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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2014 2:12 pm
 


... resulting in a "salient" bump in the line ...one of the most infamous killing zones in history.


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 20, 2014 10:47 am
 


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ww1-arc ... -1914.html

Just a few interesting tid bits in the above.

10-20-1914 At 2 pm, the occupation army enters Brussels.


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 20, 2014 12:23 pm
 


stratos stratos:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ww1-archive/11034630/Daily-Telegraph-August-20-1914.html

Just a few interesting tid bits in the above.

10-20-1914 At 2 pm, the occupation army enters Brussels.



damn Telegraph, I delete my cookies for no paper.

uhhh, FWIW, the German army occupied Brussels on August 20th, not October 20.

Today, the German army is near Nieuport and Dixmude, on the coast.

And I got an eyewitness. :)



The German juggernaut smashed its way into Belgium on August 5, initially targeting Belgium's line of defensive fortresses. The Belgian army was forced to retreat and by August 20 the Germans entered Brussels on its way to France. The Belgians elected not to defend the city and the Germans marched through unhindered.

Richard Harding Davis was an American newspaper reporter and witnessed the German army's march through the city. We join his account as he sits at a boulevard cafe waiting for the German arrival:

"The change came at ten in the morning. It was as though a wand had waved and from a fete-day on the Continent we had been wafted to London on a rainy Sunday. The boulevards fell suddenly empty. There was not a house that was not closely shuttered. Along the route by which we now knew the Germans were advancing, it was as though the plague stalked. That no one should fire from a window, that to the conquerors no one should offer insult, Burgomaster Max sent out as special constables men he trusted. Their badge of authority was a walking-stick and a piece of paper fluttering from a buttonhole. These, the police, and the servants and caretakers of the houses that lined the boulevards alone were visible.

At eleven o'clock, unobserved but by this official audience, down the Boulevard Waterloo came the advance-guard of the German army. It consisted of three men, a captain and two privates on bicycles. Their rifles were slung across their shoulders, they rode unwarily, with as little concern as the members of a touring-club out for a holiday. Behind them so close upon each other that to
cross from one sidewalk to the other was not possible, came the Uhlans [cavalry], infantry, and the guns. For two hours I watched them, and then, bored with the monotony of it, returned to the hotel. After an hour, from beneath my window, I still could hear them; another hour and another went by. They still were passing.

Boredom gave way to wonder. The thing fascinated you, against your will, dragged you back to the sidewalk and held you there open-eyed. No longer was it regiments of men marching, but something uncanny, inhuman, a force of nature like a landslide, a tidal wave, or lava sweeping down a mountain. It was not of this earth, but mysterious, ghostlike. It carried all the mystery and menace of a fog rolling toward you across the sea.

The German army moved into Brussels as smoothly and as compactly as an Empire State express. There were no halts, no open places, no stragglers. For the gray automobiles and the gray motorcycles bearing messengers one side of the street always was kept clear; and so compact was the column, so rigid the vigilance of the file-closers, that at the rate of forty miles an hour a car could race the length of the column and need not stop - for never did a single horse or man once swerve from its course.

All through the night, like a tumult of a river when it races between the cliffs of a canyon, in my sleep I could hear the steady roar of the passing army. And when early in the morning I went to the window the chain of steel was still unbroken. It was like the torrent that swept down the Connemaugh Valley and destroyed Johnstown. This was a machine, endless, tireless, with the delicate organization of a watch and the brute power of a steam roller. And for three days and three nights through Brussels it roared and rumbled, a cataract of molten lead. The infantry marched singing, with their iron-shod boots beating out the time. They sang Fatherland, My Fatherland. Between each line of song they took three steps. At times 2000 men were singing together in absolute rhythm and beat. It was like blows from giant pile-drivers. When the melody gave way the silence was broken only by the stamp of iron-shod boots, and then again the song rose. When the singing ceased the bands played marches. They were followed by the rumble of the howitzers, the creaking of wheels and of chains clanking against the cobblestones, and the sharp, bell-like voices of the bugles.

