ spectatorship at YMCA and Knights of Columbus-sponsored bouts, and veterans successfully lobbied to legalize the sport in states such as New York where it had previously been banned.

A YMCA Tour of Paris for the Troops

YMCA officials operated “canteens” where soldiers could buy a wide range of goods, including cigarettes, canned fruits, toiletries, chocolate, and even wristwatches. Edwin Gerth, a Knox College student who enlisted in the Army, wrote in letters to his family and his diary of his appreciation for the YMCA, and wished their canteens could be in the trenches where he could have chocolate when he needed it most. Other soldiers like Jacob Emery, a lieutenant and student at Harvard, wrote to his family criticizing the canteens for their limited selection, high prices, and inconvenient hours. The reactions of soldiers like Gerth and Emery highlighted what soldiers perceived as the unfulfilled potential of canteens to provide inexpensive, convenient comforts during times of intense physical and mental strain.

Photos from the Hoover Institution Collection

Sunday, March 4, 2018

The Dangerous Lives of WWI Tank Crews


I was looking through my folder of WWI tank images and came across many of damaged tanks, especially of British Mark-Series vehicles. The two shown here with the dead crew members were especially affecting. This led me to do some searching for information on the hazards of serving on tank crews. The best material I could find was The Long, Long Trail website article "The Tank Corps of 1914–1918." It turns out that it wasn't just enemy fire that was dangerous for the men aboard.


At best, the early tanks could achieve a top speed of 4 miles per hour. On the battlefield this was rarely realized, and in many cases infantry moved far faster. The machines were crewed by a subaltern, three drivers, and four gunners, of which one was an NCO. Interior conditions were truly appalling, being a combination of intense heat, noise, and exhaust from the engine, violent movement as the tank crossed the ground and molten metal splash as bullets struck the plating. Men would often be violently sick or badly incapacitated by the conditions and were often in no fit state to continue after quite short journeys. It was difficult to communicate within the tank and with men and other tanks outside. The tank officer often had to get out and walk, to reconnoiter his path or to work with the infantry. The tanks also proved to be mechanically unreliable and vulnerable to shellfire. Some tanks carried a wire frame on the roof, designed to deflect grenades. 


[At the Battle of Amiens] in conjunction with the new artillery and infantry tactics [the 450 tanks assembled], proved to be useful in crushing wire, overrunning machine gun posts and strong points, and helping infantry through the streets of destroyed villages. However, tank losses were significant and within days of the initial assault the Tank Corps was a temporarily spent force. It was not until the assaults on the Hindenburg Line in late September 1918 that a large enough force had been assembled again. From 21 August 1918 to the Armistice on 11 November 1918, some 2,400 men and officers of the Tank Corps became casualties.


Source: http://www.1914-1918.net/tanks.htm 

Saturday, March 3, 2018

Who Was John Purroy Mitchel?



Known as "The Boy Mayor of New York", John Purroy Mitchel (1879–1918) was New York City's youngest-ever mayor, elected to office when he was only 34. He was soundly defeated for re-election and died less than six months after he left office on 6 July 1918, at age 38, while he was training as an Air Service pilot. He fell 500 feet out of his biplane near his training field in Louisiana after apparently forgetting to fasten his seat belt. 

Mayor Mitchel at a War-Related Event

He was the namesake of Mitchel Field on Long Island, formerly Hazelhurst Aviation Field #2. Charles Lindbergh flying the Spirit of St. Louis departed for France in 1927 from an adjacent airfield.

Photos from Keith Muchowski 

Friday, March 2, 2018

Recommended: T.E. Lawrence and the Forgotten Men Who Shaped the Arab Revolt

By Philip Walker
At OUPblog of Oxford University Press

[Some readers have asked me why we are recommending works from other blogs with greater frequency, some of which are just irresistibly interesting.  As it turns out, I'm getting more and more recommendations from our readers and editorial team.  This article was discovered by our contributing editor Tony Langley.]

