ONE SOLDIERS WEEKLY RATION INCLUDES: * 4oz bacon or ham * 3 pints milk per week * 2oz butter * 2oz margarine * 2oz fat/lard * 2oz tea * 1 egg per week * 2oz jam * 3oz sugar * 1oz cheese 3oz sweets ------------ There are short stories told in Turkey, one of them is like that; In the Battle of Gallipoli, a water carrier loses his track and ends up in ANZAC back lines between a few soldiers, at that time the water was carried by ships from afar in an uneffective way. Desperate for water, the soldiers were so happy to see that water carrier that they exchanged water with chocolates and sweets, letting the Turkish soldier to leave. This story also tells that war is among countries, not the people. Gurthaur
the soldiers ate their own poo and drank their own wee. some ate the rats and lice that nibbled at their feet also some ate bacon rasher and a Sunday roast with pepperoni Pizza and chips some had chips from the chip shop
They ate in the trenches, simple really! cause im a DINGLEBING
The soldiers themselves dug out the trenches.
why did the french and british dug up trenches?To provide cover from view & fire of the enemy.
During WW1, soldiers were promised mostly money or a promotion for the capture, killing of enemy troops, or for capturing enemy trenches.
Deplorable sanitation conditions in the trenches led to outbreaks of disease. Trench Foot was pandemic, and morale was low.
In trenches.
tents, trenches and foxholes.
Soldiers hid in a vast system of trenches during WWI.
They dug trenches to protect themselves from the weapons of the enemy. Turks vs. British
the trenches affected the soldiers during ww1 ww2 by supplying some cover for the soldiers and they were also a living hell because they held water and were often soaked by blood from fallen comrades
They ate in the trenches, simple really! cause im a DINGLEBING
383,800 British Soldiers were killed during World War 2.
Food for soldiers in the trenches during World War One was at times considered a luxury. Getting decent hot food from the field kitchens to the front line trenches could be impossible when a battle was either imminent or in full flow. When soldiers were at stand-down, food was easier to acquire and both British and German troops could expect certain food to be available with a degree of frequency.
in the trenches
The soldiers themselves dug out the trenches.
In World War 2 the hiding place for soldiers were called the Trenches.
The British tank, and the trenches.