Phillip Jones March 15, 2005 Essay #1 During World War I, trench warfare was very common. It was a newer technique in battles as in wars prior to the Great World War, fighting was less invasive and men merely marched at each other from opposite ends of fields and fought until only one side remained standing or a white flag was hung high in surrender. In fact in older wars, the fighting was far less dangerous to the point where battles were often times viewed by locals who watched from side lines with really no threat of getting hurt. In World War I however, the fighting had up scaled to the most sadistic type the world had ever experienced. With the industrialist wave that had overcome us in the late 1800 s into the early 1900 s, many technological advancements made the war a lot harsher of a scenario. Mass weaponry was being created in factories all across Europe to use for the war, and so the “old wars,” of much less casualties and danger were in the past, and the “new war,” or first World War was at the present, with heavy war machinery and severe casualties.
The picture in the Stearns text book on page 808 displays a group of soldiers during World War I in the trenches, their homes and in most cases-their death beds during combat. In this picture it is clear to see that life in the trenches was dismal and uncomfortable. Trenches were basically dug out pieces of land that soldiers fought from and sought refuge in upon returning attacks. They were not fun places to live and consisted of numbers of men packed tightly together in constant fear of their lives being taken from them before they could ever return home to their families, if they were lucky enough to reach that day! Through the expressions on these men’s faces in the picture, one can see that the trenches were very uncomfortable and unlikely.
The Essay on World War One – Trench Warfare – Describing The Horrific Conditions
Introduction World War 1 was like nothing that had ever happened in the world before. Although it was inevitable, the horrific loss of life was pointless. Almost no-one except the politicians ruling agreed with it, which has been proven by soldier’s diaries, and most famously the football match between the British and the Germans on Christmas Day 1914. All-in-all, World War 1 resulted in a ...
The men look dirty and tired in their cave like surroundings. Disenchanted with the lives they led and the war they were there to fight, the soldiers do not look at ease or positive about their current situation. They sit cramped on the ground with no smiles or grins for the photographer of this picture. There is rubble all around them, somewhat signifying their lives as they miss their homes and families and watch their closest friends die or suffer from deadly battle wounds beside them. In this picture the men’s poses look famished and weak, as you can imagine there was no fine dining in line for them, only minimal food and beverage they often time shared with nuisance rodents unwillingly. They seem to sit in waiting for the next attack to befall them in their soiled uniforms and delusional faces.
Their ora suggests a lot about the World War they were fighting in; bleak, miserable, slow, costly, and vulnerable. All characteristic to the nature of the changes that occurred in the new and vicious type of warfare in World War I. As Europe switched into War mode, everyone’s lives were altered around the new concentration. As men went off to fight, sit in waiting, and die in these awful trenches, their wives and children went into the factories.
The countries in Europe, especially the main powers at war such as Germany, Austria-Hungary, France, Great Britain, Russia and Serbia, turned in to war focused economies. All the uniforms, bags, canteens, weapons, and other materials seen in the picture surrounding the men were the labor of their countries’ citizens. The nature of war during World War I was strongly felt and bonded even the most different of p.