" FLASHES OF ACTION " AMAZING MOMENTS OF WORLD WAR I COMBAT CAUGHT ON CAMERA 70752

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  • čas přidán 27. 01. 2015
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    Trigger warning: this war film contains scenes of violence and death.
    Created from official films of the U.S. Army Expeditionary Forces in World War I and released by Eastman Kodak, "Flashes of Action" is a silent newsreel created in 1928 -- for the ten year anniversary of the end of hostilities. The film features footage of trench warfare, balloon busting by aircraft (including a spotter jumping from the balloon moments before it bursts into flames), gas warfare, nighttime bombardments, and more.
    The film opens, showcasing U.S. Army infantry marching and pulling military carriages (0:20-0:23). Following an introduction card, the film presents a U.S. crackshot soldier (sniper) in action (0:24-0:30) and then moves to depict camouflage snipers (0:41). Scenes capture the recaptured town of Rambucourt in France (1:05-1:33), featuring a WWI era artillery cannon firing after the text card “always ready” (1:43). The film proceeds to portray the use of gas weaponry, soldiers donning gas masks (2:46), an attacked observation balloon (3:08), and the shelling of enemy headquarters (3:32).
    Devastating, real-life scenes of violence and death are shown (3:50-4:01). This is followed by footage of the use of liquid fire / flamethrower (4:15), a French field gun in action (4:24), and an Italian machine gunner in action (4:47). British raiders bringing in prisoners are shown (5:05), followed by scenes of cavalry soldiers galloping through water with the text “British rushing up artillery” (5:27). Soldiers are struck by an artillery blast (6:08). The film displays artillery in action (6:28-6:46) and mine explosions (6:51) before concluding with scenes featuring the Allied commanders (7:10) and ending with a soldier grimly staring at the camera (7:18).
    Motion picture films don't last forever; many have already been lost or destroyed. For almost two decades, we've worked to collect, scan and preserve the world as it was captured on 35mm, 16mm and 8mm movies -- including home movies, industrial films, and other non-fiction. If you have endangered films you'd like to have scanned, or wish to donate celluloid to Periscope Film so that we can share them with the world, we'd love to hear from you. Contact us via the weblink below.
    This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD. For more information visit www.PeriscopeFilm.com

Komentáře • 915

  • @piatpotatopeon8305
    @piatpotatopeon8305 Před 4 lety +85

    Whoever chose the background soundtrack deserved a hearty handshake. That was downright haunting towards the end.

    • @viice305
      @viice305 Před 3 lety +4

      Yeah, i wonder what the soundtrack is called.

    • @johnblackett1141
      @johnblackett1141 Před 3 lety +1

      I Would like to know as well

    • @74sampson
      @74sampson Před 2 lety +1

      !! My 5year old could do better with $10 toy .. It was depressing.
      Why so sad?

    • @74sampson
      @74sampson Před 2 lety

      Oh yeah, I forgot. Drama sells.

    • @piatpotatopeon8305
      @piatpotatopeon8305 Před 2 lety +5

      @@74sampson Your 5 year old is gifted. I hope you foster & encourage their special talent.

  • @nickwhitton3882
    @nickwhitton3882 Před 5 lety +336

    There’s something about the ww1 that truly terrifies me. I think it’s the crossroads between old technology and new.

    • @harrykuheim6107
      @harrykuheim6107 Před 4 lety +7

      It's the way it Photographed with the Equipment of the Day ...The Creepy soundtrack is Sophmoricly Morbid and Predictable so....

    • @andyblack5687
      @andyblack5687 Před 4 lety +14

      Not to mention that if you looked at three other guys around you, at least one of you four would be dead before the war’s end. 25% casualty rate. Just horrible. At the Battle of the Somme, over one million men died. Just in one month.

    • @PolakInHolland
      @PolakInHolland Před 4 lety +13

      @@andyblack5687 There wasn't a million dead on the Somme in one month. British and Commonwealth casualties for the entire war were about a million dead. That isn't to say it wasn't absolute carnage.

    • @PolakInHolland
      @PolakInHolland Před 4 lety +20

      There's something about the combination of the claustrophobia of trench warfare, the certain death of no mans land and barbed wire, the uncleared corpses, the gas, the shelling and shell shock that combines into something morbidly terrifying. I always found WWI movies far scarier as a child than I did WWII ones. Maybe it was the gas masks.

    • @cwnapier67
      @cwnapier67 Před 4 lety +4

      Andy Black numbers are way off. Verdun was the worst meat grinder in WW1 and the Somme was horrendous. Almost 20,000 British troops died on the first day only with 60,000 casualties. Most of them in the first hour. The worst losses in British military history.

  • @elkiemart4132
    @elkiemart4132 Před 4 lety +260

    “Politicians who took us to war should have been given the guns and told to settle their differences themselves, instead of organising nothing better than legalised mass murder" - Harry Patch 1898-2009 The last British fighting Tommy

    • @mikes6970
      @mikes6970 Před 3 lety +18

      God bless Harry Patch and may he rest in peace ... greatman ..

    • @pilowmonster
      @pilowmonster Před 3 lety +14

      True, all wars are mass human sacrifice to create changes afterwards. A society is not the same or as powerful when all the brave men are gone.

    • @davisworth5114
      @davisworth5114 Před 3 lety +7

      Harry Patch was a very cool dude.

    • @ObviousTrollFrom2007
      @ObviousTrollFrom2007 Před 3 lety +9

      One hundred and eleven years old. That must've been one hard yet outstanding life.

    • @ronxlii
      @ronxlii Před 3 lety +7

      Old men start wars… young men fight them.

  • @al01100
    @al01100 Před 7 lety +269

    modern weapons, obsolete tactics, no antibiotics, and as much misery as yould ever want. glad I missed this party

    • @jkline999
      @jkline999 Před 4 lety +24

      And for what? So your kids could fight another one in '39?

    • @MechanicznaCebula
      @MechanicznaCebula Před 4 lety +8

      @@jkline999 every war sucks we all know that, but first war was way cruel for soldiers.

