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Trench Warfare Poison Gas

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Presentation on theme: "Trench Warfare Poison Gas"— Presentation transcript:

1 Trench Warfare Poison Gas
A New Kind of War Gassed by John Singer Sargent Trench Warfare Poison Gas

2 TRENCH WARFARE a form of combat in which soldiers dug
trenches, or deep ditches, to seek protection from enemy fire & to defend their positions

3 This is a diagram of trenches. There were more than two opposing lines of trenches. Notice how letters A, B, & C all show different “lines” of trenches for one side. The opposing side would obviously have more than one “line” as well. Trench warfare was not a new concept. Soldiers had been hiding behind mounds of earth and other objects for shelter for years, but this was the biggest scale trenches had ever been used.

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5 NO MANS LAND

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8 OVER THE TOP

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10 LIFE IN THE TRENCHES lived very close to other soldiers not much room

11 Trench Facts Each battalion had its own supply of rum that it distributed to its soldiers. Each division of 20,000 men received 300 gallons.  - Every soldier carried iron rations -- emergency food that consisted of a can of bully bee, biscuits and a tin of tea and sugar.  - A single pair of rats could produced up to 880 offspring in a year.  - A total of 3,894 men in the British Army were convicted of self-inflicted wounds. A firing-squad offense -- none were executed, but all served prison terms.  - The British Army treated 20,000 soldiers for trench foot during the winter of  - One-third of all casualties on the Western Front may have been killed or wounded in a trench.  - A lit candle was fairly effective in removing lice, but the skill of burning the lice without setting yourself on fire was difficult to learn.   -Soldiers in the trenches often depended on impure water collected from shell-holes or other cavities, causing dysentery. Source: Spartacus Educational

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13 This photograph is a good example of life in a trench. What do you see in this photograph? man at the ready men sleeping not much room barbed wire

14 This trench looks smaller than the trench on the previous slide. It is not as tall/high as the other one Doesn’t have wood or any structures to help hold it up Could it possibly be a temporary/impromptu trench? The other trench definitely looked like it was there to stay for some time.

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17 LIFE IN THE TRENCHES trenches could be miserable sometimes rainstorms
“trench foot” sanitation lice & rats How could rainstorms make living in trenches miserable? trenches are dug out areas in the earth rain + earth = mud/puddles Trench foot was something that happened often to soldiers. You know how you get wrinkly after you’re in the bath or swimming for a long time? Basically, that is trench foot. When your feet get wet and stay wet for such a long time. Soldiers would need to change their socks multiple times a day—some troops were even issued three pairs of socks.

18 Problems in the Trenches
UNSANITARY RATS Trench FOOT ALWAYS WET and MUDDY Dystentary LICE

19 http://www. harris-academy

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24 http://www. gwpda. org/photos/coppermine/displayimage. php

25 POISON GAS a new weapon used in the war different types limited value
blind choke burn limited value wind gas masks There were different kinds of gas that could be used. Some kinds would blind  bromacetone, 1916, used by both sides Some would choke you when you breathed it in  chlorine, 1915, used by both sides Some would burn or blister your skin  mustard gas, used by both sides The value of gas as a weapon was limited. Some countries were able to produce gas masks that would help soldiers through a gas attack. The use of gas rests solely on the wind—if the wind, for instance, changed direction, the gas could blow back to your own side. It was good, however, in that it could creep across no man’s land and, since it is slightly heavier than air, it would sink down into the trenches.

26 This photo includes, supposedly, a man who, while charging through no man’s land who got caught with no protection from a gas attack. The other men appear to have some sort of covering over their faces—might not be a gas mask, but better than nothing.

27 Men wearing gas masks during a gas attack

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29 What were the effects of gas?

30 Trench Warfare What kind of tactic is this? How is it effective?
How did they create such a strategy? What is meant by Over the Top? What is No Man’s Land?


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