Centennial of the End of the Great War

Gamers can also use this forum to chat about any game related subject, news, rumours etc.

Moderator: maddog986

User avatar
Capt. Harlock
Posts: 5379
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2001 8:00 am
Location: Los Angeles
Contact:

RE: Centennial of the End of the Great War

Post by Capt. Harlock »

10 November 1918

The Allies continued to push forward. Mézières, which had been in German hands since August 1914, was recaptured by the French. Not to be outdone, the Belgians liberated the city of Ghent. This was about 200 kilometers (124 miles) from Spa, where Kaiser Wilhelm had his headquarters.

However, Wilhelm II was not waiting for the Allied advance. Early in the morning, without warning anyone outside the Kaiser’s entourage, the Imperial train got under way. It traveled a relatively short distance, for there were no continuous tracks leading into Holland. The Kaiser and his party switched to motorcars for the rest of the journey.

There was an almost comical delay at the Dutch border. Since the evacuation had not been announced, the Kaiser and his entourage had no visas. The border guards hesitated to allow the Germans in. Eventually, however, a Dutch Major arrived on the scene, realized the importance, and had the gates opened. Wilhelm II passed into Holland, and the throne of Prussia, the German Empire, and the centuries-old rule of the House of Hohenzollern passed into history.
Image

In the military hospital in Pasewalk, Germany, the news of the Kaiser’s effective removal was delivered by an elderly priest. He announced to his stunned audience that Imperial Germany was no more, and there was to be an armistice amounting to complete defeat. The priest wept, and he was joined by many of his listeners. One was Adolf Hitler, who would later write in his memoirs, "Again everything went black in my sight. I staggered and stumbled back to my ward and buried my aching head between the blankets and pillow."


In eastern Europe, Allied forces crossed the Danube River and entered Romania. Encouraged by this, King Ferdinand proclaimed that Romania was again at war with Germany. (He personally had refused to sign the Treaty of Bucharest.) With one day to go, Romania had rejoined the Allies, and was in a position to regain her lost territory during the peace conference.


Off the Farne Islands, the Racecourse-class minesweeper HMS Ascot was torpedoed and sunk by the German submarine UB-67. The Racecourse class were propelled by paddlewheels, which was adequate for coastal minesweeping. Ascot would be the last ship to be sunk in the First World War.


General Groener now made a secret arrangement with new Chancellor Freidrich Ebert. Groener promised that the army would support the new republic-government, a key step since the government had not been legally installed. For his part, Ebert agreed to maintain the military’s role as a major part of the German government, and to suppress the socialist and communist revolutionaries. German democracy was weakened at its very beginning: the civilian government would have only partial control of the military.


In Forest of Compiègne, the German delegation was shown the news of the Kaiser’s abdication. It was not strictly accurate, of course, but it was now the effective reality. The Germans sent a message to Berlin, asking what they should do. Back came the answer that the delegation was authorized to sign the armistice. The next hours were spent adjusting the numbers of weapons and transport to be surrendered, and, since the naval blockade was to be continued, adding a line that “The Allies and the United States contemplate the provisioning of Germany during the Armistice as shall be found necessary.” The clause, added to appease the Americans, would not be honored, and the blockade would be continued until June 1919.
Attachments
HohenzollernArms.jpg
HohenzollernArms.jpg (19.97 KiB) Viewed 1456 times
Civil war? What does that mean? Is there any foreign war? Isn't every war fought between men, between brothers?

--Victor Hugo
User avatar
redcoat
Posts: 1034
Joined: Wed Aug 31, 2005 9:48 am
Location: UK

RE: Centennial of the End of the Great War

Post by redcoat »


The 10th November 1918 was a significant day for the Royal Aircraft Factory SE5a (F904) in the Shuttleworth Collection. It encountered and shot down a Fokker D.VII near the France-Belgium border. The aircraft was in the hands of flying ace Major Charles Pickthorn MC.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Pickthorn

http://www.shuttleworth.org/


Image
Attachments
SE5a.jpg
SE5a.jpg (124.75 KiB) Viewed 1456 times
“‘Who controls the past,’ ran the Party slogan, ‘controls the future: who controls the present controls the past.’”

George Orwell, 1984
User avatar
Capt. Harlock
Posts: 5379
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2001 8:00 am
Location: Los Angeles
Contact:

RE: Centennial of the End of the Great War

Post by Capt. Harlock »

11 November 1918

At 5:00 a.m., the German delegation signed the Armistice terms, to take effect on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month. In wars past, news of peace had taken some time to travel. (The famous Battle of New Orleans was actually fought two weeks after the signing of the treaty ending the War of 1812.) Now, the news was transmitted instantly across Europe. The reactions were many. In some cases, there was immense relief. In other cases, it made little difference for the next few hours. It was a point of pride for many of the Allies to push the Germans back as far as possible before the fighting stopped. It is estimated that nearly 11,000 men were killed or wounded in the six hours before the cease-fire took effect.

