World
War One was
the last of
what is
generally
referred to
as a
romantic war
and the
beginning of
the modern
war.
Many tactics
used by the
Germans
during World
War One,
were learned
from our
American
Civil
War. Observers
from Prussia
learned the
usage of
cavalry,
trains, and
also
artillery.
The tactics
of artillery
crushed the
forts of
Denmark in
1864.
While using
other
tactics that
were learned
from our
American
Civil War,
the
Prussians
were able to
defeat the Austrians
in 1866 and
the French
in
1871.
With these victories
Prussia was
able to
unite the independent
states which
created
Germany as
we know
it
today.
Folklore
has enlivened
the
Christmas
season with
stories such
as Santa Claus
and flying
reindeer.
Even
during the
American Civil War
Santa Claus
came to
visit the
soldiers.
Riding
his sleigh
and passing
gifts of
comfort to
the troops
on the
battlefield. Gifts
such as
candies,
personal
needs,
tobacco, and
coffee.
Soldiers
would even
cross over their
lines during
the night or
pickets
would yell
across to
the other side
wanting to
make a
trade.
The
one story
that I will
always
remember is called
'The Christmas
Truce'. This is a special story with a sincere meaning and morals that could thaw the
coldest of
hearts.
Not
many people
have heard
about this
true story.
It is one
that is not
generally
taught in
school or at
home, but
I had heard
it
once when I
was at church. Weihnachten
is the
German word
for
Christmas.
Many
Christmas
traditions
that we know
are from the
German-speaking
world. This
story goes
to the
battlefields
of Europe,
when the
Germans and
Austrians
invaded
France and
Belgium in a
plan called
the
Schlieffen
Plan.
The
Schlieffen
Plan was
named after Count
Alfred von
Schlieffen,
who became
Chief of
General
Staff in
1891. He developed
a plan in
1899-1900
for mobilization
of German
army for
attacking
France.
After making
changes to
his plan, he
submitted
his plan in
1905. This
was done
after the Japanese
defeated
Russia in
the
Russo-Japan
War. The
plan would
call for
nearly all
of the German
Army
wheeling
through
Holland,
Belgium and
Luxembourg
then
entering
France and
keeping a
small force
in Germany to
impede the
expected
Russian
advance.
In
1906, Helmuth
von Moltke replaced
General von
Schlieffen as the new
German Army
Chief of
Staff.
Moltke
modified the
strategy by
advising
that Holland
was not to
be invaded.
The main
route would
now be
through the
flat plains
of Flanders
in Belgium,
where this
Christmas
story takes
place.
The
Schlieffen
Plan was put
into
operation
when the
German Army
invaded
Luxembourg
and Belgium
in August of
1914. And
by September
the
Schlieffen
Plan had not
done well.
The Belgium
Army had
stalled the
German
advance with
support of
the British
and French
Armies, and
the Russians
also invaded
Eastern
Prussia. The
events
during the
Schlieffen
Plan ended
the German
hopes of a
short and
decisive
war. The
German Army
was not
destroyed
and with its
successful
retreat,
they started
to fortify
their positions
by digging
trenches
between the
North Sea to
the Switzerland
Frontier.
In
December
1914,
after
several months
of heavy
fighting,
German and
British
troops had
fought to a
stalemate
within their
trenches. Troops
faced each
other in a
stand off
looking upon
the fields
of “No
Mans Land”
which was
covered in
barbed wire.
Their living
conditions
in the trenches
were very
harsh.
They
were full of
mud and
stale water
from the winter
rains that
flooded the
dugouts and
turned them
into mud
holes.
Soldiers had
to keep
their heads
down to
avoid
getting shot
by a sharp
shooter.
This picture is from a stereograph that I have in my collection. It
shows barbed
wire in an
area known
as No Mans
Land in
Belgium.
No Mans Land
is a term
used by
troops to
describe the
ground
between the
two opposing
side. Its
width along
the Western
Front would
vary a great
deal. The
average
distance in
most sections
was about
250 yards,
although in
some cases
the troops
were facing
each other
at 50 yards.
Barbed
wire covered
the area of
No Mans Land
in the areas
most likely
to be
attacked.
Iron
stakes
laboriously
driven into
the ground
under the
black of
night and as
laboriously
strung with
barbed wire
as part of
the defenses
to hold back
enemy
troops.
The
upper ends
of the
stakes you
see would
have a loop
to hold the
wire and the
ends were
sharpened in
order that
they may
prove
dangerous to
the
advancing
troops.
Ten
belts of
barbed wire
reached
before the
trenches. In
some places
the wire was
more than a
100 feet
deep. No
Man's Land
would be
full of
broken and
abandoned
military
equipment
and would
also contain
a large
number of
bodies that
perished
after a
battle.
An
advance
across No
Man’s Land
was a very
difficult
task.
