The Great War in Africa - for those interested in the subject, I highly recommend this book
http://www.amazon.com/Great-War-Africa-1914-1918/dp/0393305643
http://www.amazon.com/Great-War-Africa-1914-1918/dp/0393305643
The astonishing diaries of a First World War captain whose company was slaughtered on the Western Front have been discovered after remaining hidden in a wardrobe for 40 years.
The journal of Capt Edwin Vaughan, detailing the Battle of Ypres in 1917 in which his band of 90 men were decimated to just 15, has been published, graphically throwing light on the battlefield carnage .
He notes how a fellow officer was overcome with a feeling of 'this is the end of us' when they received orders to advance across No Man's Land. He was killed by a shell a short time later.
How sad!Archaeologists in France recently discovered the remains of 21 German soldiers from World War I in an underground shelter that hasn't been touched since the day it was destroyed by French shells 93 years ago. Pocket books and prayer beads tell stories of life in the trenches -- but Germany doesn't want to hear them.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,794103,00.html
Tomorrow night millions of viewers will see this grim existence in the BBC adaptation of Birdsong, the Sebastian Faulks novel which tells the story of an officer who fights alongside a tunneller at Messines.
Although fiction, Birdsong draws heavily on the experiences of men like Sapper William Hackett. Like many tunnellers, Hackett was a pitman by trade, who responded to calls for skilled miners on the Western Front.
At the age of 41 he was too old for the infantry – yet on October 25, 1915, he was accepted by the Royal Engineers. After a fortnight’s training at Chatham, Kent, he was sent to France.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/tv-and-radio/2012/jan/22/birdsong-tunnel-warfare-sebastian-faulksTo create a realistic portrayal of this deadly underground battle for the book's television adaptation, the producers built an accurate replica of part of the vast network of tunnels. They believe this is the first time this has been attempted.
The detailed reconstruction was aided by Peter Barton, a first world war archaeologist and historical writer, who has made the subject his life's work. Barton, employed as a consultant on the drama – judged too difficult to film for years – supplied Birdsong's director, Philip Martin, with scale drawings and plans from his excavations. Only then could a set of tunnels be built in a Budapest studio.
http://whyy.org/cms/radiotimes/2013/05/24/remembering-the-doughboys-of-wwi/When we remember American veterans who served in war, we often forget of those who fought in the first World War. For over a decade, writer RICHARD RUBIN traveled across America searching for living veterans of the WWI. The men and women Rubin found ranged in age from 101 to 113. Today, all of the veterans of the American Expeditionary Forces have died – the last surviving WWI vet died in 2011– but Rubin was able to talk with many of them and learn about their remarkable experiences. He recounts their stories and history of the war in his new book, “The Last of the Doughboys: The Forgotten Generation and Their Forgotten World War.”
Every Memorial Day weekend, a ceremony takes place just outside Paris to honor a group of Americans who fought in France. They're not D-Day veterans, but a little known group of pilots who fought for France in World War I, before the U.S. entered the war. This year's ceremony in the tiny town of Marnes-la-Coquette began with a flyover by two French air force Mirage fighter jets from the Escadrille Lafayette, or Lafayette Squadron, paying tribute to the men who founded the group nearly 100 years ago.