T. E. Lawrence, known as “Lawrence of Arabia”, has provoked controversy for 100 years. His legend was promoted in the 1920s by the American Lowell Thomas’s travelogue, renewed in 1935 through his book Seven Pillars of Wisdom, and revived in 1962 by the epic film Lawrence of Arabia. The hype should not blind us to the fact that Lawrence’s contribution to the Arab Revolt of 1916–18 against the Turks was indispensable. His skills in organizing and coordinating, his daring and courage, his intuitive grasp of guerrilla warfare and how to harness it, his influence over Emir Feisal (the leader of Arab forces in the field), and his talent for manipulating his own leaders if necessary, were all crucial to the hollow success of the revolt.


Yet Lawrence was a team player. In particular, there was a nexus of influence over the revolt that has stayed below the radar. While Lawrence and other British, Arab, and French officers were blowing up the Hejaz Railway, a forgotten band of British officers at Jeddah, far from the desert campaign, carried out vitally important diplomatic and intelligence work that prevented the revolt from collapse. This untold story centres on Colonel Cyril Edward Wilson, the British representative at the Jeddah Consulate. Wilson was a dependable officer of the old school—the antithesis of the brilliant and mercurial Lawrence. But his strong relationship with Sherif Hussein of Mecca, the leader of the revolt, drew this suspicious and controlling man back from the brink of despair, suicide, and the abandonment of the revolt. Wilson’s undervalued influence over Hussein during critical phases of the revolt was at least as important as the well-known influence of Lawrence over Emir Feisal, Hussein’s son.

Wilson’s core team included Captain Norman Bray, a highly strung Indian Army intelligence officer who rooted out anti-British and anti-Hussein jihadists. These men were incensed that Hussein dared to rebel against the Turkish sultan, who was also the caliph (leader) of all Sunni Muslims. The stakes were high because the jihadists based at Jeddah and Mecca wanted to discredit both Hussein and the British by disrupting the Hajj—the Muslim pilgrimage—and encourage Indian pilgrims (passing through Jeddah on their way to Mecca) to rebel against British rule in their homeland. Bray helped keep the revolt on course by neutralizing the jihadists, with the aid of a resourceful Persian spy named Hussein Ruhi, and had their leader deported to prison in Malta.

Ruhi is one of the most intriguing and influential players in the Arab Revolt. His cover was as Wilson’s Arabic interpreter, and he did invaluable intelligence work for the colonel in other respects too— even at times putting his life in danger.

Wilson’s two deputies, both with intelligence backgrounds, helped him with vital diplomatic work. In the colonel’s absence, the eccentric, half-deaf Major Hugh Pearson helped steady Hussein when he lost his nerve. Later, the genial and imperturbable Colonel John Bassett stood in for Wilson while he spent five months recovering in Cairo from life-threatening dysentery. Bassett encouraged and cajoled Hussein when Hussein fell out with his son Feisal, resigned as King of the Hejaz, spoke of suicide, and threatened to withdraw all of Feisal’s Bedouin tribesmen from the planned advance into Syria. If those fighters had returned to the Hejaz (Hussein’s territory) the revolt would have dissolved.

Continue reading the full article here:

https://blog.oup.com/2018/02/te-lawrence-forgotten-men-arab-revolt/?utm_source=feedblitz&utm_medium=FeedBlitzRss&utm_campaign=oupblog



