How many children lost their fathers in WW1?

The first world war left 360,000 children fatherless. Very few now survive, the youngest are in their 90s. These are the last of those who lost a father in the trenches of the western front, on the beaches of Gallipoli or in the deserts of the Middle East.
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Who lost more men in World War 1?

The Entente Powers (also known as the Allies) lost about 5.7 million soldiers while the Central Powers lost about 4 million.
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What happened to children during World War 1?

Children were particularly impacted by the war through disruption to home life and to schooling, absent parents, and deaths of family and family friends.
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What caused the most deaths in ww1?

The greatest number of casualties and wounds were inflicted by artillery, followed by small arms, and then by poison gas. The bayonet, which was relied on by the prewar French Army as the decisive weapon, actually produced few casualties.
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Who was the youngest ww1 soldier killed?

Pte. John Condon (5 October 1900 – 24 May 1915) was an Irish soldier born in Waterford. He was believed to have been the youngest Allied soldier killed during the First World War, at the age of 14 years; he lied about his age and he claimed to be 18 years old when he signed up to join the army in 1913.
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WW1 - Trench Life and The End of War (6th Class History Lesson)



What was the biggest killer of WWI?

By far, artillery was the biggest killer in World War I, and provided the greatest source of war wounded.
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What was the biggest killer of US soldiers in WW1?

The flu struck an estimated 500 million people, some 28% of the world population. American combat deaths in World War I totaled 53,402. But about 45,000 American soldiers died of influenza and related pneumonia by the end of 1918. More than 675,000 Americans died of influenza in 1918.
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What were the actual odds of dying in ww1?

About one to every 10,000 men. With one exception – I'll speak about that later – there has been no widespread disease among the armies on the western front. This is a splendid record. In our previous wars thousands of soldiers died in hospitals without ever seeing action.
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Why was ww1 the most brutal?

The loss of life was greater than in any previous war in history, in part because militaries were using new technologies, including tanks, airplanes, submarines, machine guns, modern artillery, flamethrowers, and poison gas.
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When was the last person killed in ww1?

World War I ended precisely on the 11th Hour of the 11th Day of the 11th Month of 1918. At the moment the bells struck and the guns went silent, a body fell in a French village. Henry Gunther was a bank clerk from Baltimore, drafted the year before. He's listed as the last man killed in World War I.
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What was the youngest age to fight in WW1?

The youngest known soldier of World War I was Momčilo Gavrić, who joined the 6th Artillery Division of the Serbian Army at the age of 8, after Austro-Hungarian troops in August 1914 killed his parents, grandmother, and seven of his siblings.
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What did little girls do in WW1?

Girl Scouts volunteered as ambulance drivers for the Red Cross, knit scarves and other items for soldiers, and sold war bonds, as did the Boy Scouts and the Junior Red Cross, which was established in response to the war.
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Who was the youngest boy in WW1?

Momčilo Gavrić, in Serbian military from age eight; youngest soldier in World War I in any of the nations which fought in World War I.
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What family lost the most sons in ww1?

The end of an era, the ruin of homes, the death of loved ones. But few could match the loss of three families devastated by the demands of war. For the Smiths, the Souls and the Beecheys all had five sons die. These stories mix sacrifice, hope, salvation and bitterness.
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What was ww1 life expectancy?

Without the war, their life expectancy would have been 48.3 years, but they lived for just 37.6 years on average, a loss of 11 years.
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What did ww1 soldiers fear?

Fear about loved ones at the front, fear of air raids, fear associated with war-related migration, hunger, and violence all made it onto the pages of ego-documents.
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What was the deadliest 1 day Battle?

Washington County, MD | Sep 17, 1862. Antietam, the deadliest one-day battle in American military history, showed that the Union could stand against the Confederate army in the Eastern theater.
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Did ww1 soldiers go crazy?

Not only did it affect increasing numbers of frontline troops serving in World War I, British Army doctors were struggling to understand and treat the disorder. The term "shell shock" was coined by the soldiers themselves. Symptoms included fatigue, tremor, confusion, nightmares and impaired sight and hearing.
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Do they still find bodies from ww1?

In total, 63 sets of World War I soldiers' remains were uncovered by archaeologists during the work between 2014 and 2016.
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What did they do with dead bodies in ww1?

They were often buried where they fell in action, or in a burial ground on or near the battlefield. A simple cross or marker might be put up to mark the location and give brief details of the individuals who had died.
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What were the odds of surviving ww1 as a soldier?

The mortality rate ranged between 6% and 30%, with the highest in the armies of Serbia, Montenegro and the Turkish Empire, mainly due to large epidemics of cholera, typhoid and smallpox, against which the armies of other countries vaccinated their troops.
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What were soldiers most afraid of in ww1?

One of the enduring hallmarks of WWI was the large-scale use of chemical weapons, commonly called, simply, 'gas'. Although chemical warfare caused less than 1% of the total deaths in this war, the 'psy-war' or fear factor was formidable.
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