    • @datrevmeister
      @datrevmeister Před 4 lety +3

      Take your pic between WWI Verdun or WWII Stalingrad?

    • @silverwiskers7371
      @silverwiskers7371 Před 4 lety

      You said a mouthful there

    • @silv3rbl4d3s1
      @silv3rbl4d3s1 Před 3 lety +5

      @@datrevmeister Stalingrad please.
      Verdun must have been an absolute nightmare

  • @thebeezknees
    @thebeezknees Před 6 lety +252

    Crazy to think at the start of WW1 these guys were closer to the napleonic wars than we are to them.

    • @azagar5044
      @azagar5044 Před 6 lety +5

      thebeezknees I think modern warfare is a mix between napoleonic warfare and modern warfare

    • @nigeh5326
      @nigeh5326 Před 5 lety +13

      Thankfully by 1914 the military had learned some of the lessons of the Crimean War and the U.S. Civil War eg you don't just line up opposite your opponents and fire etc

    • @twaldy
      @twaldy Před 5 lety +18

      I'm always amazed by how short generational gaps are. I'm 28, when my dad was a kid he would help his mum on nursing rounds with elderly patients and he remembers speaking to survivors of the Boer war, he's 60 odd. Just to think, the last soldier who served in the American revolutionary war died between 1940-1950. You are never too far away from other generations when you think about it.

    • @lebaillidessavoies3889
      @lebaillidessavoies3889 Před 4 lety

      Military tactics of WW1 were directly inspired from u.s cesession war , considered as first modern war.

    • @TheGeosto
      @TheGeosto Před 4 lety +19

      twaldy I think you meant the Civil war of 1861-1865...

  • @40calripken32
    @40calripken32 Před 6 lety +121

    4:25 I've literally never thought about how well trained war horses must've been. Ive been around alot of horses that get froggy if you snap your fingers too loudly.

    • @TheDrumminguy
      @TheDrumminguy Před 6 lety +9

      exactly what i thought in that moment

    • @digibotdotcom
      @digibotdotcom Před 5 lety +7

      The best, and most, real scene in the video.

    • @kevinkibler2181
      @kevinkibler2181 Před 4 lety +2

      I thought the same after seeing them firing artillery right over their heads

    • @RayMond-tp6ty
      @RayMond-tp6ty Před 4 lety +10

      Feel sorry for the poor horses they didn’t want this war

    • @dylxnhvh4266
      @dylxnhvh4266 Před 4 lety +6

      Ray Mond no one wanted the war you melon

  • @fooman530
    @fooman530 Před 6 lety +208

    Over 100 years ago... That's insane. This video gave me chills, just to think everyone in this video has passed away. I really don't know how to explain what I feel watching events of this war with very eery stock footage and music.

    • @RMPage-mw3ml
      @RMPage-mw3ml Před 6 lety +23

      I thought the same thing... Nobody in any of this footage is alive anymore, like we are watching ghosts on film.

    • @fooman530
      @fooman530 Před 6 lety +12

      "Ghosts on film"... Exactly, that's a way I could describe how I feel. I couldn't have said it better myself...

    • @stephenn6657
      @stephenn6657 Před 6 lety +10

      Fooman530
      Many were poor and young. They didn't think much back then. They didnt have the internet or mass communication.
      You just worked the fields, in town.

    • @Declan-pg8cg
      @Declan-pg8cg Před 4 lety +2

      Passed away? Unfortunately too many of them were blown away.
      All over a stupid war they barely understood.

    • @perimetrfilms
      @perimetrfilms Před 2 lety +6

      It's interesting but if life was from your nose to your outstretched arm, 4000 billion years ago is your nose, and one millimetre is of your outstretched finger nail is all of human history (5500 years). Life with bones etc only starts to appear near the base of the thumb. And humans like us only appear in the last segment of the index finger. How does that make you feel? Here's one for you relevant to this video. I am 54. Aged 7 I spoked to a man called George Sidwell (my step grandad). He was a Coldstream Guard (professional soldier) prior to WW1 and fought through it with his brother who got killed, and his best friend died of wounds in 1918 (Pvt Little). George would sit as I played with plastic soldiers, by then a very old man, and would repeat in a deep voice over and over again: "War is a terrible thing. A terrible thing." He told my dad, "Never allow the ruling classes to send you or anyone to war. Oppose it. Oppose them. Do not be deceived by them as we were! People are all people! Fight them rather than their enemies."

  • @america8706
    @america8706 Před 7 lety +202

    That first clip of the men marching in a huge mass past the camera, I've never seen anything like it. This whole video was haunting, gave me chills, and had my complete attention. It's not often that happens. It's rare to see such quality WW1 footage not created by Hollywood, sure some of it kinda seemed staged but for the most part it looked authentic. Thank you for uploading this, you deserve the like I'm about to bestow upon you.

    • @nirvanafan21191
      @nirvanafan21191 Před 7 lety +13

      Check out Apocalypse WWI. All in restored color and A LOT of footage. Chills you to the bone.

    • @america8706
      @america8706 Před 7 lety +4

      I've watched WW2 Apocalypse in full color but haven't heard anything about a WW1 documentary, I'd like to see that.

    • @nirvanafan21191
      @nirvanafan21191 Před 7 lety +3

      It's brutal.

    • @icejfishwer560
      @icejfishwer560 Před 6 lety +2

      America that's not CGI and it's both amazing and scary giave me goosebumps.

    • @lilpeepants4202
      @lilpeepants4202 Před 6 lety +3

      We still march like that from time to time, just not in the public eye.

  • @backdraft57
    @backdraft57 Před 4 lety +20

    My great Uncle fought there, US Marine. Came back a madman.

    • @michael_mouse
      @michael_mouse Před 4 lety +3

      ... a prayer for him and all the other poor souls who were lost in WWI & WWII

    • @alicehopkins5567
      @alicehopkins5567 Před 2 lety +3

      My Great Uncle was a Marine in WWI, and died of a heart attack a few years after coming back. All that stress.