Thursday, March 1, 2018

100 Years Ago Today: EINLADUNG—An Invitation to the Americans!

By Terrence J. Finnegan

The First Division Arrives in the Sector, January 1918

Trench Line North of Bois de Remieres Was the
Location of the Raid
The German General Staff decided to engage the 1st Division at the Woëvre front, on the southern side of the St. Mihiel Salient, shortly after it arrived.  Planning commenced on 17 February 1918 for the attack known by the ironic code word Einladung—it was now time for the Germans to send an "invitation" to American forces to experience first-hand the realities of positional war.  General der Artillerie von Gallwitz recognized a trench raid was an appropriate way to test the initial mettle of the American soldier in the area that constituted Bois de Remieres and Bois Carre north of the village of Seicheprey.  The 78th Reserve Divsion (78. R. D.) was tasked with quickly breaking through the lines at dawn and penetrating  as far as the northern edge of Bois de Remieres (see maps, left and below) to acquire prisoners and destroy abris (shelters) and supporting trenches.  Two Res. I. R. 259 Kompagnies augmented by members of Sturmbattalion.14 armed with Flammenwerfer (flamethrowers) were to execute the raid.  After a brief 30 minutes, Stosstruppen (storm troops)  were to return to the lines with MW and artillery ceasing fire 20 minutes later.  Major Bruns,  Res. I. R. 259 commander, issued his order for Einladung. The operation was to occur on 1 March using Stosstruppen and patrols.  Bruns named Hauptmann Seebohm as the assault commander to lead the Einladung attack. 

Click on Map to Enlarge

Post-Action Map Maj. Gen. Bullard Used to Describe Einladung Against His 1st Division

Col.  Frank Parker's 18th Infantry Was
the Main Target of the Raid
On 1 March at 0540, Einladung commenced with an artillery, Gaswerfer (gas shells), and (gas projector)  barrage saturating Colonel Frank Parker’s 18th Infantry holding the F Sector.   The barrage lasted a half-hour, annihilating positions, demolishing abris, caving in trench networks and cutting off wire communications.  Einladung was more noteworthy for the artillery exchange for than the infantry close combat.  In less than an hour the German barrage deluged four 75mm batteries with 300 shells each. A Gasschutz (gas barrage) of 720 Gaswerfer shells landed in the American trenches. Ten minutes after the Germans launched Einladung, the 5th Field Artillery 155mm commenced counter-battery against German batteries. Major Robert C. McCormick, commander of 1st Battalion, 5th Field Artillery, without waiting for the order, “knew it was an attack and opened fire.”  Major Robert McCormick was a former Illinois National Guard cavalry officer who was assigned to the 1st Division as a field artillery battery commander.  He is best known as the publisher of the Chicago Tribune newspaper. “As soon as I opened fire everybody else thought the order had been given and the whole brigade opened fire.” The 155mm heavies were also assisted by French 90mm and 95mm.  Sixth Field Artillery and 7th Field Artillery 75mm fired over 5000 rounds at 78. R. D. targets north of Bois de Remieres and other German batteries in the area.

A German Flammenwerfer Team

Major General Bullard, commander of the “Fighting First” Division forwarded a succinct assessment of the battle to Général Passaga on 2 March.  “The enemy entered our lines about 20 minutes after the barrage started.”  A brief description of the attack followed.  “About 50 men entered at Breach A, blew up one dugout, searched the trenches nearby and retired…About 100 raiders entered at Breach B, dividing into two parties.  One party moved west through trenches until met and repulsed by a platoon of Co. F/2.  The other party moved south until met and repulsed by a detachment of Co. F/1.  About 50 raiders entered at Breach C.  A portion reached the P.C. of Co. F/1 before being repulsed.  They blew up all dugouts en route with mobile charges.” First Division Commander Major General Bullard concluded the discussion on the enemy with “Practically all dugouts in subcenters F/1 were destroyed as well as a number in the eastern portion of subcenter F/2. The trenches were demolished.” As German artillery commenced registration fire, Colonel Frank Parker, 18th Infantry commander, was ordered to move their detachments out of the registered area.  When the attack commenced, the infantry groups that had withdrawn advanced and met the raiders in the open. Rifle and revolver fire drove them back. Bullard concluded on a sobering note—“If the garrisons of F/1 and F/2 had not been withdrawn as before explained, it is very probable that few would have survived the enemy’s bombardment.”