More Uhlans followed, the hoofs of their magnificent horses ringing like thousands of steel hammers breaking stones in a road; and after them the giant siege-guns rumbling, growling, the mitrailleuses [machine guns] with drag-chains ringing, the field-pieces with creaking axles, complaining brakes, the grinding of the steel-rimmed wheels against the stones echoing and re-echoing from the house front. When at night for an instant the machine halted, the silence awoke you, as at sea you wake when the screw stops.

For three days and three nights the column of gray, with hundreds of thousands of bayonets and hundreds of thousands of lances, with gray transport wagons, gray ammunition carts, gray ambulances, gray cannon, like a river of steel, cut Brussels in two."


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 20, 2014 1:41 pm
 


Martin dang you are right I miss read what it was saying. My fault


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PostPosted: Mon Oct 20, 2014 1:52 pm
 


Heartbreaking wills of soldiers who died on the Western Front are revealed for the first time: 'To Beatrice, who would have been my wife'

Letters revealed to commemorate 100 years since the start of the war
Reveal loved ones of men and boys fighting on the Western Front in 1914
Many left possessions to their mothers signing off 'your ever loving son'
Others pledged estates to girlfriends and wives who they left behind


The heartbreaking wills of soldiers who fell on the Western Front have been revealed for the first time, 100 years after they were written.

The documents, some penned by boys as young as 14, offer a rare glimpse into what life was like for many of the soldiers before war began on July 28, 1914.

Among them are emotional farewells from teenagers to their mothers and romantic pledges from husbands and lovers leaving their possessions to the women they left at home.


Image

Image


Each member of the British and Commonwealth Army was required to compose a will following the outbreak of war.

Kept in their pocketbooks, many of the surviving documents bear signs of the battlefield be it bullet-holes or dust.

One letter, written by a Private Horace Henry Cook who died in the first battle of Ypres on November 1, 1914, reveals his love for a girlfriend he would never be able to make his wife.

Writing of Beatrice Brown from Westham, London, he instructed: 'She is to be treated in all possible respects as my wife, which would have been the case.'

Another soldier's final letter to his mother describes the torrid conditions endured by servicemen at the beginning of the First World War.

'We have to fight like tigers to get our food here.

'This war is going to be worse than I thought. Some seem to think it won't last a month and some say it will last three years.

'If I never come home again I leave the boy in your charge and I know you will do your best to him.

'I have got to make my will this afternoon. I shall make it out to you everything of what I possess. So if I go under and you do not get anything you must apply for it.


...more


































The last testaments of soldiers on the Western Front have been revealed to commemorate the centenary of the First World War

Each member of the British and Commonwealth Army was required to compose a will following the outbreak of war.

Kept in their pocketbooks, many of the surviving documents bear signs of the battlefield be it bullet-holes or dust.

One letter, written by a Private Horace Henry Cook who died in the first battle of Ypres on November 1, 1914, reveals his love for a girlfriend he would never be able to make his wife.


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PostPosted: Tue Oct 21, 2014 2:10 pm
 


Interesting read on aerial combat in WW1.

$1:
Some experience or a pilot’s licence — which was rare at the time — was needed to sign up. Training was rudimentary and while by the end of the war pilots would go to squadrons with between 30 to 50 hours in the air, at the start of the war it wasn’t usual for them to be deployed after only nine or 10 hours aloft.

“They used to call themselves the 20-Minute Club because the life expectancy of a new pilot in combat in 1916-17 was 20 minutes,” March said of the early pilots.


http://ww1.canada.com/faces-of-war/firs ... ded-legacy


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PostPosted: Tue Oct 21, 2014 2:34 pm
 


Two of my maternal grandmother's older first cousins made a name for themselves during WWI as pilots. Lt. Col. William Barker VC and Wilfrid 'Wop' May. I was in #50 Lt Col Barker VC Royal Canadian Air Cadets as a kid. His younger brother Orville was a frequent guest. For Oilers fans, Pocklington was a cousin to both.


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PostPosted: Wed Oct 29, 2014 10:52 pm
 


German forces begin an unprovoked invasion of Angola.