    • @backdraft57
      @backdraft57 Před 2 lety +1

      @@alicehopkins5567 sorry, so sad. Wish the hate, madness and war could end.......but it never will

    • @matoko123
      @matoko123 Před 2 lety +2

      And madmen sent him there.

    • @matoko123
      @matoko123 Před 2 lety +1

      @@backdraft57 There's serious money to be made by wars, they'll never stop.

  • @romaking6713
    @romaking6713 Před 5 lety +31

    My grandmother's eldest was KIA in France 24 OCT 1918. Just days before the cease fire. Initially buried in France, his remains were repatriated to the USA in 1921. He now rests in Arlington alongside his Brothers-in-arms.

    • @viice305
      @viice305 Před 3 lety +1

      I’m sorry to hear that. I wish the best to you and your family.

  • @ossionci586
    @ossionci586 Před 6 lety +136

    Over 60 million soldiers fought in the "War to End All Wars".
    It ended nothing.
    Yet it changed the world forever.

    • @fooman530
      @fooman530 Před 6 lety +13

      Ossionci
      *Cough* Battlefield 1 *Cough*

    • @ossionci586
      @ossionci586 Před 6 lety

      COD rolled the dice, but battlefield 1.

    • @fooman530
      @fooman530 Před 6 lety

      Ossionci What? Yes... we know. I was saying that you just ripped the line straight from the game.

    • @ossionci586
      @ossionci586 Před 6 lety

      It was a joke.

    • @ossionci586
      @ossionci586 Před 6 lety

      I actually don't remember posting this.

  • @nirvanafan21191
    @nirvanafan21191 Před 7 lety +97

    Honestly, despite what people say about WWII and after having done quite a bit of research on all the variables that went with WWI, it was damn near the deadliest conflict in human history. The sheer number of people that died in so short a time. Absolutely tragic.

    • @IdesofMarch223
      @IdesofMarch223 Před 6 lety +20

      Josh WW2 was clearly the deadliest and most horrific war to ever be waged, but WW1, for the soldiers, was the most hellish existence, more so than the frontlines of WW2. Yes, comparatively, much less death than WW2, but for the millions that survived the combat, their time in the trenches was a literal hellscape. We can never forget WW1, which is sadly more common thing to forget today.

    • @si6ck
      @si6ck Před 6 lety +2

      Well when you think about the 4 years WWI was and the deaths and then compare the 12 years WWII was its safe to say WWI could've been much worse, thank god it wasn't.

    • @Migoyan
      @Migoyan Před 6 lety +9

      Dr. MEME! The WW2 was 6 years not 12

    • @si6ck
      @si6ck Před 6 lety

      *shush*

    • @IdesofMarch223
      @IdesofMarch223 Před 6 lety +3

      Some bloke in your back garden There are some historians that will argue that WW2 began when Japan invaded China in 1933.

  • @elobreque3886
    @elobreque3886 Před 5 lety +37

    Although many were very young, they were real men. Respect

    • @matoko123
      @matoko123 Před 2 lety

      They were fools.

    • @jeffsmith9351
      @jeffsmith9351 Před 2 lety +1

      All men are real men and most of them are simple minds like the one who wrote the naive words I'm replying to

    • @tillerman7272
      @tillerman7272 Před 2 lety +1

      @@matoko123 they were forced to fight and carried out the job. How dare you call the men who fought for your freedom fools.

    • @matoko123
      @matoko123 Před 2 lety

      @@tillerman7272 If some men in suits in government tells you to say goodbye to your family, go and 'fight' and die for what we say are valid reasons and you say 'sure, sounds good to me' then I have no problem at all in calling that person a fool. There would be no wars without the brainwashed fools of this world.
      And as for WW1 and 2 are you sure the good guys won? Of course you are you've read it in the history books written by the victors.

    • @Mirandelorean
      @Mirandelorean Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@matoko123 you make me sick

  • @catholicforever
    @catholicforever Před 5 lety +56

    It's sad to think that there are no World War 1 veterans around anymore. :'(

    • @ptrekboxbreaks5198
      @ptrekboxbreaks5198 Před 3 lety +6

      Over 100 years ago ! Absolutely crazy I remember it like it was yesterday. The shells humming, the bullets whizzing, the men pissing. Oh the scary times

    • @ptrekboxbreaks5198
      @ptrekboxbreaks5198 Před 3 lety +4

      Just messing around, but thankfully we have some footage to always remember them by

    • @shadowpoet4398
      @shadowpoet4398 Před 3 lety +5

      I'm the son of a soldier and I wanted so much to meet and thank one

    • @nigelmitchell351
      @nigelmitchell351 Před 3 lety +2

      Both my grandfather's went to France and Belgium, both came home before the end.
      One minus one eye, completely, the other with a shattered leg, a walking stick and a severe limp.
      They were two of the lucky ones.
      Of my grandmother and her three sisters she was the only one to marry.

    • @finddeniro
      @finddeniro Před 3 lety +2

      I met several in the 1980s.. Old Guard...that breed is G o n e ..
      ..

  • @johnmason5389
    @johnmason5389 Před 6 lety +92

    When you watch that horse and rider get hit by the artillery shell you just before the end you see the horse trying to get back up,sad man, respect, never forgotten

  • @TheLeadSled
    @TheLeadSled Před 4 lety +12

    Absolutely fascinating, I do not think people realize how devastating this war was because it gets overshadowed a lot by world war 2. This was the first true mechanized war with so much death and destruction, horrific.

  • @FailedCommentator
    @FailedCommentator Před 7 lety +173

    This scares me, just to know, that they faced hell and millions never came back

    • @omen828
      @omen828 Před 6 lety +6

      Earl Yoist The vast majority of combatants survived.

    • @nigeh5326
      @nigeh5326 Před 5 lety +5

      A very small number survived from the start of the war in 1914 through to 1918 despite repeated service in the trenches

    • @o01chris10o
      @o01chris10o Před 4 lety +3

      It wasnt throughput the whole war that losses were high. Its just that the greatest losses of the war happened within a span of Weeks to Months.

