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[Music]
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country
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[Music]
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created
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[Applause]
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[Music]
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intro
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[Applause]
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[Music]
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Pier 54 New York City.
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On May the 1st 1915 2000 passengers
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boarded one of the fastest most
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luxurious ships in the world the
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Lusitania
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"She was simply a wonderful steady ship
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she had four red funnels and she was a
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beautiful sight to see. She really was"
-
EDA Stanley and her family were heading
-
home to England and into the midst of
-
the most brutal conflict man had ever
-
experienced, The First World War was
-
almost a year old and any transatlantic
-
crossing was made potentially dangerous
-
by the presence of German submarines
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Still, the passengers felt safe. After all
-
the Lusitania was a passenger ship
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[Music]
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On her last day at sea the Lusitania was
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approaching the Irish coast
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[Music]
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"It was two o'clock in the afternoon and
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you could see all this coastline. It was a
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beautiful day. Couldn't have been any better.
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There was a terrific bang. Dad knew what it was.
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I mean that he knew darn well that
-
it was a torpedo"
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The single German torpedo did such
-
damage that the Lusitania could launch
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only six of her lifeboats before she
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went down
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"We could not take the people and they
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were begging to be taken in we would have
-
capsized and everybody would have gone
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down. 1,200 drowned. I think.....There was
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more drowned than was saved"
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Among those who drowned were a hundred
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and twenty-eight Americans.
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The memory has faded for all but a very
-
few some of whom you'll hear from. But
-
because it has affected so much of what
-
has happened since, the bulk of this
-
program is about the First World War. The
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Great War they called. It began in
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June of 1914 with the assassination of
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the Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria
-
Hungary. He was shot by a Serbian
-
nationalist in Sarajevo.
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Ferdinand had governed in a
-
circle of European royalty that also
-
included the king of England,
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the Tsar of Russia, and the Kaiser of
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Germany and together their colonial
-
empires dominated most of the Earth's
-
population. And when the competitive
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Kaiser seized upon the assassination as
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a pretext to begin a European war he
-
found the other Royals only too willing
-
to go along. All of them sought to widen
-
their influence. None could possibly
-
realize how radically they were about to
-
alter the course of the 20th century. In
-
the summer of 1914 the generation that
-
would fight the First World War was
-
enthusiastic about doing so. Those young
-
men who were so quick to answer their
-
nation's call to arms had no reason to
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anticipate the hell ahead
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[Applause]
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In the German city of Coblenz
-
twelve-year-old Joachim von Elbe began a
-
diary. August 5 1914: the city is full of
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soldiers. They were singing this song, on
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on to fight we are born on on to fight
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for the Fatherland
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to Kaiser Wilhelm we have sworn
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to Kaiser Wilhelm we give our hand."
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The optimism of the Germans was matched
-
by their allies in Austria and by their
-
enemies in Russia in France and in
-
England. "As soon as I enlisted I was in
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the crowd of all other 18,19 and 20 year
-
olds and we thought was going to be a
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tremendous tremendous lark to go and knock
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the Kaiser off his throne, you see"
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"Everyone, everyone thought the war would
-
be over Christmas and they really badly
-
wanted to get to France to get in the
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fighting"
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Music
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music
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The Germans attacked first
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and very quickly they were through
-
Belgium and into France. The romantic
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notion of war that so many young men
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carried into battle was very quickly
-
shattered. The new weapons of war were so
-
ferocious that by the end of the first
-
year French casualties alone would
-
approach a million men
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[Music]
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"Nobody in Europe expected these appalling
-
casualties and when they came they were
-
utterly crushing
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music
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The first dreadful experience was that
-
of the victims of what was called "the
-
massacre of the innocents" in Germany.
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These boys from high school or college
-
who were given a couple of months
-
training and sent off to the Front and
-
then died in tens of thousands in a few
-
weeks
-
music
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Nothing like that had ever happened
-
before to any country in Europe and
-
moreover this was the flower of German
-
youth. They were they the best educated
-
young men. They were from middle-class
-
families almost exclusively and they had
-
no expectation at all this terrible
-
thing was going to happen."
