Wwi and Tinned Bully Beef in Germany

What was life like in a Earth War One trench?

On the Western Forepart, the war was fought by soldiers in trenches.

Trenches were long, narrow ditches dug into the basis where soldiers lived.

They were very dingy, uncomfortable and the toilets overflowed. These conditions caused some soldiers to develop medical issues such as trench foot.

At that place were many lines of High german trenches on one side and many lines of Allied trenches on the other.

In the middle was no man's state, which soldiers crossed to attack the other side.

Soldiers were encouraged to wash their feet regularly and often had their anxiety inspected.

What things were in a trench?

Explore our interactive trench scene and click on different objects to observe out more than well-nigh them.

There are ten dissimilar objects to find. You tin use the question mark push to highlight them all.

A typical day in the trenches

  • 5am 'Stand up-to' (short for 'Stand-to-Arms', meaning to be on loftier-alert for enemy set on) half an hr before daylight
  • 5.30am Rum ration
  • 6am Stand-down half an 60 minutes afterwards daylight
  • 7am Breakfast (ordinarily salary and tea)
  • Later 8am Clean selves and weapons, tidy trench
  • Apex Dinner
  • Subsequently dinner Sleep and reanimation
  • 5pm Tea
  • 6pm Stand-to half an hr before dusk
  • half dozen.30pm Stand-down half an hour after dusk
  • half dozen.30pm onwards Work all night with some time for remainder (patrols, earthworks trenches, putting up spinous wire, getting stores)

Soldiers simply got to sleep in the afternoon during daylight and at dark for an 60 minutes at a time. During balance time they wrote messages and played card games.

Soldiers sleeping and writing letters.
Lookout our video to learn more nigh life in the trenches.

What items did soldiers keep in the trenches?

A World War One poster advertising British military uniform

Soldiers carried lots of equipment

This included a gas mask; weapons and ammunition; protective clothes like boots and a helmet; 'webbing equipment' which contained personal items like shaving kits and water bottles; and a shovel.

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The Christmas Truce

During the kickoff Christmas of the war, something unique happened in some parts of the Western front.

On Christmas Eve, soldiers from both sides put down their weapons and met in no human'due south land. They sang carols like 'Silent Dark' ('Stille Nacht' in German).

Men from both sides gave gifts to each other. The Germans gave sausages to the British and the British gave the Germans chocolates.

A colour postcard possibly produced to send Christmas greetings from the front line.
Illustration of a British army officer scoring a goal confronting a High german officer, circa 1914.

On Christmas Day, a British soldier kicked a football out of his trench and the Germans joined in. Information technology was reported that Germany won the match 3-ii.

The British Loftier Command did not agree with the truce. They fifty-fifty suggested the Germans were planning an set on. They were ignored and no guns were fired on Christmas Day 1914.

The truce lasted until the New year's day in some parts of the Western Front. Only it wasn't long before soldiers on both sides returned to life in the trenches.

There's more than to learn ...

British soldiers eating rations during the Battle of the Somme in October 1916

What was life similar in a Globe State of war One trench?

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Source: https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zqhyb9q/articles/z8sssbk

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