Bangkok Post

WORLD WAR I INNOVATION­S STILL WITH US A CENTURY LATER PORTABLE X-RAYS

The world’s first mechanised war introduced enhanced weaponry and equipment, most of it designed to take lives but some of it aimed at saving lives — many of which we take for granted today

- By Chris Carola

Machine guns. Tanks. Chemical weapons. Warplanes. Submarines. Trench coats. Wristwatch­es. April 6 marked the 100th anniversar­y of the US entry into World War I, and some of the innovation­s that were developed or came into wide use during the conflict are still with us today.

America entered nearly three years after the war began, joining Britain, France and Russia in the fight against Germany and the Austro-Hungarian Empire. When it ended on Nov 11, 1918, more than 4.7 million Americans served and some 115,000 died.

The world’s first mechanised war introduced enhanced weaponry and equipment, most of it designed to take lives but some of it aimed at saving lives. Here’s a look at some of the things that were new to the doughboys that we take for granted today:

MACHINE GUNS

Hand-cranked, high-capacity, rapid-firing firearms had been used as far back as the Civil War. But it was American inventor Hiram Maxim’s 1880s design for a single-barrel, portable machine gun and other later versions that became ubiquitous on both sides during World War I. It forced opposing forces to dig hundreds of miles of trenches, with a deadly “no man’s land” in between where soldiers could get mowed down.

This kind of fighting was unfamiliar to most American forces, who had been trained in the tactics of mobile warfare, always advancing. “Then it becomes, ‘How do we get out of the trenches?’,” said Maj Kyle Hatzinger, a history instructor at the Military Academy at West Point. “The Americans by 1917 have to figure this out.”

TANKS

One way to break out of the trenches along the Western Front was to bust through with newly developed armored tracked vehicles dubbed tanks. The British introduced a large number of tanks to the battlefiel­d for the first time in September 1916, during the battle of the Somme. Other armies soon were developing their own versions. In September 1918, a 32-year-old army lieutenant colonel named George Patton led a US tank unit into battle for the first time. A quarter century later, during World War II, he was the most famous commander of American armoured units.

CHEMICAL WEAPONS

Germany launched the first use of a chemical weapon, chlorine gas, at Ypres, Belgium, in April 1915, against French troops. By 1917 other chemicals, including mustard gas, were being used by both sides. Some estimates put the number of deaths from gas attacks at about 900,000, with another one million injured. Gas masks were developed. But using gas could result in friendly fire casualties when winds blew the toxic fumes back into the attackers’ positions.

“And if you attack you now have to go through the gas cloud you’ve created,” Hatzinger said. “There’s a lot of trial and error with the technology.”

Outrage over the use of chemical weapons in WWI led to the 1925 Geneva Protocol treaty that banned the use of chemical or biological weapons in internatio­nal armed conflicts.

AIR WARFARE

A little more than a decade after the Wright Brothers flew their first airplane, WWI combatants took to the skies to spy on one another — and then to shoot each other down. Early in the war, aircraft were equipped with cameras for taking reconnaiss­ance photograph­s. Pilots started arming

There’s a lot of trial and error with the trench warfare technology KYLE HATZINGER HISTORY INSTRUCTOR AT WEST POINT

themselves with handguns and rifles to shoot down enemy biplanes. Soon, mounted machine guns were being used in aerial combat known as dogfights, giving rise to such legendary fighter aces as Germany’s Manfred von Richthofen (aka “The Red Baron”), American Eddie Rickenback­er and Canada’s Billy Bishop.

SUBMARINES

Using submersibl­e vessels to attack enemy ships had been tried as far back as the American Revolution. It wasn’t until WWI that submarines were used in large numbers as part of naval operations. Germany was the first nation to fully utilize submarine technology, attacking Allied shipping in the Atlantic and infamously sinking the British ocean liner RMS Lusitania off the Irish coast in May 1915, killing 1,200 people, including 128 Americans. The outcry from the US over the attack prompted Germany to shift much of its submarine attacks elsewhere.

But the Germans resumed submarine attacks in early 1917 and sank several US vessels, one of the key reasons for America entering the war.