    • @astudentpilotlife
      @astudentpilotlife Před 4 lety +1

      Plus when they come back home they then face the Spanish flu that kill more then the WW1 victim.

    • @graham2631
      @graham2631 Před 4 lety +3

      @@omen828 the wives put it best, "they returned ghosts of the men they once were" none survived unscathed

  • @ta2joe13
    @ta2joe13 Před 7 lety +108

    Only the dead truly know the end of war

    • @6tony1gray4
      @6tony1gray4 Před 6 lety +3

      Some rest in peace, others still at war

    • @MrZozur
      @MrZozur Před 5 lety +3

      "Only the dead have seen the end of war" ~ Platon

    • @lysyrg251911
      @lysyrg251911 Před 5 lety +4

      The quote is from Plato.

    • @MrT8T3R
      @MrT8T3R Před 4 lety +3

      The muffled drums sad roll has beat the soldiers last tattoo.
      No more on life's parade shall meet the brave and fallen few.
      On fames eternal camping ground their silent tents are spread
      And glory guards with solemn round the bivouac of the dead.
      -Theodore O'Hara

    • @docbailey3265
      @docbailey3265 Před 4 lety +1

      To sleep, perchance to dream...

  • @johnconley3218
    @johnconley3218 Před 4 lety +10

    I think the saddest part of all is to this day farmers plow up remains of these young men in the Europe killing fields...respect and Rest In Peace warriors

    • @3vimages471
      @3vimages471 Před 2 lety +3

      And so much ammunition is dug up every year .... tons of shells and bombs. They call it the Iron Harvest.

  • @alexandrebender5896
    @alexandrebender5896 Před 5 lety +12

    Impressive. Real action. I was impressed with that cart drawn by horses that nearly turns upside down.

  • @F.Krueger-cs4vk
    @F.Krueger-cs4vk Před 4 lety +5

    My grand father was in that hell hole. Fields of mud, full of decomposing corpes, stench, bones, fragments & unexploded munitions. Even today, farmer's find so much stuff left from those times. One of many sad chapters in human history. 🖐 🇦🇺 .

  • @timdockery5830
    @timdockery5830 Před 6 lety +5

    I think that is the best quality WW1 footage I've ever seen.

  • @mikhailv67tv
    @mikhailv67tv Před 7 lety +164

    spooky music

    • @charlieswan322
      @charlieswan322 Před 6 lety +1

      mikhailv67 what’s it called

    • @timothyo718
      @timothyo718 Před 6 lety

      mikhailv67
      Makes me think of Allah.

    • @MrZiad32
      @MrZiad32 Před 6 lety +1

      +Timothy O how does creepy music make you think of the all merciful?

    • @mattwalters6834
      @mattwalters6834 Před 5 lety +1

      mikhailv67 I think it adds to the “theme” if you will. War always seems eerie and the music definitely has that eerie sound to it?

    • @jfloresmac
      @jfloresmac Před 4 lety +5

      I think it is the perfect atmospheric music. It fits the air and the ground around the soldiers. It was the twilight for them, live here die there and everywhere. There was no escaping this music

  • @pfclumi
    @pfclumi Před 6 lety +36

    What never changes is death itself. Fast forward or rewind, death always looks the same, no matter how the method of killing may change. It's still death, death is timeless

    • @TheDJKILLIN
      @TheDJKILLIN Před 6 lety +1

      Lumi Michael death is universal.

    • @MrZiad32
      @MrZiad32 Před 6 lety +1

      +Gary Daniel temporary

  • @bubbles6883
    @bubbles6883 Před 6 lety +42

    I can't believe I'm watching footage of WW1

    • @michael_mouse
      @michael_mouse Před 4 lety

      ... I agree... I had to check the title to see which war it was from

  • @LookHereMars
    @LookHereMars Před 6 lety +9

    It's very interesting to literally watch in motion 100 years ago.

  • @lebaillidessavoies3889
    @lebaillidessavoies3889 Před 4 lety +14

    Those guys in the obsevations balloons during WW1!! I have always been fascinated by the nature of human being to volunteer for doing the most suicidal things....

  • @Sailor1010
    @Sailor1010 Před 7 lety +84

    Rare footage. I've seen some of this but other stuff is new to me. Do you have more?

    • @shellc6743
      @shellc6743 Před 6 lety +1

      I've seen most of this before .. some was filmed after battles for training purposes.

  • @mazda1942
    @mazda1942 Před 3 lety +7

    It was only observers in balloons who were allowed to have parachutes. It is tragic that so many young pilots needlessly died because they were forbidden to wear parachutes on the pretext that they would facilitate cowardice.

    • @mikadeca4031
      @mikadeca4031 Před rokem

      The only cowards were the politicians who send this men to face the bullets and artillery while they remained comfy and safe

  • @panzerfaust5119
    @panzerfaust5119 Před 7 lety +19

    man its been 100 years ago.everyone you see here is long gone.Nobody survives life.

    • @TheKres7787
      @TheKres7787 Před 7 lety +1

      always get caught by bizarre yet realistic thoughts of what you said when watching these old videos..

    • @panzerfaust5119
      @panzerfaust5119 Před 7 lety +1

      Kresimir Kolumbic its a sad testament to mans ability to violate themselves out of the basic principles of life and to the lowest means to do it with.

    • @tru11666
      @tru11666 Před 6 lety

      Terry Franks

    • @jeremybear573
      @jeremybear573 Před 6 lety

      Terry Franks Touché Sir, Touché

    • @icejfishwer560
      @icejfishwer560 Před 6 lety +2

      Terry Franks RIP to the men who fought in the war.

  • @deathxceremony5255
    @deathxceremony5255 Před 3 lety +3

    The image stabilisation and frame rate regulation on this is absolutely incredible, good job guys.

