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This book covers the entire spectrum of military service during
World War I. It gives examples, including many photographs, from
almost every ethnic and national group in the United States during
this time. Including draft registration, induction and training,
stateside service, overseas service, combat, return home, and
discharge, learn the history of America's foreign-born soldiers
during World War I and how they adapted to military service to
become part of the successful American Expeditionary Forces.
By October 1918, the U.S. had more than one million men fighting in
the Meuse-Argonne campaign. The Allied Expeditionary Forces'
logistic corps, the Services of Supply (SOS), provided critical
support to combat forces from behind the lines. A bewildering array
of units served in this role, including British women from Queen
Mary's Army Auxiliary Corps, African American regiments, a U.S.
Marine brigade led by a legendary officer, volunteers from the
Salvation Army, Chinese laborers and German prisoners of war. The
SOS kept American soldiers at the front supplied with "bullets,
bandages and beans" while repairing weapons, producing vast
quantities of lumber, buying horses from Spain, operating a massive
railroad network, caring for the sick and wounded, fighting fires
on troopships, driving trucks under enemy fire and administering a
notorious prison. This book gives a full account of perhaps the
most overlooked yet crucial military effort of World War I.
Nearly 100 years ago, on October 4, 1918, on a muddy, poison
gas-soaked hillside in France, the U.S. 26th Infantry Regiment
jumped-off amidst a hail of shell fire and machine-gun fire to
begin the final push to end World War I. For the next 39 days, with
little respite, the regiment fought desperately against a
determined, well-armed foe. This is the story of a single regiment
in a successful, highly acclaimed "Regular Army" division, during
the greatest American battle to date. This is not a dry recitation
of facts, but an in-depth examination of a single regiment that
allows the reader to appreciate the intricacies of small-unit
action and the problems associated with leading platoons,
companies, and battalions in battle during the Great War, while at
the same time depicting the human drama associated with the
terrible carnage
Much has been written about the exploits of the American
Expeditionary Forces, the men and women sent overseas to fight
during World War I, but much less is known about the two million
who served in the Army without ever setting foot on foreign soil.
This book examines the history of depot brigades, development
battalions, U.S. Guards units, Students' Army Training Corps, and
other "forgotten" troops charged with training soldiers, guarding
installations, and performing myriad other duties. It also
chronicles the service of men like actor Jimmy Cagney, author F.
Scott Fitzgerald, movie director Frank Capra, children's author
Ludwig Bemelmans, and the two million others who served in the
United States during the war. At the time, many of these men
considered themselves unfortunate cast-offs, doomed to spend the
war safe at home while their friends served in combat overseas.
But, in the end, it was largely because of them that America could
field an effective fighting force.
Baseball is the most American game. No other sporting contest so
closely reflects the American psyche and culture. Its uniqueness
comes from the fact that part of the game is clearly defined and
unchanged since play first began, while another part of the game
fluctuates and changes constantly. And if baseball is the truest
American game, the Doughboys of the Great War were its most loyal
proponents. By 1918, there were over four million of them: two
million in France fighting in the Meuse-Argonne Offensive and
another two million in stateside training camps awaiting their turn
to cross the Atlantic to the Western Front. Playing wherever they
could find enough room to throw a ball, they brought the game with
them into the front lines and then into the occupation of Germany.
Sharing their military service, in combat and on the baseball
diamond, were a number of famous professional ballplayers,
managers, lawyers, politicians, and even an umpire.
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