American Henry Gunther of the 313th Infantry Regiment had been demoted from sergeant to private for writing a letter to home criticizing conditions at the front and advising a friend to avoid being conscripted. He was apparently consumed with regaining his rank. When his squad approached a German roadblock with two machine guns, the squad leader ordered his men to stand down, but Gunther evidently hoped one more act of bravery would get him the promotion.

Bayonet fixed, Gunther charged. The Germans, knowing the cease-fire was about to come into effect, tried to wave him off. But he kept coming, and at 10:59 am, a burst from a machine gun killed him instantly. He was the last man to die in the official part of World War One. He was, however, posthumously promoted back to sergeant.
Image


In the German Navy:

[font="Times New Roman"]Heavens above! but the terms are crushing! All the U-boats to be surrendered, the High Seas Fleet interned; why not say "surrendered" straight out, it will come to that, unless we blow them up in German ports. The end of Kaiserdom has come; we are virtually a republic; it is all like a dream.

We have signed, and the last shot of the world-war has been fired. Here everything is confusion; the saner elements are trying to keep order, the roughs are going round the dockyard and ships, looting freely. "Better we should steal them than the English," and "There is no Government, so all is free," are two of their cries. There has been a little shooting in the streets, and it is not safe for officers to move about in uniform, though, on the whole, I have experienced little difficulty. I was summoned to-day before the Local Council, which is run by a man who was a Petty Officer of signals in the König. He recognized me and looked away. I was instructed to take U.122 over to Harwich for surrender to the English. I made no difficulty; some one has got to do it, and I verily believe I am indifferent to all emotions.

[center]--The Diary of a U-boat Commander[/center]
[/font]


In Austria, Emperor Charles, realizing no one was willing to obey him any longer, issued a proclamation. It acknowledged the right of the Austrian people to determine the form of government, and for himself relinquished “every participation in the administration of the State." The proclamation also released all officials from their oaths of loyalty to the crown, allowing them to participate in the new government.

However, Charles believed that this was only a temporary disruption. The proclamation was not an abdication, and to the end of his life he maintained that he was still the rightful king of both Austria and Hungary. The governments of those two countries would not agree, and when he left Austria, the Austrian Parliament would pass a law banning him from ever returning.


In London, the reaction was all that could have been hoped for:

[font="Times New Roman"]And then suddenly the first stroke of the chime. I looked again at the broad street beneath me. It was deserted. From the portals of one of the large hotels absorbed by Government Departments darted the slight figure of a girl clerk, distractedly gesticulating while another stroke resounded. Then from all sides men and women came scurrying into the street. Streams of people poured out of all the buildings. The bells of London began to clash. Northumberland Avenue was now crowded with people in hundreds, nay, thousands, rushing hither and thither in a frantic manner, shouting and screaming with joy. I could see that Trafalgar Square was already swarming. Around me in our very headquarters, in the Hotel Metropole, disorder had broken out. Doors banged. Feet clattered down corridors. Everyone rose from the desk and cast aside pen and paper. All bounds were broken. The tumult grew. It grew like a gale, but from all sides simultaneously. The street was now a seething mass of humanity. Flags appeared as if by magic. Streams of men and women flowed from the Embankment. They mingled with torrents pouring down the Strand on their way to acclaim the King. Almost before the last stroke of the clock had died away, the strict, war-straitened, regulated streets of London had become a triumphant pandemonium. At any rate it was clear that no more work would be done that day. Yes, the chains which had held the world were broken. Links of imperative need, links of discipline, links of brute force, links of self-sacrifice, links of terror, links of honour which had held our nation, nay, the greater part of mankind, to grinding toil, to a compulsive cause—every one had snapped upon a few strokes of the clock. Safety, freedom, peace, home, the dear one back at the fireside . . .

[center]--Winston Churchill, “The World Crisis, Vol. 3”[/center]
[/font]

Image
Attachments
armistice..nlondon.jpg
armistice..nlondon.jpg (81.53 KiB) Viewed 1456 times
GuntherHNstone.jpg
GuntherHNstone.jpg (97.45 KiB) Viewed 1456 times
Civil war? What does that mean? Is there any foreign war? Isn't every war fought between men, between brothers?

--Victor Hugo
User avatar
Erik Rutins
Posts: 39324
Joined: Tue Mar 28, 2000 4:00 pm
Location: Vermont, USA
Contact:

RE: Centennial of the End of the Great War

Post by Erik Rutins »

Thanks for this incredible thread.
Erik Rutins
CEO, Matrix Games LLC


Image

For official support, please use our Help Desk: http://www.matrixgames.com/helpdesk/

Freedom is not Free.
User avatar
Capt. Harlock
Posts: 5379
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2001 8:00 am
Location: Los Angeles
Contact:

RE: Centennial of the End of the Great War

Post by Capt. Harlock »

12 November 1918


The guns along the Western front had fallen silent, but peace was not restored everywhere. The Russian Civil war was still going strong, with participation by troops from several of the Allied nations. And although Poland had not yet had its borders established and officially recognized by much of the world, it was already at war with the Ukraine over territory.