  • @markroberts9577
    @markroberts9577 Před 4 lety +5

    Extremely good footage considering how old the film is. Plus much of that I know I've never seen before

  • @LindaStevensBZ
    @LindaStevensBZ Před 4 lety +4

    War on that scale is simply madness.

  • @chrisnnh
    @chrisnnh Před 2 lety +5

    My grandad was a medic in The Great War. Mustard gas got him as he was pulling wounded off the battlefield. He was proud of his service and the friends he made in France. But….he did confide to me, a young lad, “Cannon fodder.”

  • @TheRhNegative
    @TheRhNegative Před 7 lety +2

    Thank you for this upload. I so enjoy learning about the Great War.

  • @jnauttube
    @jnauttube Před 5 lety +1

    Amazing choice of music to couple these scenes with. Well done.

  • @johnfellows2867
    @johnfellows2867 Před 5 lety +6

    I always feel so sorry for the horses, millions died, but they were just being faithful to their masters .

    • @w.h.1940
      @w.h.1940 Před 4 lety

      when they died they ate them

  • @twwtjohns
    @twwtjohns Před 4 lety +4

    My grandfather was a Sargent in Company M of the 32nd Inf Brigade/Division. He was wounded at the battle of Chateau Thierry and a second time in the Argonne forest. He died of a seizure in 1921 as a result of the "shell shock." The repeated artillery explosions caused traumatic encephalopathy in the brain. Fortunately my grandmother was 5 months pregnant with my mother.

  • @liampalmer4370
    @liampalmer4370 Před 5 lety +2

    Music made it even more eerie, man I wish the camera were better back then, I would love to see more of these brave men.

  • @mjc11a
    @mjc11a Před 3 lety +1

    Remarkable film. Thanks for posting and stay safe.

  • @SamonMarquis
    @SamonMarquis Před 5 lety +10

    Maybe if we fire just ONE MORE shell, that will affect the outcome of this battle/war.

  • @jimmyc2895
    @jimmyc2895 Před 5 lety +3

    Every man in this video has passed and met his creator.many never made it back home to their families

  • @rongeotom6
    @rongeotom6 Před 7 lety +7

    Amazing footage

  • @daveybass655
    @daveybass655 Před 2 lety +6

    My Grandad was there. Mounted cavalry.
    He lived to be 99 yrs old.
    My Pa, fought ww2. He lived to be 78.
    These were good men.

  • @user-eb6yj5xb2x
    @user-eb6yj5xb2x Před 6 lety +3

    Thank you for your service

  • @johnpenny9656
    @johnpenny9656 Před 5 lety +6

    They did it for us, we're told. My Grandfather had a different opinion. However, he started me on the road to being anti war, as did my father, who partook in the second WW!

    • @matoko123
      @matoko123 Před 2 lety +1

      Wars are designed only to make very wealthy individuals a lot wealthier. Your ancestors were quite right.

  • @djolivierastro
    @djolivierastro Před 4 lety +5

    4:33 imagine the terror not only for the men but for these horses

  • @jesser73
    @jesser73 Před 2 lety +1

    Truly grateful with the constant advent of technology, more of these films are being found, preserved and put out there.this conflict never received its due here since the US came in at the tail end, and was completely foreshadowed by the second war and the fact photographic and cinematic battle techniques and equipment had evolved insanely just in a 25 yr span.

  • @brandonthomas303
    @brandonthomas303 Před 4 lety +4

    Absolutely surreal! Even the ones who did survive, lived with hell in their minds. And even now, they are all past away. I do pray that they all found peace!

  • @northernleigonare
    @northernleigonare Před 4 lety +3

    I think the worst thing I remember isnt the death, or the gas, or the pictures of trenches that makes WW1, but those massive amounts of artilery. The huge railway guns and cannons with different breach loading mechanisms and designs. They were massive, and there were so many. Then in WW2, you hardly see any railway guns unless it was when germany was fighting france, sometime in russia or during the retreat in 1944.

  • @blessedwithchallenges9917

    Nobody in these scenes is alive. They certainly made a difference for us today. Incredible.

    • @matoko123
      @matoko123 Před 2 lety

      Not necessarily for the better.

    • @blessedwithchallenges9917
      @blessedwithchallenges9917 Před 2 lety

      @@matoko123 you believe Europe and Asia would be better off under Hitler's rule? Wow.

    • @matoko123
      @matoko123 Před 2 lety

      @@blessedwithchallenges9917 Yes, I do believe that. Patton himself said 'we fought the wrong enemy'. May I suggest that you watch Europa: The Last Battle. You'll find it on bit'shute. It offers the non-mainstream version of history as written by the victors.

    • @blessedwithchallenges9917
      @blessedwithchallenges9917 Před 2 lety +2

      @@matoko123 I lived in Communist countries and watched people tortured and hacked up with machetes. I was personally imprisoned and, although they never physically beat me, they threatened it the whole time. Stalin, Lenin, Kim Ill Sung, (et al) are never going to be on my good side. I've known Jews from Holland who were in the concentration camps. You'll always find alt history; but finding good for society in authoritarian or communist dictatorships is not the way it works.

    • @matoko123
      @matoko123 Před 2 lety

      @@blessedwithchallenges9917 Agreed, now watch Europa.

  • @tonybeards9153
    @tonybeards9153 Před 4 lety +5

    I imagine everybody is thinking,thank God we’re alive now and not then🙏

  • @greene1339
    @greene1339 Před 5 lety +5

    Isn't it heartbreaking people thought this would be the Last big global conflict?

  • @petersrightbut8297
    @petersrightbut8297 Před 5 lety +7

    American troops were not well trained in 1917, We mostly fought directed by other allied troops. Eventually we were shipping 10,000 men a day into France, and our own Commander Pershing led us to several great victories, including Meuse Argonne.

    • @anonymousnameless1835
      @anonymousnameless1835 Před 5 lety +1

      But Americans were better marksmen due to the 2nd Amendment.