-
Americans had never dreamed
-
that a war on the other
-
side of the ocean could affect them.
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The US was officially neutral and most
-
of its citizens assumed it would stay
-
that way." People were going about
-
their own business. The object being to
-
makes money and and good business
-
Everything was very pleasant indeed"
-
" It's hard for people who weren't
-
there to realize how enormously
-
the world has changed. On New Year's Day
-
President Wilson had open house at the
-
White House. And he would go out
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[Music]
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on the lawn and we went down once
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I was a little kid and we went down on the
-
lawn and stood in a little queue and it
-
moved up and we all went through and
-
shook his hand. Shook hands with the
-
President on New Year's Day"
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[Music]
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But certainly America was changing. The
-
pace of life was quickening.
-
Almost overnight Henry Ford's historic
-
assembly line had lowered the cost of
-
making cars as well as the cost of
-
buying them. The mass-produced Model T
-
came in one color: black but at
-
295 dollars it was the first car priced
-
within reach of ordinary Americans
-
"We played baseball in the streets.
-
There was no problem of playing
-
baseball when horses and wagons
-
dominated the traffic. It only became a
-
problem when automobiles and trucks
-
came in"
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So much in America was changing as
-
Europe went about its ugly war
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[Music]
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At this first movie that I attended I
-
recall the scene where there was a great
-
deal of shooting. As they came to the
-
front of the screen and the figures got
-
larger and larger and I thought they
-
were coming at me and I started
-
screaming so badly that had to take me
-
out of the movie house." As moviemaking
-
techniques improved movies became an
-
American obsession and it was in the
-
movie houses that Americans were exposed
-
to the war in Europe. In the movie house
-
it still seemed glamorous." We went every
-
Saturday morning and just devoured the
-
pictures of the war, beautiful uniforms
-
and dashing mounted cavalry with their
-
flashing sabers in the sun riding into
-
battle and oh I thought that would be
-
something else (I was just just eighteen)
-
to go."
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[Music]
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The movies were the perfect proving
-
ground for the new art form called
-
propaganda. Americans saw and soon
-
sympathized with the British view of the
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Germans
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[Music]
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By early 1915 the war in Europe was good
-
for America. U.S. banks were lending huge
-
amounts of money to Britain and France
-
who in turn used the money to buy arms
-
from American factories. With the war
-
Americans were in the greatest economic
-
boom in their history. "During the war
-
everybody worked. Before the war my
-
father brought home six or seven dollars
-
a week Now he brought home checks for
-
a hundred, a hundred and ten dollars
-
a week. It was like bringing home a check
-
for a million." The war had
-
another effect: it virtually cut off
-
European immigration to the United
-
States causing a labor shortage in
-
American factories and that forced
-
northern employers to look for the very
-
first time at the substantial Black
-
labor pool of the American South. " Black
-
newspapers, we went down south and told
-
them 'come on up to Chicago with us
-
we'll get you a job and you don't have
-
to stay down here and be lynched and
-
burned'" " My relatives, aunt, uncles
-
cousins came North and were able
-
to get into factories and steel mill jobs
-
that just wouldn't have been available
-
to Blacks under normal circumstances"
-
This Great Migration from
-
the South kept America's economy strong
-
and vigorous while the increasing
-
economic stake in Britain and France
-
encouraged greater support for their war
-
against the Germans. But the war was not
-
going well and the idea that Americans
-
might yet have to be involved was now an
-
issue all over the United States. With
-
the support of former President Theodore
-
Roosevelt, potential volunteers began to
-
train for battle
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[Music]
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By Christmas 1914 the armies of Europe
-
had completely bogged down and fighting
-
had spread to Russia, Africa, and the
-
Middle East. The empires drew on their
-
colonies for manpower. 60 countries were
-
eventually represented in the conflict
-
The Germans had expected to win in 42
-
days but they had not anticipated what
-
would happen on the Western Front in
-
France. On the Western Front, the German
-
assault had finally failed and soldiers
-
on both sides had raced to dig an
-
elaborate trench system that stretched
-
for 300 miles from the English Channel
-
all the way to Switzerland. On New Year's
-
Day in 1915 the young men who had gone
-
off to fight glorious battles were now
-
trapped in a desperate war of attrition
-
[Music]
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"Someone said to us excitedly" Jack Smith"
-
I said what about him? he said" he's dead.
