World War I Life in the Trenches All for One and One for All.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
-People were dying all the time -Many died for other reasons such as disease and infection -The idea of being killed at any time from sniper fire -Soldiers.
Advertisements

How did the U.S Help to Secure an Allied Victory in WWI?
Views from the Front Line. "We must looked out for our bread. The rats have become much more numerous lately because the trenches are no longer in good.
How was WWI different from previous wars? The War at a Stalemate Why was the war at a stalemate? –B–B–B–Both sides were dug in while engaging in the.
Aims: What living conditions were like for soldiers in the trenches.
WWI Life In The Trenches. Trench Lines Trench Diagram.
Trench Warfare.
Trench Warfare IB 20 th Century Topics. Trench Warfare  Both sides on the Western front dug themselves in, ending any possible chance of a quick war;
Trench Warfare. When the German advance was finally stopped outside of Paris they moved to a more defensive position This led to a race for the sea in.
Trench Warfare “Over the Top!”.
Trench Warfare By: Mitchell Mook. World War I, also known as the First World War was a world conflict that lasted for five years.The Allied Powers (British.
WARFARE DURING WORLD WAR I. The British government wanted to encourage men to enlist for war. They said the war would be safe, hardly any fighting, a.
Grade 10 History TRENCH WARFARE. The Canadian government wanted to encourage men to enlist for war. They said the war would be safe, hardly any fighting,
The Schlieffen Plan ►h►h►h►h Western and Eastern Fronts.
What were conditions in the trenches really like? Lesson Objective To understand the layout of a trench Key words Trench foot Camaraderie.
Snipers Communication trench Waterlogged Communication trench.
What was life like in the Trenches of World War One? Year 9.
Trench Warfare: Daily life in the trenches
Western Front Trench Warfare.
 Use all of the following words in 1 sentence. ◦ Imperialism, Militarism, Nationalism.
 The Great War was supposed to be a fairly short event and one of great movement.  This was not to be the case!  WW1 was known for its lack of movement.
The Treaty of London 1839: Why Britain declared war on Germany In 1839 Britain had signed an international treaty saying that Belgium would always.
Life in the Trenches. What are trenches? Trenches are heavily guarded ditches dug into the ground. The trenches used during WWI were the depth of just.
Canadian History 1201 November 18, Opening Moves In August 1914, Germany attempted to quickly knock France out of the war & capture Paris before.
Objective: To examine the horrors of trench warfare.
TRENCH WARFARE. How They Looked What the Trenches were like… Filled with water and mud Duckboards along the bottom of the trench No privacy Dead bodies.
British troops on the western front.
The Military Experience of World War I How did the U.S Help to Secure an Allied Victory in WWI?
Trench Warfare The intensity of World War I trench warfare meant about 10% of the fighting soldiers were killed. As in many other wars, World War I's.

#1.
The Reality of Trench Warfare in WWI. ► The Great War was expected to be a relatively short affair and, as with most wars, one of great movement. ► The.
Living In Mud Mehrnoush Rahrovani Mr. Robert More.
Illnesses Suffered World War Ⅰ Joanna Jianga.
The First World War Boys and Girls! War Savings Stamps Poster by James Montgomery Flagg
War Begins on the Western and Eastern Fronts World Wars Ms. Hamer September 15, 2009.
WORLD WAR I.  Britain Declared war on Germany in September 1914  Canada had to go to war because it was a British Colony.
Trench Warfare “Over the Top!”.
“Over the Top!” Trench Warfare. The Western Front.
Trench Warfare & The War at Sea
What were conditions in the trenches really like?
The First World War Boys and Girls! War Savings Stamps Poster by James Montgomery Flagg
Life in the Trenches Ms. Moran SWBAT: analyze different dangers of living in the trenches during WWI by answering questions based on notes, pictures, video.
Why Trench Warfare? Protection from machine gunfire “No Man’s Land” – empty area between trenches: open targets for enemy Trap enemy: mud pits, empty.
Canada in Battle How was Canada’s identity shaped though battle?
Please do the following: Take out your HW #2 to be checked Take out your HW #2 to be checked Take a look at your Intro feedback when you get your paragraphs.
Letter from a soldier in a trench in France, March Write a letter home to a member of your family. It could be your mother/father/sister/brother/loved.
Life in the Trenches WWI.
Objective: To examine the horrors of trench warfare.
Life in the Trenches.
Objective: To examine the horrors of trench warfare.
Trench Warfare The ugly side of WWI.
Life in the Trenches World War I.
Trenches and Technology
The Battles of the Great War Part 2
Life In The Trenches By Ms. Houselog.
Dysentery was especially bad at the start of the war
Trench Warefare.
10th Euro Studies The Race to the Sea Life in the trenches NONE
Trench Warfare Life of Soldiers U.S. Neutrality WW1
Photos and Quotes from WWI
KD: 2. Label each of the 15 parts. (15)
#1.
Hardships in the Trenches
Weapons and Life in the Trenches
Trench Warfare.
Era of the Great War Life in the trenches.
Life in the Trenches.
Trench Warfare WORLD WAR I
Presentation transcript:

