Beer Brewing - Roger Casement - Surviving Aces I OUT OF THE TRENCHES

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  • Опубліковано 15 гру 2017
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 270

  • @ringo1692
    @ringo1692 6 років тому +190

    I'd love to see a picture of Churchill's face when he was asked to take the sobriety pledge 😂😂😂

  • @theirondukew.8522
    @theirondukew.8522 6 років тому +111

    Longest surviving "top" ace? Probably *Donald McLaren* of Canada who lived until 1988 and died aged 95. He had 54 victories and was the 10th most successful pilot in the war - the third most successful Canadian ace after William Bishop (72) and Raymond Collishaw (60) .
    The last "regular ace" of WWI was *Cecil Lewis* , the British ace with 8 victories (5 needed for ace status). He died 27 January 1997 aged 99.
    The longest surviving WWI pilot who saw service and action was Henry Botterrell. Born November 7, 1896 he lived until January 3, 2003 and died aged 106.
    Yes, he was born in the 19th century and died in the 21st century meaning he lived during three different centuries.

    • @warpartyattheoutpost4987
      @warpartyattheoutpost4987 4 роки тому +17

      That's amazing that he lived through the entire 20th century! The way he saw things change and advance must have been a trip.

    • @sopwithsnoopy8779
      @sopwithsnoopy8779 3 роки тому +3

      I believe the last surviving Pour le Merite (Blue Max) winner on the German side was Josef Jacobs, who passed away on 29 July 1978 at age 84.
      Josef Jacobs on most ace lists, is listed as having 41 kills, but it had been long believed, and recent research has shown that Jacobs had 48 confirmed victories, the same as Werner Voss. There had always been the letter Jacobs received from the German high command congratulating him for his 48 victories. Jacobs received the letter in early November at a gathering of top German aces (plenty of photos exist). But his squadrons records in the last weeks were missing.
      Research has confirmed his last 7 kills, for 48 overall.
      Josef Jacobs was also the highest scoring triplane ace, with 31 kills coming while flying the triplane. He continued flying the triplane 'til the end of the war, even after the rest of his Jasta 7 switched over to the Fokker D.VII

  • @indianajones4321
    @indianajones4321 6 років тому +49

    The chair of wisdom

  • @oOkenzoOo
    @oOkenzoOo 6 років тому +51

    You forgot René Fonck and Charles Nungesser in your surviving aces list :
    French aces, 75 victories out of 142 claims for Fonck (titled "all-time Allied Ace of Aces") and 43 victories for Nungesser.
    Fonck : en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ren%C3%A9_Fonck Nungesser : en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Nungesser
    They both have an interesting Story and are worth to be mentionned someday.

    • @freemusictiltheend
      @freemusictiltheend 6 років тому +1

      oOkenzoOo kind of odd there was no mention of them ...

    • @JosipRadnik1
      @JosipRadnik1 6 років тому +1

      Yes indeed, how could they miss the highest surviving ace and highest ranking ace of the entente - also Madon, Collishaw and Bishop should not be left out, but how could they forget Fonck?

  • @bladudemovies
    @bladudemovies 6 років тому +107

    The loss of Oktoberfest was perhaps the greatest casualty of the First World War.

  • @veljkostevanovic7597
    @veljkostevanovic7597 6 років тому +36

    The top fighter pilot by number of victories to survive the war was the Entente ace of aces, the French ace Rene Fonck with 75 victories, second only to the German Richthofen overall. He went on to become the inspector general of the French Air Force before WW2.

    • @canicheenrage
      @canicheenrage 6 років тому

      Potentially second, possibly first. Richtofen has very few unconfirmed kills as he fought mostly in squadron, while Fonck, who often went hunting alone behind enemy lines, has around 50...

    • @shuaguin5446
      @shuaguin5446 4 роки тому

      @@canicheenrage Note that the French had the same strict kill counting that the German as they required at least 2 witness on the ground of the crah to be counted, so a kill would not be counted if the plane crashed behind enemy lines.
      Thought as most Aerial fighting happened behind or over German lines, it is mostly admit that the German had less problem of unconfirmed kill than the French did.
      Comonwealth pilots on the other hand were talken on their word alone to count their kill.

  • @LoserBroProductions
    @LoserBroProductions 6 років тому +32

    That lethal comma

    • @eldorados_lost_searcher
      @eldorados_lost_searcher 6 років тому +6

      Archduke Franz Ferdinand
      Why'd you have to go and get that ostrich killed?

    • @karlkarlos3545
      @karlkarlos3545 6 років тому +3

      because he got Hungry.

    • @WastelandSeven
      @WastelandSeven 6 років тому

      Grammar is a dangerous arcane science. Especially with people looking for loopholes.

    • @cruelangel7737
      @cruelangel7737 5 років тому

      When students are in doubt as to the importance of grammar, tell this story.

  • @Milos89kv
    @Milos89kv 6 років тому +15

    Is the best channel on UA-cam ever?
    - Yes it is.

  • @yeast7485
    @yeast7485 6 років тому +8

    Rip Roger Casement. Congo wont forget you.

  • @earthenjadis8199
    @earthenjadis8199 6 років тому +31

    About the fighter pilot question. Indy didn't fully answer it. Wasn't the highest scoring surviving ace of WW1 René Fonck?

  • @VladTevez
    @VladTevez 6 років тому +80

    Aristeidis Moraitinis, the only Greek ace (9 victories, also the aviator who carried out the first naval-air operation in history) survived the war to crush on Mount Olympus (December 22, 1918), due to bad weather.