    • @o01chris10o
      @o01chris10o Před 4 lety

      Lets also not forget that the fastest international transportation was still by ship, so the fact that the US was able to grow so powerful so quickly proved them to be a World Power which altered history forever

    • @RicTic66
      @RicTic66 Před 4 lety +2

      @@anonymousnameless1835 You're joking by 1918 when the Americans started fighting British, French German troops etc were as good if not better than any rifle men ever. In fact in 1914 the British were considered the most devastatingly accurate marksmen in the world. The Germans at Mons thought the British were using machine guns because of the amount of fire coming from the British line. 30+ aimed rounds a minute from a bolt action 303 SMLE was some going.

  • @stupoc6715
    @stupoc6715 Před 4 lety +2

    My Great Grandfather was German born in 1899 ,moved to the U.S. at 3yrs old only to go back to Germany after 14yrs to fight in WW1. He was a great guy and proud of what he did. Couldn't hear for sh!t.
    Crazyness.

    • @matoko123
      @matoko123 Před 2 lety

      He fought for the wrong side.

    • @derstille463
      @derstille463 Před 2 lety

      @@matoko123 He fought for his country, which a disgusting worm like you doesn't understand.

  • @jeromeycole613
    @jeromeycole613 Před 4 lety

    Cool. That's some eerie music. Good video

  • @jamesreidtabo7803
    @jamesreidtabo7803 Před 7 lety +84

    the scariest thing is GaS everyone is putting mask on but you didn't find your mask.

    • @MrSlidthunder
      @MrSlidthunder Před 6 lety +5

      James Reidtabo the scariest thing is living during that era

    • @plumbherhub1664
      @plumbherhub1664 Před 6 lety +3

      Or it ripped from shrapnel

    • @Brodus8899
      @Brodus8899 Před 6 lety +2

      WalkingOnSunshineMan BF1 reference?

    • @reggiekrager5411
      @reggiekrager5411 Před 6 lety +14

      Teutonicus Furor Excuse me?The two world wars, spainish flu, rise of nazism and communism, great depression , concentration camps, gulags? In fact, I think the generation born between 1893-1901 has to pass as the most unlucky generation to EVER exist in history , WORLDWIDE , but especially in Europe, just think about it, you are born in any year between 1893-1901, in 1914, World War 1 breaks out , if you were born in 1894-1896, you would have just came of age in 1914, which makes you just the perfect age for getting conscripted in the army of whatever country you are from, so it's more than sure that you will get conscripted for fighting in the war at any time between 1914-1918/19 in the army of the country you are from, the war ends in 1918-1919, at the same time when the spainish flu hits, so if you didn't die in the war, you might probably die because of spainish flu(because by the way most of the infected ones where young men with ages between 18-25 years old, so EXACTLY the soldiers that had just returned from the front) , so if you didn't die neither at the front, neither from the spainish flu, you would have a time of relative peace and prosperity in the 20's( in the case of the winning nations only)....before the 1929 great depression hit , when you might not die, but you will surely lose your job , your house,remain homeless and starving. If you were from the former Russian Empire, you also caught the 1917 revolution, the rise of communism, and the purges and gulags of lenin and stalin,if you where from Germany, you caught the rise of hitler ,if you where a jew , homosexual , gypsy or a person with a handicap,you got put into a ghetto , if you where from Italy or Japan, you caught the rise of fascism in those countries, then world war 2 breaks out , and you might be consripted AGAIN in your country's army, so if you didn't die in the other war you 'll probably die in this one,if you are jewish, gypsy , homosexual, polish or a person with a handicap from nazi Germany or nazi -controlled territory you got moved from the ghetto to a concentration camp where you'll most likely die. If you where a german/axis soldier on the eastern front you might have fallen prisoner and be sent to a gulag where you'll most likely die.Don't forget the bombings , air raids and street battles, if you survive the war and you are from Eastern or Central Europe, you'll see the installing of the communist dictatorial regime in your country, and you might end up in a communust gulag , where you'll most likely die(of course if you survived all the events listed above) and even if you are not from Eastern or Central Europe , you still spend the last years of your life in a continent in ruins, ravaged by war and rampant poverty, probably suffering from PTSD and each and every single possible disease in the world, you probably lack at least a foot or an arm, all of your friends and big parts of your family are dead etc. Those people did absolutely NOTHING wrong excepting for being born at the wrong place at the wrong time. So, yea , you sure seen some shit if you lived in that era, it would have been very scary indeed, it seems like if there was some kind of curse on that entire generation...

    • @sebastiantiainen2749
      @sebastiantiainen2749 Před 6 lety

      Costin Pitulice the reason why the spanish flu seemed to affect young men is because young men lived very close to each other in the absolutely horrendous and unsanitary trenches. And the spanish flu would probably not have been as devastating if not for the war

  • @smartacus88
    @smartacus88 Před 6 lety +6

    0:16 That scene gives me chills. That America doesn't exist anymore.

    • @RicTic66
      @RicTic66 Před 4 lety

      That's the only bit that features Americans. A staged flag waving. Most of this was filmed long before America entered the war.

  • @liliarodrigueznavarro3392

    genial captacion tiempo y espacio de la historia 👍

  • @iamcarbonandotherbits.8039

    The English and German colonels upwards had a lovely war visiting each other for dinner, after all they were related.

  • @orellaminx3530
    @orellaminx3530 Před 6 lety +4

    0:41 Sneak sneak sneak "Oye, camera man, we trying to stealth here! Go away with your big ass breadbox camera!"

  • @Andyb2379
    @Andyb2379 Před 6 lety +168

    Sad to think everyone in these clips are all dead now.

    • @Sandman42008
      @Sandman42008 Před 6 lety +19

      Andyb2379 it’s also a bit freaky to like were are we going to be in 100 years just like them brother but yes it is most definitely sad

    • @killercrabman
      @killercrabman Před 6 lety +1

      J Thorsson for F sake Google it, this is a comments section not a dang chat room.

    • @ab-qs8vi
      @ab-qs8vi Před 6 lety

      J Thorsson so why are you still alive?