World War I Life in the Trenches All for One and One for All

The First Year In the first year of the war, the soldiers on both sides thought of this as an adventure – it would all be over by Christmas. As such, they behaved with a certain human decorum that the senior officers simply could not allow. After this event the senior officers made it a court martial offence to “fraternize with the enemy”. Never again has a Christmas truce been declared.

Overall Conditions Overall the conditions that the soldiers lived in was terrible. In addition to all the conditions of war (shells dropping on them, snipers picking them off, charges across no-man’s land, etc), they also lived in mud. –The four years of the war were four of the wettest in France’s history. All the dirt that was churned up by the battles was then turned into mud by the rain.

Overall Conditions The food did not always make it up to the front lines, so the soldiers were always hungry. They often had to rely on hard tack, bully beef and weak tea for days They were always wet and dirty. This seems like a minor complaint, but it led to some very severe physical problems.

Body Lice Because the men were always dirty and had to wear the same clothes day and night for weeks or months at a time, they all suffered from lice. The lice left blotchy red marks all over the body, caused terrible itching, and caused the men’s bodies to take on a sour, stale smell.

Body Lice The lice also carried diseases. Fifteen percent of all “sick call” cases in the British army were the result of “Trench Fever” – caused by lice. Pyrrexhia (Trench Fever) caused shooting pains in the legs, followed by a very high fever. This was not fatal, but it was painful.

Body Lice Men used various methods to try to get rid of the lice, but nothing worked. Enough eggs always remained that within a few hours of wearing, the lice would be back. Running a hot stone or iron over the seams of the clothes often killed many of the eggs – but never all of them.

Body Lice Soldiers tried burning the lice with a candle – a tricky job if you aren’t practiced. The army provided “de-lousing” chambers where men could immerse the clothes in a chemical bath.

Body Lice The men often passed the time by pinching the lice between their fingers.

Trench Rats Because so many men died on the front, they were buried pretty much wherever they fell – if they were buried at all. The smell of the putrid rotting flesh was merely something the soldiers had to learn to deal with. The large amount of dead flesh attracted rats.

Trench Rats Rats feasted on the decomposing corpses of the dead soldiers. They more they ate, the larger they became. The rats could produce up to 880 offspring in one year, so the trenches were teaming with vermin.

Trench Rats The rats were more than an irritant to the soldiers – they drove them mad with frustration. Soldiers caught shooting rats could be charged with wasting ammunition.

Trench Rats One soldier describes his most horrific war memory thusly: “I saw some rats running from under the dead men’s greatcoats, enormous rats, fat with human flesh. My heart pounded as we edged towards one of the bodies. His helmet had rolled off. The man displayed a grimacing face, stripped of flesh; the skull bare, the eyes devoured and from the yawning mouth leapt a rat.”

Trench Foot Soldiers stood for hours in wet, muddy conditions. They lived in this filth for months at a time. Trench foot was an infection of the feet caused by exposure to cold, wet, dirty conditions.

Trench Foot The feet would lose their feeling, then start to turn either blue or red.

Trench Foot The infection would literally eat away the skin and cause massive growths to form on the foot. If left untreated, the infection could become gangrenous and need to be amputated.

Trench Foot The only prevention was to keep your feet dry and change your socks 2 – 3 times a day. This was not always possible in the trenches. In addition, it was believed that if you covered your feet with grease, they would become more “water proof”. This actually did work to a degree.

Trench Foot Trench foot was such a big problem that the British army made the condition of the men’s feet the personal responsibility of the commanding officers. If a soldier was found to have trench foot, it was the commanding officer who faced a court martial.

Trench Foot The men were ordered to carry extra socks and to dry their feet regularly. They were also ordered each day to go by twos into an area to apply grease made from whale-oil to each others feet. A battalion at the front could go through 10 gallons of whale-oil grease every day.

Sergeant Harry Roberts describes Trench foot like this: “Your feet swell to two or three times their normal size and go completely dead. You could stick a bayonet into them and not feel a thing. If you are fortunate enough not to lose your feet and the swelling begins to go down, it is then that the intolerable, indescribable agony begins. I have heard men cry and even scream with the pain and many had to have their feet and legs amputated.”