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Published byHector Billiter Modified over 9 years ago
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Trench Warfare
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The Canadian government wanted to encourage men to enlist for war. They said the war would be safe, hardly any fighting, a good lark and over by Christmas. They used advertising posters to encourage this idea! A picture of soldiers going ‘Over the Top’ Trench Warfare
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Posters always showed men ready and willing to fight. They never showed the boredom of the trenches or actual fighting taking place. Trench Warfare
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The reality of ‘going over the top’ was very different!
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How the uniform and equipment changed after just three weeks in the trenches…
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The Failed Schlieffen Plan… World War I officially began with the German army storming through Belgium, into France. At the First Battle of the Marne, Germany attacks and then retreats A stalemate occurs Trench Warfare
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Trench Warfare is battle in which both sides have dug trenches to stand their ground Artillery fire (cannon) was used to keep the enemy off- guard Trench Warfare
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Trenches were generally holes, dug about six feet deep Trenches were a lot like a maze on both sides, with bunkers used for communications and storing ammunition Trench Warfare
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Key 1.Communication Trench 2.Machine Gun Nest 3.Underground Bunker 4.Traverse 5.Wire Break 6.Listening Post + Trench Block
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Conditions in the Trenches No smiling and relaxed faces… No clean uniforms… Their equipment is scattered everywhere…Boredom and sleep are obvious…
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In the busier front-line sectors: – constant machine gun and artillery fire – Don’t peer over the edge of the trench Estimated 1/3 rd of the deaths for the Allied Powers were in the trenches. Conditions in the Trenches
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Shell fire Germans used mortar fire (large shells that explode on impact) against the allies These shell attacks were more deadly than gunfire Conditions in the Trenches
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Rats, which numbered in the millions infested the trenches These rats gorged themselves on human remains – As a result, some were as big as cats. Conditions in the Trenches
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Rats continued… A single rat could produce 900 offspring, so it was impossible to get rid of them What do you think rats contributed to the trenches?
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Conditions in the Trenches
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Lice, another problem with the trenches – Caused never-ending itching – Clothes that were “de- loused” almost always still had lice eggs on them Condition called Trench Fever – Caused by lice – Horrible fever/severe pain Conditions in the Trenches
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Trench foot: a fungal infection caused by standing in water for long periods of time Especially bad at the beginning of the war – Conditions improved in 1915 Conditions in the Trenches
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Poison Gas In 1915, the Germans began to use poisonous chlorine gas in some shell attacks The poisonous gas caused violent choking spells Conditions in the Trenches
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The Stench Chlorine gas from the gas attacks still lingered in many places Rotting carcasses lay around in their thousands. – For example, approximately 200,000 men were killed on the Somme battlefields, many of which lay in shallow graves Conditions in the Trenches
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