WW1 Centennial News: Episode #43 - US deployment to the front begins | Edwin Fountain on America’s WWI Memorial in DC | Poppy News | Nark | 100C/100M Danville PA | and much more…




WW1 Centennial News show

Summary: <br> Highlight:<br> <br> US troops quietly begin deployment to the western front | @01:15<br> British troops near mutiny - Mike Shuster | @06:55<br> Zeppelin L-49 captured intact - War in The Sky | @10:50<br> Announcing Ceremonial groundbreaking for America’s WWI Memorial in Washington DC -Facebook Live stream coming | @15:30<br> All about America’s WWI Memorial in DC - Edwin Fountain | @16:15<br> Junior Master Gardener Poppy Program update - Lisa Whittlesey | @24:10<br> Speaking WWI - the word is Nark! | @29:35<br> 100C/100M project profile - Borough of Danville, PA - Jamie Shrawder | @31:00<br> International Caparetto, Kobarid and Karfreit - Commemoration | @36:10<br> First three American combat casualties - from 16th infantry | @37:35<br> The Franco-American links - US Centennial Commissioner Seifried | @39 :00 <br> About Aline Kilmer’s poetry - Peter Molin on WWRITE blog | @39:35<br> Buzz on Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome and selection of the Unknown Soldier | @40:45 <br> more...<br> <br> Opening<br> Welcome to World War 1 centennial News - It’s about WW1 THEN - what was happening 100 years ago this week  - and it’s about WW1 NOW - news and updates about the centennial and the commemoration.<br> Today is October 25th, 2017 and our guests this week are:<br> <br> Mike Shuster from the great war project blog,   <br> Edwin Fountain, Vice Chair at the US WW1 Centennial Commission<br> Lisa Whittlesey, Director of the International Junior Master Gardener Program<br> And Jamie Shrawder, the Administrator of Governmental Affairs for the Borough of Danville, Pennsylvania<br> <br> WW1 Centennial News is brought to you by the U.S. World War I Centennial Commission and the Pritzker Military Museum and Library. I’m Theo Mayer - the Chief Technologist for the Commission and your host. Welcome to the show.<br> [MUSIC]<br> This was a big week 100 years ago in the War that changed the world.<br> Looking back - --- America declares war 6 months ago and the first American troops arrive in Europe 4 months ago. <br> This week 100 years ago, the Army’s 1st division quietly deploys to Sommervillier -  in france - a village near the western front almost directly between Belgium and Switzerland. <br> We put a link in the podcast notes to some National Archive footage showing the the soldiers of the 1st division moving their horse drawn wagons, mechanised trucks, artillery and men to the fighting front.<br> This is in the midst of a lots of controversy, conflicting agendas… opinions, and a very dire situation in the war “over there”.<br> So let’s jump into our wayback machine to see what going on and how things play out 100 years ago this week.<br> World War One THEN <br> 100 Year Ago This Week<br> [MUSIC TRANSITION]<br> We are nearing the end of November 1917 and in the US, speculation is high about “Our Boys” getting into the fight. <br> The official bulletin says NOTHING about this, the Wilson administration is being obscure, but the public press is sensing that something is up. <br> [Sound Effect]<br> Dateline: October 22, 1917<br> The headline in the New York Times reads:<br> Hints Our Army is Near Action….<br> Secretary Baker’s guarded review is taken to mean that soldiers soon will be in the trenches.<br> In the story it reads:<br> In his review to press, Secretary of War Baker emphasized  the status of the Pershing expedition by giving it the most prominent position in his analysis of the military equation. <br> He declares that “our men in France, after three months of intensive training, are in splendid physical condition and efficient fighting trim” and that they “Now feel at home in the war zone”.<br> The Secretary had no comment to make on the statement, but the interpretation placed on his words, when carefully weighed here tonight, is that they mark the verge of the actual entrance of the American Troops into the fighting line.<br>  <br> Now O