    • @LovingTinha
      @LovingTinha Před 6 lety +1

      There is no such thing, everything is an arrangement of what each person can or will tolerate from others, people are naturally insane, no other way to justify or explain our historical/present actions/ events. Nobody could ever convince me to go to war like these people did, yet if I didn't fight I'd be considered a coward as if there is anything wrong with not wanting to participate in killing and dying until a time of my own free choice.

    • @noconnection1839
      @noconnection1839 Před 6 lety

      It's life.

  • @jamesb.9155
    @jamesb.9155 Před rokem +1

    I remember my late grandfather speaking highly of U.S. General "Black Jack Pershing" 7:16 back in the 1960s! As an ambulance driver he had seen some of the effects of the war close up. I still have some of the mementos he brought back from France, including some Kaiser Deutsch Marks.

  • @turnupthesun81
    @turnupthesun81 Před rokem +1

    It’s crazy when you watch those artillery guys. I remember seeing WW1/WW2 vets as a kid in the 80s and you always saw those guys with hearing aids because their hearing was all shot to hell

  • @jwf1964
    @jwf1964 Před 7 lety +8

    Never seen footage like this from such a long time ago. Seems allies cooperated very closely for the signal corps to such incredible shots of allies. Brits and French look very professional.

    • @scottseymour5621
      @scottseymour5621 Před 6 lety +2

      Brits and Australians were very professional......they were, after all, fighting this war for the best part of three years before the US finally came to help.

    • @RicTic66
      @RicTic66 Před 4 lety

      Most of this was filmed long before America entered the war.

    • @jwf1964
      @jwf1964 Před 4 lety

      Scott Seymour it would have been the height of arrogance for us to get involved in a war that had nothing to do with us. When Germany was stupid enough to pick a fight, we accepted. And you should be glad we did. Just like you should be glad we risked our pacific fleet at the Coral Sea to save Australia from invasion. If it had gone bad we opened up California and Hawaii to attack

    • @jwf1964
      @jwf1964 Před 4 lety

      RicTic66 well this is a US Army Signal Corps film, they may have received footage from allies. Allies US Army and Marines saved from certain defeat in 1918.

    • @RicTic66
      @RicTic66 Před 4 lety

      @@jwf1964 Certain defeat? The war was practically over before America started fighting. Yes the threat of a million or more troops from America swayed the Germans hand, but hardly any of them fought re to the amount of British, French, Canadians, Aussie's, Italians, Serbians etc. By 1918 the British had practically starved Germany into surrender on the home front and yes the German army may have fought on for another 6 months or so, but they were beat and the fact Pershing took so long to get fighting showed America was much more effective as an army on paper than they were in the field.

  • @rickvassell8349
    @rickvassell8349 Před 4 lety +3

    My grandfather was wounded from an artillery shell while on horseback, Captain Fred Vassell.

  • @charlestehuia9263
    @charlestehuia9263 Před 4 lety +1

    The absolute madness of mankind on full display here

    • @matoko123
      @matoko123 Před 2 lety

      Not mankind, only the ruling elite.

  • @L3GHO5T
    @L3GHO5T Před 3 lety

    In no shape or form is any sort of war easy but these poor souls I think had it the worst. The film adds such an eerie effect to what is already hell on earth. Thank you for sharing this

  • @davidca96
    @davidca96 Před 6 lety +7

    WW1 was the worst war in recorded history, mainly due to how far weapon technology had progressed compared to medical technology. WW2 medical support was leaps and bounds better, with a much more efficient system for casualties. Also the act of trench warfare made most men go mad over time if they werent killed or maimed by the INSANE amount of artillery used.

  • @peterajacobs4509
    @peterajacobs4509 Před 6 lety +3

    Wars should be fought by the politicians who declare the war in the first place

  • @docbailey3265
    @docbailey3265 Před 4 lety +1

    Good presentation.

  • @c431inf
    @c431inf Před 6 lety +1

    Amazing

  • @goodbrew1
    @goodbrew1 Před 7 lety +3

    Frikin gnarly !!! Damn !

  • @digital_nobody
    @digital_nobody Před 6 lety +7

    No mans' land...

  • @frednel4326
    @frednel4326 Před 4 lety

    Comming from a ex militant i must say this is sad and should never have happened..God bless everyone who died in these evil wars..soldiers..woman and children..animals..all because of the choices of a few..peace ✌

  • @Stewart1953
    @Stewart1953 Před rokem +1

    my Scot grandfather was a piper in france. never met him but very proud of him.

  • @mort2753
    @mort2753 Před 7 lety +6

    How have we made it this far?

  • @soundknight
    @soundknight Před 6 lety +6

    Phenomenal, endlessly fascinating due to its uniqueness, longest continuous and most intense fighting, most powerful nations across the globe, an age of shivalry mashed in the meat grinder like young chicks to the slaughter house. A generation lost fighting each other

  • @chriscoleman6411
    @chriscoleman6411 Před 5 lety +1

    Great footage...sad..but good

  • @williamfairfaxmasonprescot9334

    #TrulyAmazingFootage
    As always 👍👍👍👍👍

  • @technosamurai9825
    @technosamurai9825 Před 7 lety +5

    where can I download this music?

  • @stewmeat9261
    @stewmeat9261 Před 5 lety +4

    Firing shells over the top of that horse column. Wow horses were used to the noise I suppose

  • @fquiroz6592
    @fquiroz6592 Před 2 lety

    War can be really crude, the hell we are able to create on earth itself its incomparable with any scenario we can ever imagine. Good thing we have footage, pictures and numbers to remember what it was, and to never repeat it again. They shall be never forgotten.

  • @ziggymorris8760
    @ziggymorris8760 Před 6 lety +1

    Nice

  • @johnx9318
    @johnx9318 Před 6 lety +82

    That's odd. The beginning of the video showed a huge force of US troops, the end of the video showed a magnificent US war office seal.
    But all the action footage seems to be of the British, French, Germans or Italians.
    Did I miss the US action sequences?