-
he's been shot"
-
The first one of the battalion to be
-
shot. I said " what?"
-
" Yes he's dead. Been shot
-
Put his head too far over and a sniper
-
got him" and that caused a bit of a
-
sensation amongst the lads. They
-
thought 'well this is not exactly what we
-
come for' (mumbling) from that day
-
onwards while we were in the trenches
-
it was three killed, four killed, five
-
killed, 20 killed, a hundred killed. By
-
then we was veterans."
-
A young American poet, Alan Seeger, was
-
among those looking for adventure when
-
he joined the Foreign Legion to fight
-
for France. His diary reveals how seldom
-
he found it."It's a miserable life.
-
Shivering in these wretched holes in the
-
dirt. We're not leading the life of men
-
at all but that of animals, living in our
-
holes on the ground and only showing our
-
heads outside to fight and to feed"
-
"We'd been
-
there about six months. Covered in mud
-
Wet through practically all day
-
Absolutely chewed up by lice and we'd
-
say "and to think we wanted to come to
-
this hole" I said "yes, we didn't know"
-
[Music]
-
Every so often one side or the other
-
seized a few hundred yards of territory
-
only to be forced back again
-
surrendering what had costs hundreds of
-
lives to win. The Front never moved more
-
than a mile or two in either direction
-
By the spring of 1915 the generals had
-
concluded that the best way out of the
-
stalemate was to blast the enemy out of
-
their trenches
-
[Music]
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The same factories and assembly lines
-
that had begun to contribute to life in
-
the 20th century were now retooled to
-
create massive killing machines.
-
This was the industrialization of war
-
[Music]
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"There were
-
just a splintered trunks of trees, there's
-
a quagmire of the shell holes
-
and no ,no grass. It was just like a
-
lunar landscape
-
really"
-
[Music]
-
"At night the rats, they grew to
-
enormous sizes feeding on the bone and
-
the corpses. It was impossible
-
to get to get the dead buried."
-
"We put dead bodies in the bottom of the
-
trench so that we could stand on them
-
to keep dry and on some
-
occasion dead bodies was put on the top
-
of the trench to make it higher so that
-
we could walk a bit better
-
instead of crouching." And
-
contributing to the stalemate were new
-
weapons. (NOTE) By now the machine gun
-
had been perfected to the point that a
-
single soldier could command as much
-
firepower as 40 riflemen
-
[Music]
-
The tank made its first appearance
-
invented by the British to get through
-
the dense thickets of barbed wire that
-
protected the enemy trenches. And in
-
April 1915 the Germans introduced the
-
most terrifying weapon of all poison gas
-
"No one had ever seen it before.
-
This is the moment when chemical
-
warfare was invented. It scared the
-
living daylights out of the Canadian
-
troops that were hit by it." The First
-
World War had become a contest NOT
-
of fighting spirit but of technological
-
might and for the soldiers caught in the
-
middle of it there was no way forward
-
and no way back. There was simply
-
endurance. " You saw a little bush
-
you swore that bush was somebody creeping
-
up on you. The perfect soldier for that
-
war would have been somebody with no
-
imagination whatsoever.
-
We all had too much imagination"
-
[Music]
-
"So many men who had been through these
-
dangers and anxieties. Their life broken
-
They were the victims of shell shock. You
-
know there is a breaking point for most
-
people. For anybody really. Robbed of all
-
humanity and courage and everything else
-
that makes life worth living really. He's
-
descended to something less than human."
