If your really interested in WW1, the only way to really understand and comprehend it, is to visit europe and the battlefields of france belgium and germany. it's an experience that'll bring home just how recent it was.
[color=#003300]Your granfather was about the age of my grandmother who joined the RC Nurse's Corps at the beginning of the war. She was about to be shipped to France out of Halifax when my great-grandmother had her located and squeeled on her actual age (16). At war's end she married my grandad (he'd now be 116).My grandfather served in France with the US 3rd Army in the last year of that war... he'd be 109 if he were still alive!
Welcome to the not-so-wonderful world of feeling old...
It gets worse, trust me! ;D
My grandfather served in France with the US 3rd Army in the last year of that war... he'd be 109 if he were still alive!
I have remnants of my great-grandfather's services in WW1 - apparently he was a merchant vessel captain or officer (I think) and quite recently my grandfather gave me a book dating from the time of WW1 containing instructions to merchant vessels in time of war. It's weighted with lead so that if the ship was being captured or sunk the book could be thrown over the side and it would sink, thus meaning it wouldn't fall into German hands... his dad (my great-grandad) was issued it, at the end of the war he was presented with it as a memoir when it was declassified, and it's been in the family since. It's incredible... you hear all about the war, zig-zagging in submarine areas, etc from second hand sources, and here I am holding a book that is genuine and real and comes from that era.
It contains a hell of a lot of complicated information such as various recommended zig-zag courses for different situations... quite an incredible item. It shall be much treasured I am sure.
An 18 year old soldier at the beginning of WWII would now be 86 or 87, depending on the month they were born...
Now there's food for thought..
An 18 year old soldier at the beginning of WWII would now be 86 or 87, depending on the month they were born...
Now there's food for thought..
Unless they lied, which was relatively common it seems.
Indeed. It was more common in WWI.Unless they lied, which was relatively common it seems.An 18 year old soldier at the beginning of WWII would now be 86 or 87
Things were a lot different then. I often wonder if young boys would do the same thing today.
It's a little more than that, really, with a perspective quite apparent to the U.K. Today's U.K. is a comparative welfare state. WW1 was on the tail of the Victorian era where the military was not just a possible route to glory; it was the closest to a fringe benefit job for the middle/lower classes at the time. The civilian arena rarely guaranteed any form of workmen's comp, let alone any other insurance benefit; it was not common for the average worker to have a job where his medication, meals and housing was the responsibility of the company (however meagre that actually was in a battle situation) and, with little added benefits on any civilian job, that had more import than it does now. Even the average homefront (family life) was different (and, just as Hagar can tell you that this was different in his youth, it also was a generation or two before him).Speaking from the perspective of a 14-year old... I don't reckon most would. Reason; because WW1 and WW2 happened, and so much is known about them as common knowledge.Things were a lot different then. I often wonder if young boys would do the same thing today.
[color=#003300]It's a little more than that, really, with a perspective quite apparent to the U.K.Speaking from the perspective of a 14-year old... I don't reckon most would. Reason; because WW1 and WW2 happened, and so much is known about them as common knowledge.Things were a lot different then. I often wonder if young boys would do the same thing today.
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