H.M.S. "Audacious" sunk by mine off coast of Donegal.
German cruiser "Emden" raids Penang Roads and sinks Russian cruiser "Zhemchug"
British hospital ship "Rohilla" wrecked off Whitby.

Serbian forces begin retreat from the line of the Drina.

Italian Cabinet resign. New Cabinet formed. Signor Salandra remains Premier.

Turkey commences hostilities against Russia. Turkish warships bombard Odessa, Sevastopol, and Theodosia.
Great Britain and France sever diplomatic relations with Turkey. British and French Ambassadors demand passports.
Allied Governments present ultimatum to Turkey.


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PostPosted: Sun Nov 02, 2014 10:28 pm
 


H.M.S. "Hermes" sunk by German submarine in Straits of Dover.
Austrian cruiser "Kaiserin Elizabeth" sunk in Tsingtau harbour.
Allied squadrons bombard forts at entrance of the Dardanelles.
German cruiser "Karlsruhe" sunk in the Atlantic by internal explosion.
German cruiser "Yorck" sunk by mine off the German coast.

First German naval raid on British coast near Gorleston and Yarmouth.
Grand Fleet ordered back to Scapa flow.


Russia declares war on Turkey.
"State of War" commences between Serbia and Turkey.

Battles of Messines and Armentières ends.


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PostPosted: Wed Nov 05, 2014 11:25 pm
 


Allied squadrons bombard forts at entrance of the Dardanelles.
British submarine "B.-11" proceeds two miles up the Dardanelles.
Great Britain and France formally declare war on Turkey.

Great Britain annexes Cyprus.

tomorrow:
Tsingtau capitulates to Japanese forces.


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PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2014 7:10 am
 


$1:
Tsingtau capitulates to Japanese forces.

They were after the beer, which is reeeeeally good.


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PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2014 5:45 pm
 


martin14 martin14:
German forces begin an unprovoked invasion of Angola.

H.M.S. "Audacious" sunk by mine off coast of Donegal.
German cruiser "Emden" raids Penang Roads and sinks Russian cruiser "Zhemchug"
British hospital ship "Rohilla" wrecked off Whitby.

Serbian forces begin retreat from the line of the Drina.

Italian Cabinet resign. New Cabinet formed. Signor Salandra remains Premier.

Turkey commences hostilities against Russia. Turkish warships bombard Odessa, Sevastopol, and Theodosia.
Great Britain and France sever diplomatic relations with Turkey. British and French Ambassadors demand passports.
Allied Governments present ultimatum to Turkey.



We knew an old Scottish guy (lived to be 101) who was a 17 year old RN midshipman during the bombardment of that Dardanelles. It went quite badly for the British and French and several sips were sunk or damaged. He was blown off the deck of a cruiser and his body was full of metal fragments for the rest of his life. He routinely set off alarms every time he flew some where. He was a serious Judo competitor right up to his late 80's .. authentic tough guy who never talked like a tough guy. He was the real deal, not the loud Hollywood version.


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PostPosted: Sun Nov 09, 2014 12:18 am
 


German cruiser "Emden" destroyed by H.M.A.S. "Sydney" at the Cocos Islands.
German gunboat "Geier" interned at Honolulu.
H.M.S. "Niger" sunk by German submarine off Deal.

The Sheikh ul Islam issues Fatwa declaring Jehad (Holy War) against all the Allies.
(well that's nothing new. ;))

Przemysl again isolated by Russian forces.
Memel (East Prussia) occupied by Russian forces.

Battle of the Yser ends, Dixmude stormed by German forces.

Battle of Nonneboschen (Ypres). Attack by German Guard repulsed.

This will be the last Battle of Movement in the Race to the Sea.
When this battle ends, the line from the Channel to Switzerland will be deadlocked.


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PostPosted: Sun Nov 09, 2014 5:59 am
 


EDITED FOR STUPIDITY


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PostPosted: Sun Nov 09, 2014 6:17 am
 


Yes indeed. Look where the highest scoring "Aces" came from ... the Dominions for the most part.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Wo ... _victories


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