An Allied fleet sailed through the Dardanelles, on the way to controlling the Black sea. Along with that, French forces entered Constantinople, returning the once capital of the Eastern Roman and Byzantine Empires to non-Muslim control for the first time since the 15th century. It would, of course, only last for a few brief years.


In Austria, the National Assembly declared the Republic of German-Austria in the German-speaking part of the fragments of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The Assembly drafted a provisional constitution that, among other things, stated "German-Austria is an integral part of the German republic". This was because the members of the Assembly felt that the new state was too small to be economically viable, and too weak to avoid being overrun by one or more of its neighbors. They had a point: Hungary was still refusing to sell grain to its former rulers.

However, it was one of the greatest examples in history of “be careful what you wish for”. Twenty years later, Austria would join with Germany, but there was no longer a German republic. Instead, Austria was annexed into Hitler’s Third Reich.
Civil war? What does that mean? Is there any foreign war? Isn't every war fought between men, between brothers?

--Victor Hugo
kingwanabee
Posts: 103
Joined: Mon Sep 27, 2004 1:14 am

RE: Centennial of the End of the Great War

Post by kingwanabee »

I de-lurked for the first time in years to thank Capt. Harlock for a fantastic history lesson. I've been visiting this thread almost daily for months, always learning interesting facts about the last year of the Great War. Thanks for all the time and effort you put into this thread! [:)]
User avatar
berto
Posts: 21461
Joined: Wed Mar 13, 2002 1:15 am
Location: metro Chicago, Illinois, USA
Contact:

RE: Centennial of the End of the Great War

Post by berto »


A belated thanks for this most fascinating thread! [&o]
Campaign Series Legion https://cslegion.com/
Campaign Series Lead Coder https://www.matrixgames.com/forums/view ... hp?f=10167
Panzer Campaigns, Panzer Battles Lead Coder https://wargameds.com
Zorch
Posts: 7087
Joined: Sun Mar 07, 2010 4:21 pm

RE: Centennial of the End of the Great War

Post by Zorch »

ORIGINAL: berto


A belated thanks for this most fascinating thread! [&o]
+1
User avatar
Capt. Harlock
Posts: 5379
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2001 8:00 am
Location: Los Angeles
Contact:

RE: Centennial of the End of the Great War

Post by Capt. Harlock »

Epilogue

Unlike his character’s fate in the movie “Wonder Woman”, Erich Ludendorff had survived the war, and fled into Sweden. He had managed a good part of the German economy as well as directing the war, and had made considerable use of forced labor. However, one concession that Germany manged to get in the peace settlement was that war crimes would be tried in German courts. There were few trials and even fewer convictions. Ludendorff was able to return to Germany in less than a year.

[font="Times New Roman"]One evening in the autumn of 1919, Ludendorff was dining with the head of the British Military Mission, Major-General Sir Neill Malcolm, and his officers, and was expatiating, with his usual vitriolic eloquence, on the way in which the Supreme Command had been betrayed by the revolution on the “home-front.” His style of speech was turgid and verbose, and in an effort to crystallize the meaning into a single sentence, General Malcolm asked him: “Do you mean, General, that you were stabbed in the back?” Ludendorff’s eyes lit up and he leapt upon the phrase like a dog on a bone. “Stabbed in the back?” he repeated. “Yes, that’s it, exactly, we were stabbed in the back.” And thus was born a legend which has never entirely perished.

[center]--John W. Wheeler-Bennett, "Ludendorff: The Soldier and the Politician"[/center]
[/font]

Ludendorff spoke and wrote extensively, promoting the “Dolchstoßlegende“ (Stab in the Back Legend). It would turn out to be perhaps the most damaging historical falsehood ever told. The idea that the German army was undefeated in the field but betrayed at home by socialists -- many of whom were Jews -- was seized on by numbers of Germans. Those who had signed the armistice were called the “November Criminals”. Matthias Erzberger, the head the German armistice delegation, was assassinated in 1921 by two former navy officers. There is good reason to believe the myth played a large part in the election of Adolf Hitler, and the annexation of territory leading up to the invasion of Poland.

But, of course, it was false. Even as the armistice meetings began, Germany’s forces had been brought to a hopeless military position. All her allies were gone, while the U. S. still had large reserves of manpower, and then there were the countries such as Belgium, Serbia, and Romania which were recovering their territory and their populations. More immediately, the German forces on the Western front were being driven steadily back at the rate of kilometers a day, and getting weaker instead of stronger because of casualties, disease, and the equipment and supplies they had to leave behind. They had not surrendered, but they were beaten.

[font="Times New Roman"]"What I dread is that Germany doesn't know that she was licked. Had they given us another week, we'd have taught them."

[center]--John “Black Jack” Pershing[/center]
[/font]

Human beings have a strong tendency to believe what they want to believe. Quite possibly the “Stab in the Back” legend would have caught on no matter what the Generals and politicians in Germany said. But is it possible – just possible – that an incalculable amount of death and devastation could have been avoided by a victory parade down the avenues of Berlin?
Civil war? What does that mean? Is there any foreign war? Isn't every war fought between men, between brothers?

--Victor Hugo
Post Reply

Return to “General Discussion”