-
The stalemate in the trenches continued
-
through 1915 and into 1916 when the
-
generals decided to go back to their
-
original weapon: their men
-
[Music]
-
The river Somme in northern France. Early
-
summer 1916. Along a Front 25 miles wide
-
a massive Allied army prepared to attack.
-
Thousands of British Tommies, as they
-
were called, would lead the charge and
-
they would follow one of the most intense
-
bombardments in the history of warfare.
-
An artillery barrage would last an
-
entire week
-
[Music]
-
The Battle of the Somme was about to
-
begin.
-
"There must be a thousand gods if there
-
was one. It was a terrible roar from
-
morning to night but the foolish officers
-
said "tomorrow boys will be over the top
-
and don't worry" he says.
-
"There'll be no trenches there. Our shells
-
have blown them to pieces. There will be
-
no Germans there. They're blown to pieces
-
All you have to do is to walk over and
-
take those trenches. In fact ,"he says,
-
you can carry your rifle like a bag."
-
[Music]
-
"The Germans after the shelling, they
-
simply come out of the dugouts,
-
grabbed their machine guns and then
-
waited for the Tommies."
-
[Music]
-
They just simply shot them down .
-
like cutting down grain. They didn't
-
get 200 feet. One German
-
machine gunner said "I stopped firing
-
because I was sickened by what we were
-
doing"'
-
It was the bloodiest day in British
-
history. 20,000 men killed 40,000 wounded
-
And yet the day after and for days
-
after that young men continued to be
-
ordered out of their trenches and into
-
near certain death.
-
Poet volunteer Alan Seeger was killed
-
on July the 4th. On the same morning Ted
-
Francis waited for the signal to go
-
[Music]
-
Officers are down below us in the
-
trenches with a whistle and when they
-
blow that whistle we'd got to dash out of
-
the trenches and make for this German
-
trench and (mumbling) still
-
four or five minutes but we look at each
-
other and say I would also do this. Some
-
were visibly shaken. Some were crying and
-
of course when the whistle went off we
-
had to scramble over."
-
[Music]
-
The Battle of the Somme would come to
-
define the futility of the First World
-
War
-
It went on for six more months at a cost
-
of a million men and at the end of it
-
the Allied armies had moved a grand
-
total of five miles. The guns of the
-
Somme were so loud and so insistent that
-
they were heard across the English
-
Channel in London a hundred and fifty
-
miles away. In every country that was
-
involved in the war there were growing
-
problems at home. After so many years of
-
struggle the disillusionment of the
-
battlefront now extended to the home
-
front. Russia in particular was ripe for
-
revolution. Its people were starving and
-
its battered army was on the verge of
-
defeat. In February 1917 a food riot
-
broke out in the city of Petrograd which
-
had been called Saint Petersburg. In no
-
time Russia was embroiled in full-scale
-
revolution. The ruling family led by Tsar
-
Nicholas was brought down.
-
300 years of royal rule were replaced by
-
a provisional government that stubbornly
-
decided to continue the war
-
The Germans chose this moment to help a
-
Russian revolutionary return home from
-
exile. The man who spoke for a socialist
-
movement known to Russians as the
-
Bolsheviks. His given name was Vladimir
-
Ulianov. He's better remembered as
-
Vladimir Lenin. Sascha Bryansk
-
served as Lenin's bodyguard
-
"He spoke with a lot of gestures and
-
rushed forward calling us to advance.
-
Saying "Power had been taken over
-
by the bourgeoisie that went on with the
-
bloody war." A new order had to be
-
established to ensure the power of the
-
working class. Lenin and the Bolsheviks
-
hoped to create the world's first
-
Communist state where all land, capital,
-
and political power would be given to
-
the people. For many Russians it would
-
mean the end of privilege
-
[Applause]
-
"Victory of the Bolsheviki would mean the
-
end of Russia. That we knew. I
-
remember one evening at our country
-
place. I was running down the lawn to
-
call my mother to tell her that supper
-
was ready and I suddenly stopped and here
-
was all the beauty around. The roses, the
-
trees, the park, the lawns. It was a
-
beautiful place. It was sunset and I
-
stopped and said all this disappears. All
-
this will be gone. That was the one
-
moment I remembered that feeling
-
of fear that the whole world of which
-
I was part of was would disappear."