BARBED WIRE

Invented in post-Civil War America for Midwestern homesteade­rs to confine their livestock, the strands of twisted wire with sharpened spurs could also be used to keep soldiers from reaching an enemy’s positions. During WWI it was placed in front of trenches or arranged in such a way that enemy ground assaults were funnelled into areas covered by machine gun and artillery fire. Barbed wire fences were ubiquitous on the Western Front, where snared soldiers made easy targets for smallarms fire. Radiology pioneer Marie Curie is credited with coming up with the idea of loading X-ray machines onto vehicles and driving to the front lines outside Paris to treat wounded French soldiers.

The fleet of modified vehicles she assembled served as mobile X-ray units that were credited with saving thousands of lives. Today’s military medical support units can take the high-tech versions as close to the fighting as possible to examine wounded soldiers before sending them to larger field hospitals.

TRENCH COATS AND WRISTWATCH­ES

They weren’t fashion accessorie­s. Trench coats replaced the earlier era’s full-length, woolen great coats, which became heavy when wet.

British officers serving in the trenches turned to establishe­d English clothing firms such as Burberry and Aquascutum for khaki-coloured, waterproof coats with deep pockets large enough to hold maps and a belt at the waist with metal D-rings for attaching gear.

Wristwatch­es had been around in some form for decades, mostly as jewellery worn by women, but they became standard equipment for soldiers and pilots who didn’t want to be fumbling for the traditiona­l pocket watch while launching artillery-supported ground assaults or flying combat missions.

WOMEN IN UNIFORM

WWI was the first time in the nation’s history that women were officially attached to branches of the US military, and more than 30,000 served in uniform, mostly as nurses or switchboar­d operators. Thousands of other women joined the various stateside private organisati­ons aiding the war effort, and they also wore uniforms.

A cartoon in popular Life magazine at the time showed two American soldiers looking at a young woman working at a desk job. “What will you do after the war if you can’t get your old job back?” one asked. The other replied: “Marry the girl who’s holding it down.”

PATRIOTIC PROPAGANDA

American James Montgomery Flagg created the now-famous poster of a pointing Uncle Sam under the words “I Want You”. Some 4 million copies of the US version of the Army recruitmen­t poster were printed in 1917-18, according to the Library of Congress website. The poster proved so popular it was re-introduced during World War II, when millions more were printed.

Similarly popular was George M Cohan’s jaunty wartime ditty Over There,’ which proudly spread word to Europe that “the Yanks are coming”. More than two million copies of the song’s sheet music were sold by the end of the war.

 ??  ?? AIRBORNE: US fighter pilot Eddie Rickenback­er poses with his Spad. Airplanes were employed at first for rec
AIRBORNE: US fighter pilot Eddie Rickenback­er poses with his Spad. Airplanes were employed at first for rec
 ??  ?? ANSWERING THE CALL: Men enlist shortly after President Woodrow Wilson declared war on Germany.
ANSWERING THE CALL: Men enlist shortly after President Woodrow Wilson declared war on Germany.
 ??  ?? SERIOUS FIREPOWER: Courtney Burns, director of the New York State Military Museum, holds a German 1918 Maxim MG-08 light machine gun.
SERIOUS FIREPOWER: Courtney Burns, director of the New York State Military Museum, holds a German 1918 Maxim MG-08 light machine gun.
 ??  ?? TO THE POINT: The classic recruiting poster created by illustrato­r James Montgomery Flagg.
TO THE POINT: The classic recruiting poster created by illustrato­r James Montgomery Flagg.
 ??  ?? onnaissanc­e, but air battles soon followed as each side tried to shoot down the enemy’s observatio­n planes.
onnaissanc­e, but air battles soon followed as each side tried to shoot down the enemy’s observatio­n planes.
 ??  ?? HOLD YOUR BREATH: German Red Cross workers help those who have succumbed to a gas attack.
HOLD YOUR BREATH: German Red Cross workers help those who have succumbed to a gas attack.
 ??  ?? UNIFORMITY: Two female members of the US Navy’s Yeoman unit pose in their chin strap hats, tie, jacket and long skirt in New York City.
UNIFORMITY: Two female members of the US Navy’s Yeoman unit pose in their chin strap hats, tie, jacket and long skirt in New York City.
 ??  ?? TANKS A LOT: A British tank uproots a large tree before the advance of the tank battle at Cambria during World War I.
TANKS A LOT: A British tank uproots a large tree before the advance of the tank battle at Cambria during World War I.

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