The
function of
the barbed
wire was to
delay the
advancing
soldiers by
catching
their
clothing or
tearing
their flesh.
Now
after
reading that
one must
wonder where
this story
is going. Although
rarely
remembered
here in the
states, the
'Christmas
Truce' of
1914, was
where the
soldiers
along the
Western
Front in the
southern
part of the
Ypres
Salient in
Belgium laid
down their
arms on
Christmas
Day and met
in No Man's
Land. German and British troops alike were pondering on memories of
home and
seeing
images of
their
families.
It
is a German
tradition to
celebrate
Christmas on
the evening
of December
24 and war
was no
exception.
On
December 24,
1914, during
the night
many German
soldiers
decorated
their
Christmas
trees and
placed them
on the
parapets and
lit the
candles.
British
soldiers
couldn’t
figure out
what was
going on and
were ordered
not to fire
but to watch
closely.
The
British
soldiers
soon heard
the sounds
of music
coming from
the German
trenches.
During
the night
both sides
were singing
the same
carol in
different
languages
such as
Silent
Night, and
Stille Nacht.
Many
of the
Germans
worked in England
before the
outbreak of
war and many
of them spoke
English, and
soon
conversations
began. Men
hugged and
saluted each
other,
laughed and
cheered for
one another.
Eventually,
the guns
were
silenced and
unarmed men
soon came out of
the trenches
onto the
field of No
Mans Land
and sang
Christmas
carols, while
their dead
comrades
littered the
ground by
their feet.
A
heavy frost
came that
night and at
sunrise on Weihnachstag
(Christmas
Day) some of
the German
soldiers
came out of
the trenches
holding a
branch of
pine
decorated
with candles
that were
lit. Some of
the British
were stunned
at what they
saw as most
soldiers had
never seen a
Christmas
tree. While
others
created
signs
wishing
their
counter
parts a
Merry
Christmas.
Officers
who allowed
their men to
participate
in the truce
went into No
Man's Land
in small
groups of
three or
four.
Even
though the
war had
paused for
the day, the
trenches
still had to
be manned.
The
truce
started to
spread over
the lines in
other places
in which the
French and
Belgium
troops also
participated.
That
day the two
armies
talked and
played games
of soccer or
football
using what
ever they
could spare
to form a
ball.
In
one story a
football
game came to
a close
after their
ball had
struck the
barbed wire
fence.
The
men on both
sides
exchanged
food,
alcohol,
chocolate,
pictures and
cigarettes
for badly
needed
supplies.
Soldiers
even
borrowed
tools and
equipment
from their
enemy, in
order to
improve
their living
conditions. Some men cut off
extra
buttons from
their
uniforms or
removed
badges and
traded them.
Soldiers
also
exchanged
letters to
be mailed to
their
families.
The bodies
of the dead
had been
there for
several
months
trapped
within No
Man's Land
were finally
buried. This
also gave
another
reason for
the British
and German
soldiers on
burial duty
to talk and
celebrate
the truce
that was
endured that
day.
Both
Germans and
the British
saw for the
first time
that their
living
conditions
were indeed
the same and
that they
were all
men. Soldiers
realized
that they
had suffered
the same,
even though
propaganda
stated
otherwise. Some of the soldiers even tried to get a close glimpse of the
lay out of
their
opponents’
trench to
mark where
the gun
emplacements
were. The
spirit of
Christmas
managed to
stop some of
the
bloodshed
and to ease
each other
while they
were away
from home.
However,
fighting did
occur on
Christmas day in other
places along
the
trenches. In
France the
truce was
not very
popular
since the
Germans were
the
invaders.
France still
bore the
scars of their
mortifying defeat of
Franco and
Prussian War
during
1870-1871.
The French
resented the
British
soldiers for
considering
a ceasing
fire. French
women would
spat at
British
troops when
they heard
them talking
about the
Christmas
truce.
The
spirit of
Christmas
oversaw the
bloodshed on
the
battlefields
of Europe. The
soldiers who
participated
in the Christmas
Truce had a
heart of
steel, and
in their
eyes there
was no evil,
only
good.
Overlooking
the fields
of barbed
wire, the
spirit of Christmas
was felt far
and wide.
There were no
Christmas
lights or Christmas
gifts. Just
the uniforms
they wore, and the joy
of the Christmas
they managed
to share.
The soldiers
on both
sides had experienced
the true
meaning of
Christmas in
1914.
Arthur
Tom
Morgan sums
it up the
best when he
wrote: “The
image of
opposing
soldiers,
shaking
hands with
each other
on one day
and then
deliberately
trying to
kill each
other the
next, is a
powerful
one, and one
which is
part and
parcel of
remembrance
of the Great
War. It was,
perhaps, a
last example
of
open-handed
chivalry
before the
squalor and
horror of
the next
three years
changed the
old world
forever.”
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