WW1 on Film: Oh What A Lovely War!
The Old Front Line
by Paul Reed
4h ago
The film Oh what A Lovely War! based on Joan Littlewood's play was released in 1969 and influenced a whole generation of people in what the Great War stood for. But what does the film really tell us about the First World War and what is its value more than 50 years on? Got a question about this episode or any others? Drop your question into the Old Front Line Discord Server or . Send us a text Support the show ..read more
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Questions and Answers Episode 16
The Old Front Line
by Paul Reed
1w ago
In a wargraves special, we follow up on the recent episode about the new Loos British Cemetery Extension and we take some Questions relating to the work being carried out there, along with the recovery and identification of the dead from the Great War, both in the past and the present.  Got a question about this episode or any others? Drop your question into the Old Front Line Discord Server or . Send us a text Support the show ..read more
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Questions and Answers Episode 15
The Old Front Line
by Paul Reed
2w ago
Our latest questions submitted by podcast listeners lead us to discuss what was a 'British Warm' and how did uniforms change during the Great War, ask if we could go back in time what would we want to see, look at the quarries that were part of the battlefield at Beaumont-Hamel on the Somme, and ask what happened to Allied Prisoners of War taken in the final days of the conflict in November 1918? The Western Front Association Online Trench Maps: WFA TrenchMapper site. Got a question about this episode or any others? Drop your question into the Old Front Line Discord Server or . Send us a text ..read more
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Loos: A New WW1 Cemetery
The Old Front Line
by Paul Reed
3w ago
We take the podcast across to Northern France and visit Loos British Cemetery on the battlefields of 1915, seeing the new Extension that has been constructed here, looking at the initial burials and asking how this brand new cemetery might develop over the coming years. Got a question about this episode or any others? Drop your question into the Old Front Line Discord Server or . Send us a text Support the show ..read more
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Questions and Answers Episode 14
The Old Front Line
by Paul Reed
3w ago
In our latest selection of questions from podcast listeners we look at the circumstances of the end of the First World War on the Western Front on 11th November 1918, ask why Albert Ball VC has a private memorial over his grave in France, discuss what happened to the Last Post Ceremony during WW2 and examine the 'War of the Guns' in the Great War - the use of artillery. Got a question about this episode or any others? Drop your question into the Old Front Line Discord Server or . Send us a text Support the show ..read more
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WW1 At Home: Shorncliffe Cemetery
The Old Front Line
by Paul Reed
1M ago
Returning to the History of the First World War we find on our doorsteps, we visit Shorncliffe in Kent to record an episode onsite. Here during the Great War were an Army Garrison, along with a major training centre. We discover the important role of the Canadians at Shorncliffe, the men of the Chinese Labour Corps who had their camp here, and also discuss the first Gotha Bomber raid on Britain by the Germans in 1917. Send us a text Support the show ..read more
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Five Weapons of WW1 Trench Warfare
The Old Front Line
by Paul Reed
1M ago
Trench Warfare saw the use of existing weapons on the battlefield and the development of new ones to cope with the static nature of the Western Front. In this episode we examine five of those weapons from handguns to trench clubs to mortars, and include a surprising 'weapon' of trench warfare. Got a question about this episode or any others? Drop your question into the Old Front Line Discord Server or . Send us a text Support the show ..read more
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Questions and Answers Episode 13
The Old Front Line
by Paul Reed
1M ago
This week we answer questions about British Prisoners of War held in Switzerland, ask what kind of permission you need to explore the fields and woods across the landscape of the Great War, discuss if any Estaminets survive from the Great War and look at events on the Somme on 1st July 1916 and what the experience of soldiers was on that evening as darkness fell. Red Cross Records from WW1 are found here: Red Cross Prisoner of War Records. Got a question about this episode or any others? Drop your question into the Old Front Line Discord Server or . Send us a text Support the show ..read more
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Despatches: Battlefield Pilgrimages
The Old Front Line
by Paul Reed
1M ago
In this latest edition of Despatches we look at the phenomena of Battlefield Pilgrimages which began almost as soon as the Great War ended and continued throughout the 1920s and 30s. What were they? What motivated people to go on a pilgrimage to the battlefields and what can we find of their history in a new book on the subject? Mike Hill's new book: Pilgrimage to the Western Front Terry Whenham's Podcast on the Great Pilgrimage 1928. You can support the Podcast via BuyMeACoffee and Patreon. Send us a text Support the show ..read more
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A Bridge at Fismes
The Old Front Line
by Paul Reed
1M ago
Fismes is a small town on the Aisne, close to its neighbour Fismette and divided by the Vesle river. Here in the summer of 1918 men of the American 28th Division took part in a bitter battle for possession of its houses and the bridge over the Vesle, a story retold in possibly the greatest American memoir of the First World War: Toward the Flame by Hervey Allen. Here too a memorial bridge was built commemorating their sacrifice, just a dozen years before Europe went to war once more. Got a question about this episode or any others? Drop your question into the Old Front Line Discord Server or ..read more
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