WW1 Podcast with Paul Reed
In this episode, we explore the four brutal wartime winters in Flanders during the First World War, focusing on the Western Front around Ypres from 1914 to 1918. Beginning with the establishment of the British front line at Ypres in late 1914, we examine how soldiers endured cold, mud, and constant danger during the Great War’s earliest winter, including the famous Christmas Truce of 1914.
Using firsthand accounts, battalion war diaries, and casualty records, we analyse how Christmas on the Western Front in Flanders changed as the war dragged on, and why later winters were very different from the early months of optimism. We also uncover compelling evidence of a lesser-known second Christmas Truce in the Canadian sector in December 1915.
The episode concludes with Christmas 1918, as civilians cautiously returned to the shattered city of Ypres in the aftermath of the First World War, reflecting on loss, survival, and the long road to recovery in Flanders.
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Fascinating podcast Paul. I had asked a question on the Christmas truces through the war years some time back and this episode answers my question in great detail. Much obliged.
Keep up the good work.
Cheers
Iain
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Michael Denesyk, michaelajdenesyk@gmail.com. Toronto Canada
Hello Paul, Thank you for another wonderful podcast. As a Canadian, I keep warm using the best textiles and materials avaiable. I can only imagine that the winter must have been brutal for a soldier doing his turn in the front line. The natural inclination to keep a roaring fire going to keep warm must have been forbidden becuase the smoke during the day or reflected light at night would bring a Trench Mortar bomb or a HE shell on top of a shelter or trench scrape. Were tthe troops issued any extra clothing or rations for winter survival and combat?
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