Typical 1st Division Trench in the Sector



Looking from the U.S Position at the Actual Area of the Assault

On 3 March 1918 Generalmajor von Stolzmann provided his assessment of Einladung. He emphasized that the Americans were totally surprised; they organized their position according to the principle of the outpost with the point of entry being thinly held and sentry posts withdrawing at first fire; coordination between American infantry and their artillery was perceived to be poor; and no enemy counter attacks followed. Key to the discussion was Besondere Erfahrungen [distinct experiences] that outlined for the German high command the most specific assessment to date of how Americans were adapting to operations in the southern Woëvre front and how well they fought against the first major planned German assault. He made it clear in his assessment that American close-in combat was very good effectively using machine guns, rifle, and hand grenades.  Generalmajor von Stolzmann noted that Stosstruppen gained an impression that the Americans resisted violently and surrendered with more difficulty than previous experience with the French in past raids.

Major Robert McCormick Showed
Great Initiative in the Raid
Around noontime, Major McCormick from 5th Field Artillery received a phone call from General Summerall’s headquarters ordering him to report immediately to the 1st Field Artillery Brigade.  McCormick left his battery on horseback and arrived when the general and his staff were being served lunch.  General Summerall stood up, offered his hand to McCormick, and stated aloud “Thank God there is one man in this outfit who knows when to disobey an order.”

General George Marshall later recalled Einladung. In a 1947 interview he remarked, 

Well, it was too bad that one platoon commander was so uncomfortable outside (it was cold), that he took his platoon back in and met the raiders head on.  And he lost, I think it was, ten prisoners.  The other platoon commanders carried out their orders absolutely. . They just shot up these raiders and we captured German prisoners…except for the loss of these few men by this platoon commander disobeying his orders and coming back into position at dawn, which is exactly the time the raid is carried out.  Of course, he was killed, so you couldn’t say very much about it.

Marshall remembered Einladung as an American victory.  

And here the Americans had met the first raid and won really a victory.  We had captured their flame fighters. We had captured—I think they had brought up even a gun—47-mm gun or something like that.  We captured a lot of them.  We took a number of prisoners.  We killed a great many, and it was altogether an American victory.” Marshall’s post-war written reminiscence had more luster. “Our men fought beautifully and viciously, and covered themselves with glory.  The result was apparently tremendously reassuring to the higher French officials.

German Prisoners Captured in the Sector

However, the most memorable recognition came from the French premier Clemenceau himself.  Leaving Paris, he arrived at the American sector at Ansauville on 3 March accompanied by Général Debeney, commander of Ire Armée.  A narrow road in a neighboring forest was selected for the ceremony.  The condition of the road required that Clemenceau leave his automobile and make the presentations a few feet from a line of troops along the road.  A light snow was falling.  Lieutenant John N. Greene, Lieutenant John L. Canby, First Sergeant William Norton, Sergeant Patrick Walsh, Private David Alvan Smiley, and Private Budie Pitman, of the 18th Infantry arrived covered in mud and residue from the battle.  

French Premier George Clemenceau Decorating Men of the 1st Division after the Raid

General Marshall recalled, 

It was altogether an American victory. Well, that was so unexpected and quite contrary to French assumptions about our troops—they had seen so many untrained troops—that Clemenceau himself came from Paris and came right up there and I escorted him.  He came up and he was giving Croix de Guerre.  He was a very old man and in doubtful health, but fortunately he had on rubber overshoes.  He gave these Croix de Guerre, but there was one fellow he didn’t get.  And as we were coming out—it was rather difficult because we had to walk beside the trucks and there was only a foot width of path along beside the trucks—this fellow [Private David Alvan Smiley] came loping down the road and he was yelling, “Wait for me, wait for me!”  He caught up.  He was about six feet two and gangling and, of course, covered with mud.  He had been through the raid and had done a very good stunt.  He had taken several prisoners and Clemenceau had the medal for him.  We had the name, and he was just yelling and yelling.  Clemenceau understood a little English.  When the fellow came up, we stood there beside the trucks, having a very hard time finding any place to stand.  And Clemenceau put this on him and shook his hand and said, You were called and you were late this morning.  But yesterday was what counted and you weren’t late yesterday,” and congratulated him.

This article is an excerpt from Terrence Finnegan's 2015 work, A Delicate Affair on the Western Front: America Learns How to Fight a Modern War in the Woëvre Trenches.  It can be ordered at the author's website:  terrencefinnegan.com