    • @andrewdziuba3336
      @andrewdziuba3336 Před 6 lety +56

      John X we were only involved in the Meuse-Argon offensive in the last months of the war. The US did practically nothing of military value except join the winning team shortly before it was over. Pershing knew he didn't have well trained troops, so he kept us out of battle until he felt they could handle it so combat footage of US troops is rare

    • @johnx9318
      @johnx9318 Před 6 lety +29

      Ben Shanklin Hey Ben, that was the most refreshinly honest response to my comment. But don't discount the huge ammount of positive psychology the US troops bought to the fray. The effect of that was the real game-changer. (In my modestly-informed opinion.)

    • @estebanmorales6568
      @estebanmorales6568 Před 6 lety +39

      The material contribution from the US was far more important than any actual combat involvement.

    • @johnx9318
      @johnx9318 Před 6 lety +16

      You do realise that Britain had to pay the US back don't you?
      Same for WW2. Final payment was in the 1990's I believe.
      US combat involvement would have shortened the war and prevented many additional and therefore unneccessary allied deaths.
      When our allies were in trouble, we responded on day one with no expectation of a refund.

    • @swaglord7105
      @swaglord7105 Před 6 lety +10

      You might be mistaking Americans for British or French seeing as they had to borrow lots of gear from the French and British

  • @homebuiltindoorplane
    @homebuiltindoorplane Před 8 lety +45

    If you like this you will love the War of 1812 combat footage.

    • @goldenrod000-youtube3
      @goldenrod000-youtube3 Před 8 lety +5

      Yeah! War of 1812!

    • @docbailey3265
      @docbailey3265 Před 7 lety +21

      homebuiltindoorplane I'm going to be uploading some rare footage from the Battle Cannae soon. It's going to be a little grainy.

    • @homebuiltindoorplane
      @homebuiltindoorplane Před 7 lety

      Haha thanks! Have a great day!

    • @saraw6446
      @saraw6446 Před 7 lety +12

      Doc Bailey Seen the go pro footage of Hannibals SS panzer division "das Numidian" at Trebia? or 3rd Balearic slingergrenadiers at Trasimene?

    • @homebuiltindoorplane
      @homebuiltindoorplane Před 7 lety +35

      pastor of muppets
      I have a little bit of footage of the Crusades, but it was shot on wooden film, and it had seriously degraded from termites.

  • @GdaySport
    @GdaySport Před 5 lety +2

    Could not believe the number of men in that opening scene. It is insane!

  • @obama7110
    @obama7110 Před 3 lety +2

    still to this day and to the grave and back, I will always think WW1 is the most chaotic and brutal war in human history, before or after any other war. It also has a lot of deaths, but isn't the deadliest

  • @johnnyt5465
    @johnnyt5465 Před 6 lety +8

    Was rad watching the 1 man operating the cannon till they came in

    • @mohutchmo9591
      @mohutchmo9591 Před 6 lety +2

      he was prolly mad shitting his pants the entire time. i would not even gonna lie

    • @KwansuMyDudes
      @KwansuMyDudes Před 6 lety +3

      Some units would leave a single man stationed on a ready to fire gun. If a target was called, the rest of the crew would join as soon as they heard the call/shot. That's why the rest of the crew immediately manned their stations without hesitation.

    • @jasonnicholasschwarz7788
      @jasonnicholasschwarz7788 Před 21 hodinou

      @@KwansuMyDudes I always wonder how many got killed by getting in the way of the recoil...instant death Iguess.

  • @gortnewton4765
    @gortnewton4765 Před 6 lety +5

    What is that music? Please.

  • @heidiwilliams598
    @heidiwilliams598 Před 4 měsíci +1

    As an avid horsewoman its very hard to watch the fates of so many horses and mules in WW1. Really heartbreaking!

    • @jasonnicholasschwarz7788
      @jasonnicholasschwarz7788 Před 21 hodinou

      Also seeing how they even managed to steer the horses past the firing guns...couldnt get my horse near one of those.

  • @jakobh6046
    @jakobh6046 Před 6 lety +2

    When the scene with German operated flamethrowers appeared, it honestly scared the crap out of me

  • @jonathanlee5314
    @jonathanlee5314 Před 7 lety +5

    Dear god I just saw the Earth lifted.

  • @jeremiah9841
    @jeremiah9841 Před 6 lety +11

    I'm watching this while playin bf1

    • @kylesnake7297
      @kylesnake7297 Před 6 lety +2

      Jeremiah98 Battlefield 1 is a great game and it shows the horror that soldiers faced during the time of hell and blood, but it’s sort of unreal as there are machine guns in everyone’s hands and prototype weapons in others, but other than that, it’s a really great game. I have 2 service stars for my Kolibri and it’s my most used sidearm :D

    • @AtheistGunGamer
      @AtheistGunGamer Před 6 lety +1

      Jeremiah98 Verdun now that's a real WW1 game

  • @davidsigalow7349
    @davidsigalow7349 Před 3 lety +1

    Modern man just cannot fathom the butcher's bill of the Great War and the bravery of those who fought. By the end of 1914, there had already been over a million casualties, yet there would be nearly another four years' worth of death, misery and destruction.

  • @effhorst
    @effhorst Před 4 lety +1

    The haunting music fits the eerie content of the film. It's like watching a long forgotten horror movie.

  • @TheInquisitiveCat
    @TheInquisitiveCat Před 6 lety +4

    Makes one wonder if the three camo snipers were filmed by a camo'd photographer

    • @o01chris10o
      @o01chris10o Před 4 lety

      Furing on a camera operator is considered a war crime. Similar to firing on nurses during the civil war

  • @chips5840
    @chips5840 Před 7 lety +6

    Anyone know the music?

    • @Andyb2379
      @Andyb2379 Před 6 lety

      ComrADHD no idea Shazam can't detect it

  • @urielbokobza8998
    @urielbokobza8998 Před 6 lety +2

    That first video was sick

  • @barryguyer8005
    @barryguyer8005 Před 6 lety +2

    good film there very little footage on ww1