Epic Epochs
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rockyp77mk3: This Memorial Day please spare a thought for those who raised their right hands and put the nation and our freedoms above their own personal comfort and safety, never to return.
Image: IWM (Q 1601) British troops returning from leave, Mailly Maillet, November 1916. The group of soldiers includes men of the Lancashire Fusiliers, York and Lancaster Regiment, and the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment (West Riding).
Image: IWM (Q 2983) British troops carrying hot food in containers. A scene at dinner time in a very muddy street in Mailly-Maillet, 24th April 1917.
Image: IWM (Q 720) A British mounted sentry outside Cafe Jordan, Mailly Maillet, 28th June 1916.
Image: IWM (Q 728) General Beauvoir De Lisle, GOC 29th Division, in conversation with another General; Mailly-Maillet, 29 June 1916. The British had great success with little bush wars and Colonial scraps during the previous twenty years, but nothing prepared them for an enemy that could hit them in the commercial running of their Empire. The Germans began to fray the million little trade agreements, but it was America, in World War II, that finished it. Roosevelt cut the Empire apart not because of any moral, or high ideal, but simply to open doors for American business.
Portrait of Bayonet Exercise Class, Staff Sergeant Major Stock.
Image: IWM (Q 1596) British Artillerymen drinking soup obtained from a Y.M.C.A. stall, Mailly Maillet, October 1916.
Tractor towing one of the Royal Navy motor boats over the first bridge built by the British naval forces near Fungurume after repair by the local tribesmen.
Portrait of an unidentified Australian Infantryman in full uniform and kit, carrying a .303 rifle with bayonet attached.
Portrait of unidentified member of the 4th Division wearing a gas respirator bag around his neck. Interesting thing about the Australians: they sent five divisions to France during the Great War or about 300,000 men. However, the Australians voted against a draft in October 1916 and again in December 1917. As men in those divisions were eliminated, the men were not replaced and those divisions became hors de combat.
Gunnery Officer, Sub Lieutenant Crabbe and Midshipman Isaac RNR in the aircraft carrier HMS Vindex’s dinghy.
306 Siege Battery, Royal Garrison Artillery
Unidentified regiment in their new greatcoats.
orphic222: WORLD WAR ONE slang !
Villa Trento hospital staff in the Spring of 1916. From left to right: (standing) L Underwood, D Carey, H Smeets, D Ewbank, M Haines, E Spackman, K Kennedy, E Gibson, L Struthers, R Bonar, C Payton, Sybil Reeves, D Wroughton; (seated) Sister Maskell, Sister Price, Sister Murray, E Partridge, E Ewbank; (front) R Sessions, J Hislop, E Seabrooke.
karagin22:
Captain GF Malley, Australian Flying Corps standing next to his Sopwith Camel in 1918. Image is in the public domain.
148th American Aero Squadron field. Making preparations for a daylight raid on German trenches and cities - NARA - 530739 (restored).png
captain-price-unofficially: Italian 149mm gun at Forte del Col Vaccer. 30 Dec 1915
Commander E. L. Rhoades RNR, officer commanding HMS Guendolen on Lake Nyasa (Lake Malawi). HMS Guendolen commanded by Captain Edward Rhoades, above won the first naval action of WW1.