-
And it would.
-
In October 1917 Lenin encouraged an
-
insurrection against the provisional
-
government that had replaced the fallen
-
Tsar. The end came at the Tsar's old
-
Winter Palace " I ran up the carpeted
-
stairway. In the very first room I saw
-
soldiers standing with their rifles ready.
-
I shouted " put down your weapons"
-
The defenders just dropped their weapons
-
and left."
-
"We saw the fires in the night and then
-
after five or six days the shooting died.
-
There were no more guns so we knew it
-
was over and we knew that the
-
Bolsheviki had won"
-
[Applause]
-
With Lennon's victory, Russia quickly
-
withdrew from the war. But the Germans
-
had seen their plans succeed only to
-
find that they now faced a new opponent.
-
It was clear to most Americans now that
-
Germany regarded them as an enemy too.
-
President Woodrow Wilson resisted the
-
demands to get involved for a while but
-
by 1917 the Germans had increased their
-
attacks on unarmed ships. And then they
-
brazenly urged Mexico to invade the
-
United States, the President felt he had
-
no other option. On April the 2nd 1917
-
Woodrow Wilson stood anxiously before a
-
special session of Congress and asked
-
for a declaration of war. He hoped it
-
would be the War to End all Wars. He said.
-
"It is a fearful thing for me to try to
-
lead a great peaceful people into war.
-
It could be one of the most terrible and
-
disastrous of all wars, but let me tell
-
you this: Right is more precious than
-
Peace."
-
"The idea of a last great war
-
and being part of it was very
-
very strong,strong appeal and
-
it certainly influenced me a great deal."
-
I said"if we're never going to see another
-
war. This is the time to see it." In the
-
summer of 1917 American troops landed
-
in France returning the favor of Lafayette:
-
the French soldier who fought with
-
America during the Revolutionary War
-
"One of the officers, he said it loud
-
enough for everybody to hear and
-
he was waving his hands.
-
"Lafayette, Lafayette" I didn't know who
-
Lafayette was
-
"Lafayette we are here"
-
[Music]
-
"It was coming to the end of our bit and
-
when the Americans decided to have a go,
-
I was absolutely... I said "Hurrah"
-
"They were untouched by
-
the anxiety or doubts that
-
had afflicted everybody else. By that
-
stage they were, they were" American"
-
you know. They were "American" They
-
were what the Americans were supposed to be.
-
They were enthusiastic. They were also
-
badly armed, poorly trained and like the
-
Europeans before them, completely
-
unprepared for what lay ahead.
-
[Music]
-
The train came through from the Front.
-
and we got to go aboard . Of course
-
which we did it as soon as possible
-
We got on it and we asked the guys
-
" how was up there what's going on?"
-
and "what are you doing?" and it
-
was a hospital train. I can see these
-
poor kids like me. Youngsters, but the
-
leg gone or two arms gone. "Well
-
this is kind of a cold water treatment.
-
All of a sudden to realize what war was
-
like. You grew up very quickly in
-
surroundings lie that. This is no longer
-
Freshmen Studies. It was the real world"
-
By 1918 with thousands of Americans
-
pouring into France every day,
-
the Germans decided they had
-
to do something massive.
-
IN March 1918 the German
-
Army tried its last major gamble. Its
-
last major offensive on the Western Front
-
It was successful.
-
"It was a remarkable moment. The Western
-
Front moved. A War of movement finally
-
arrived" And after years of impasse the
-
Germans suddenly threatened to overwhelm
-
the Allies and actually capture the
-
French capital Paris. "The Germans had a
-
fire. They called it "sweeping fire."
-
Everything upon earth got hit. They were
-
wounded or died."The threat to Paris was
-
so severe that a million people simply
-
left the city. The Germans got to within
-
30 miles. At this point these still semi
-
trained American divisions were
-
thrown into the battle and along with
-
the French, managed to stop the German
-
drop."
