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TRENCH WARFARE

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TRENCH WARFARE How They Looked How They Looked What the Trenches were like Filled with water and mud Duckboards along the bottom of the trench No privacy Dead ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: TRENCH WARFARE


1
TRENCH WARFARE
2
How They Looked
3
How They Looked
4
What the Trenches were like
  • Filled with water and mud
  • Duckboards along the bottom of the trench
  • No privacy
  • Dead bodies often left for days at a time
  • Filled with rats and other rodents

5
  • A Duckboard is a platform made of wooden slats
    built over muddy ground to form a dry passageway.

A Duckboard is a
6
Trench foot is a medical condition caused by
prolonged exposure of the feet to damp,
unsanitary and cold conditions
7
Symptoms of Trench foot
  • Infected feet
  • Numb
  • turning red or blue as a result of poor vascular
    supply
  • decaying odor
  • swelling
  • Advanced stages involves
  • Blisters and open sores
  • Fungal infections (jungle rot).
  • Untreated, trench foot usually results in
    gangrene which usually means amputation.
  • If treated properly, complete recovery is normal.
    There is some pain and trench foot leaves
    sufferers more susceptible to it in the future.

8
no coming back from this one
9
Soldiers died
  • Falling off duckboards into the mud
  • Buried alive
  • Suicide
  • Killed by enemy snipers
  • From diseases
  • From lack of food

10
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11
Duties in the Trenches
  • Replace barbed wire in No mans Land so done
    at night to avoid detection
  • Repair flooded trenches
  • Move supplies
  • Often men were bored and simply waiting for a
    battle

12
  • No man's land is a term for land that is
    unoccupied or is under dispute between parties
    that leave it unoccupied due to fear or
    uncertainty.
  • First World War the area of land between two
    enemy trenches
  • No one wanted to take control of due to fear of
    being attacked by the enemy in the process.

13
Alls Quiet on the Western front
  • http//video.google.com/videoplay?docid7300946306
    109319965

14
The Battle of Ypres
  • April 1915 in Belgium (near city of Ypres, in
    region of Flanders)
  • Task to hold 3.5 km of the line in the face of
    heavy German attack
  • This battle saw the first use of chlorine gas by
    the Germans
  • Canadians used makeshift gas masks to hold the
    line with British reinforcements
  • 6000 Canadian casualties (dead, missing, or
    wounded)
  • The poem In Flanders Fields was written at this
    battle by Doctor John McCrae

15
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16
The Battle of the Somme
  • July to November 1916 in France
  • Canadians fought as part of British forces, led
    by Sir Douglas Haig
  • Allies used old tactics and were mowed down by
    German machine gun fire disaster!
  • 58,000 Allied casualties in one day
  • First use of tanks broke through barbed wire
    and gave Allies the advantage
  • After 5 months gained only 8 km

17
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18
Battle of Vimy Ridge
  • April 1917
  • Canadas greatest victory succeeded where French
    and British had failed
  • Well-prepared -used planes to gather information
    and constructed model ridge to practice
  • 100,000 Canadians led attack
  • New strategy called leap-frogging meant troops
    werent as tired
  • 11,000 Canadian casualties
  • Morale boost for Canada, beginning of national
    pride

19
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20
Battle of Passchendaele
  • November 1917, near Ypres in Belgium
  • Bitter disaster for Canadians
  • Incredible mud horses and men sucked in and
    drowned
  • Canadians led by Sir Arthur Currie, a Canadian
  • 16000 Allied troops dead, 8000 Canadian
    casualties
  • Gained only 7 km of mud that was soon lost again

21
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22
The last 100 Days
  • August to November 1918
  • USA entered the war, Germany desperate
  • Germany launched huge attack along the Western
    Front
  • Advanced within 80km of Paris but stopped by
    Allied counter attack (including Canadians)
  • France and Belgium liberated
  • Canadians defeated a quarter of the German army
    more than American force that was 6 times as big
  • Germans surrendered on November 11, 1918
  • Canadians treated as heroes by Belgians
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