It was 4 years of trench warfare. It was caused by the fail of the schlieffen plan. The trenchs are in between france and germany. In the western front there was stalemate and it didnt get better. They were filled with mud and rats the sizes of cats and not much food. It was ether you die or get something that will drive you crazy. The eastern front was more mobile than the western. Tanks help the soilders more than the trenches. In the western front men are writing letters back from there family say ‘ hi mom im still alive but it wont be long’. That soilder knew that in the conditions he was living and hiw the war was going he wasnt going to live for that long. In the eastern front some had nice meal and not mud. Sometimes they even had water
The Western Front was the main location of war during World War 1. The outcome of the battles resulted in the formation of a battle front, which saw three years of warfare in 1915, 1916 and 1917, with only a few months of mobile warfare at the start and at the end of four years of fighting.
The Western Front was a series of trenches the Germans built that span through 700 Kilometres of land. These trenches ran from the Belgian coast to the Swiss border. Many battles were fought in this piece of land but in the end they reached a stalemate.
The grim reality of living in muddy, rat-infested trenches epitomizes the brutal and prolonged nature of this new form of combat. Soldiers endured constant peril from enemy fire, disease, malnutrition, and psychological trauma, locked in a deadly stalemate that exacted a heavy toll on both sides. In the document packet, document 4 talks about how trench warfare got very severe and how the introduction of new machinery changed warfare too when gasses were made and added into the fight. Its effect on the French was a violent nausea and faintness, followed by an utter collapse. It is believed that the Germans, who charged in behind the vapor, met no resistance at all, the French at their front being virtually paralyzed” This shows how trench warfare got extreme and soldiers were left injured in many ways if not
It was a war like no other, with the use of gas and other new technology which allowed opposing sides to kill each other in large numbers with incredible speed. Joseph Boyden's use of vivid and expressive language gave the reader every tool they needed in order to really feel as though they were experiencing the war for themselves. At Verdun, Germans would cut barbed wire and use flamethrowers to clear out enemy machine-gun posts. These flamethrowers were easy targets due to the large tank on their back. (http://online.wsj.com/ww1/flamethrowers) Boyden used this small piece of information which could have easily been looked past; as a result, it only helped build the story and really allow the reader to experience what it might have been like to witness this type of weapon. "Before I can get off the ground and aim at the fire shooter, a couple of men in the trench do it. One of them hits the tank… A fiery explosion shoots up into an orange-and-black ball of flame. He is unrecognizable lying there, gasping, the pink inside his mouth the only colour that stands out against the oozing and charred black of his body." As I continued to read the book, the more I realized how much of a struggle it must have been to get up each and every day and muster up the will to keep fighting. If it wasn't the Germans, than it was the environment. With harsh rains, cold nights, wet trenches, and almost useless equipment. Private Donald Fraser of the Canadian
The long period that the soldiers had to spend within the trenches,normally because dirty rain flood,with soaked shoes in mud puddles,rats and decomposing bodies,caused the
World War I was known for its very slow-paced battle and the stage of stalemate. After advancing from Germany on France, battle turned into trench warfare. Trench Warfare is a defensive strategy in a field where the army stays in rows of trenches that were placed along the Western Front during the war. The use of trenches during the Great War was a very significant tactic during battle, by making soldiers hidden but exposed just enough to be able to attack the enemy. On a daily basis, life in the trenches was very scary and filled with horror. Death was upon the soldiers even if there was nobody attacking them. There was a continuous shell fire that would randomly take the lives of many. Some men died on their first day in the trenches, and very few were lucky to make it out unharmed. Shell fire was not the only issue in the trenches. There were plenty of diseases and infections spreading around like a wildfire. Many soldiers got infections and diseases that could not be treated such as Trench Foot or Trench Fever. Although trench warfare acts as a great defensive and offensive measure, it became very dangerous because of the many different causes of death including shell fire, diseases, and infections.
The Western Front was a series of trenches the Germans built that span through 700 Kilometres of land. These trenches ran from the Belgian coast to the Swiss border. Many battles were fought in this piece of land but in the end they reached a stalemate.
This was when people were in essentially big holes in the ground with barricades in front of them. Trench life was very hard because you watched your friends die, and had to just see them lie there when it wasnt safe to move their bodies, you were in the trenches for hours on end, and typically were attacked straight in the trenches instead of in the middle of the battlefield. There were rats that picked at human remains, and the smell of rotting flesh. "No Man's Land" was the land between two fronts, not claimed by either
That summer was especially harsh on both sides. The casualty lists were extremely lengthy as the two sides faced off in some of the deadliest engagements of the war.
World War I was known for its very slow-paced battle and the stage of stalemate. After advancing from Germany on France, battle turned into trench warfare. Trench Warfare is a defensive strategy in a field where the army stays in rows of trenches that were placed along the Western Front during the war. The use of trenches during the Great War was a very significant tactic during battle, by making soldiers hidden but exposed just enough to be able to attack the enemy. On a daily basis, life in the trenches was very scary and filled with horror. Death was upon the soldiers even if there was nobody attacking them. There was a continuous shell fire that would randomly take the lives of many. Some men died on their first day in the trenches, and very few were lucky to make it out unharmed. Shell fire was not the only issue in the trenches. There were plenty of diseases and infections spreading around like a wildfire. Many soldiers got infections and diseases that could not be treated such as Trench Foot or Trench Fever. Although trench warfare acts as a great defensive and offensive measure, it became very dangerous because of the many different causes of death including shell fire, diseases, and infections.
The Western Front was the name the Germans gave to a series of trenches that ran 700 kilometres from the Belgian coast to the Swiss border. To imagine this, think of a ditch deep enough to stand in zigzagging its way alongside the Hume Highway from Melbourne to Canberra. As at Gallipoli, machine-gun fire caused terrible casualties on the Western Front. Both sides had dug trenches, sometimes only metres apart, as their only protection from the murderous gun fire. But they were never safe from the explosive artillery shells that rained down on the front line soldiers every few seconds for days at a time. The British High Command needed troops urgently. So after the Gallipoli veterans were rested in Egypt, and had been strengthened by the ‘fair
While the soldiers were on the front-line, they experienced individually and collectively the brutalities of war, which either damaged them physically, mentally or both. If something of that sort was to occur, the best thing that the soldiers could do was to try their best to cope with what they had to deal with, and they did such in many different ways. Soldiers were affected by the devastation and fear of artillery, as they were either killed or hurt as they were bombarded. If a solider encountered a shell explosion, it resulted in lost limbs, shell shock, and even death. Soldiers were also positively affected by the war as it developed them as experienced war veterans.
2. What were the main· features of trench warfare for the troops involved? What would happen to people who managed to live through this experience?
The dying and killing was the factor that changed the individuals the most during the war. People would see friends and comrades die at the hands of their own countrymen. Most would prepare before battle as if it would be the last thing they were going to do because for most of them it would be. Even though they prepared sometimes it wasn’t enough they would just be taken from this world and it
On June 26, the first 14,000 U.S infantry troops landed in France and began training for combat. A stalemate lasted for several years on the western front; this was mainly due to the weaponry used during the war. Miles of trenches were dug into the ground and supported by machine guns; many deaths occurred in order for either side to advance. There were a staggering total of 320,518 American casualties during the time span of the war (History.com, 2010).