-
The Germans had put
-
everything into this last desparate
-
effort and when it was it was over they
-
were finally spent. Along the Western
-
Front that Autumn, the focus shifted
-
from war to peace. On the 10th of
-
Nov the Kaiser was forced into
-
exile by his own government; a
-
victim of the war he had helped to
-
start. " This cut me so deeply that
-
I can't tell you. I had a little picture
-
of the Kaiser in my room and what did
-
I do? I put a black tie around the
-
picture to show my utter sorrow for
-
this tremendous change in history" And
-
finally at the 11th hour, on the eleventh
-
day, of the eleventh month November 1918
-
the Germans formally surrendered.
-
"And suddenly the guns stopped and there
-
was a terrible shock as if somebody had
-
hit me over the head with a big pan
-
[Music]
-
"And that sudden hush after four years of
-
continual gunfire had become part of our
-
lives.There seemed to be something missing
-
we didn't believe it you know."
-
[Music]
-
[Applause]
-
[Music]
-
One of the greatest calamities in human
-
history was over and America's veterans
-
began to return home.
-
[Music]
-
The trouble was that having made the
-
world a safer place American veterans
-
returned to a very uncertain future.The
-
economy that the boomed during the war
-
was now shrinking. Factories were laying
-
off workers just as veterans came
-
looking for jobs. "We had no help to find
-
a job. No grants to go to school
-
to finish our college education.
-
When you took your
-
discharge that was it. You had no more
-
connection with the government or they
-
with you. You were on your own"
-
[Music]
-
In the winter of 1918 Europe was a
-
disaster. The empires of Germany Austria
-
and Russia had been shattered
-
leaving destitute nations in their wake
-
[Music]
-
Even the victors Britain and France
-
grappled with ruin and rage.
-
[Music]
-
In all nine million men had died.
-
Every family had lost someone, a father, a
-
son, a brother,
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a cousin, a friend
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[Music]
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For years the wounded and the maimed
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haunted the streets of every city in
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Europe.
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[Music]
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And even those who had escaped physical
-
harm were forever changed by the Great
-
War
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"Sometimes I'm thinking about the war
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two,, three o'clock in the morning. My
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brother being hit. My best friend killed
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and I wonder, while I'm lying in bed
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" how is it that I'm lying here
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and they're all dead?""
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"I lost all my youth. I lost the best
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years of my life you might say. And I
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lost so many friends. It was all loss
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for me. I mean a few medals don't make up
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for that you know.
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Nobody wins in a war. They lost. We didn't
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win"
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Into this chaos traveling to a post-war
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peace conference in the French town of
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Versailles, came President Woodrow Wilson.
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With him President Wilson brought his
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so-called Fourteen Points which called
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for liberty and self-determination for
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all. Even the enemy. The people of Britain
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and France greeted Wilson ecstatically for
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he represented the hope of democracy. BUT
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the British and French governments were
-
interested in revenge. "The Versailles
-
Peace Treaty is the politics of hatred.
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It was the encapsulation of every
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mean-spirited element on the Allied side."
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The new Soviet Union was completely
-
excluded from the peace conference. And
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not one victorious power was ready to
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give up a colony. Sowing the seeds of
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future discord, Britain and France added
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several colonies by carving up the
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Middle East. As for the Germans, they were
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forced to accept conditions that would
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humiliate and impoverish them for
-
years.
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In the end Versailles was about
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Punishment not Peacemaking.
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"In Many ways all those men who died,
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nine million men died for nothing"
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[Music]
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Almost before it was over then it was
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clear that the legacy of this war would
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be anything but the end of all wars.
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Within 30 years these same nations would
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all fight again over precisely the same
-
ground.
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The war had shown technology's dark side.
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But dark or bright, technology was here
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to stay and in the decade that followed
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an electric pulse of change ran through
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America. We'll see that on the next
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episode of the century America's time
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thank you for joining us I'm Peter
-
Jennings
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[Music]