    • @alfredosboz2133
      @alfredosboz2133 6 років тому

      V. Athanasiou yee

    • @anderazkuna6698
      @anderazkuna6698 6 років тому +5

      I thought mount Olympus was on mars hahaha

    • @irfanqayyum2983
      @irfanqayyum2983 6 років тому +2

      ander azkuna yea i think its the biggest volcano in the world

    • @ringo1692
      @ringo1692 6 років тому +10

      I think it's called Olympus Mons, mt Olympus is in Greece, it's where the ancient Greeks believed the gods lived...

    • @nostradamusofgames5508
      @nostradamusofgames5508 6 років тому +7

      a fitting end for a greek

  • @thecellulontriptometer4166
    @thecellulontriptometer4166 6 років тому +6

    I never get tired of Indy's thorough well researched explanations. Always interesting, and educational.

  • @peterstadlmaier3107
    @peterstadlmaier3107 6 років тому +9

    Gottfried von Banfield, the flying ace of the Austro-Hungarian Navy, did not only survive WWI but also WWII. He died in 1986 at the age of 96!

  • @theonewhoplays3819
    @theonewhoplays3819 6 років тому +120

    I recently found out that you do gigs with bands. Can you play a rock version of “It’s a Long Way to Tipperary” to finish this series?

    • @StormLaker
      @StormLaker 6 років тому +5

      jawohl, Herr Kapitänleutnant! (Das Boot reference here)

    • @Statusinator
      @Statusinator 6 років тому +2

      *Schneller!*

    • @StormLaker
      @StormLaker 6 років тому +1

      Alaaaaaarm!!! (you can make a fine drinking game of that movie with just that word alone, haha).

    • @strawdog9964
      @strawdog9964 6 років тому +2

      nein bitte,i hate ze Tipperary song !

  • @AndDiracisHisProphet
    @AndDiracisHisProphet 6 років тому +40

    Is it still worth it to open a website now? I mean, the war will be over by christmas, right?

  • @floriandouhard3715
    @floriandouhard3715 6 років тому +14

    I thought that you were going to speak about René Fonck who survived the war and became a collaborator with Pétain during WW2.

    • @earthenjadis8199
      @earthenjadis8199 6 років тому +5

      The collaboration part with Petain was a myth, as far as I know. Rumours were spread about him recruiting pilots for the Luftwaffe and he escaped Vichy only to be arrested by the Gestapo and placed in an internment camp. An inquiry after the war exonerated him and he was awarded some medal for Resistance (I think).

  • @teutonicbohemian
    @teutonicbohemian 6 років тому +20

    The Great Brew

    • @renel8964
      @renel8964 6 років тому +2

      Teutonic Bohemian the brew to end all brews

  • @apudharald2435
    @apudharald2435 6 років тому +11

    I am trying to imagine a German army without snapps and a Russian army without vodka.
    They might survive, but won't have proper morale.
    There is no point in having an army that feels short changed and consequently have bad morale and resentment.

  • @paulx7540
    @paulx7540 6 років тому +31

    Roger Casement played a role in exposing the gross exploitation of the Congo, owned by Leopold king of the Belgians. King Leopold’s Ghost by Adam Hochschild is an excellent account of this story.

  • @BattleAxe1345
    @BattleAxe1345 6 років тому +1

    Ernst Udet had an interesting and adventurous life. It'd be interesting to see a special on him.

  • @TheStapleGunKid
    @TheStapleGunKid 6 років тому +2

    I'm surprised Indy neglected to mention French ace Rene Fonck. With 75 kills, he was not only the highest scoring french ace, but he was the highest scoring pilot to survive the war from any nation.

  • @nahx6205
    @nahx6205 6 років тому +7

    Its really a shame how fast the American school system blows over WW1, it's such an interesting topic that really affects us greatly even though it happened over a hundred years ago..

  • @HojozVideos
    @HojozVideos 6 років тому +2

    In Banger, Wales?
    All songs from there must be great

  • @CanuckGT
    @CanuckGT 6 років тому +44

    *War. War never changes.*

  • @donaldhill3823
    @donaldhill3823 6 років тому +3

    Navies where also known for their "Rum Ration" during this time period. The US Navy no longer servers alcohol on board ship but It is a common saying that "the ship can not get underway with out coffee". Wondering if this saying used to be applied to Rum?

  • @malik_alharb
    @malik_alharb 4 роки тому

    I love that chair

  • @user-sn8zs9yn5c
    @user-sn8zs9yn5c 6 років тому +1

    Lothar von Richthofen, Manfreds younger brother would be an candidate for the list, too. 40 victories from march 1917 till the end of the war. Managed to survive and to die in a plane crash in 1922.

  • @bubbletea8306
    @bubbletea8306 6 років тому +4

    "hey Mom can you get me a Fokker model for my birthday?"
    Dafaq u say? *Slap slap slap slap slap slap slap*

    • @BattleAxe1345
      @BattleAxe1345 6 років тому

      I had a Fokker model once for Christmas.

  • @codybane2668
    @codybane2668 6 років тому

    Excellent job on the brewing question. Thank you.

  • @trevortrevortsr2
    @trevortrevortsr2 6 років тому

    Have a wonderful Christmass Indi - we have learned so much from you this year -

  • @joeyflan9000
    @joeyflan9000 6 років тому

    I love you guys.

  • @zivbenmoshe1585
    @zivbenmoshe1585 6 років тому +12

    Shalom Indy and crew. Here in the Israeli Defence Forces we usually learn alot about the Jewish statistics in the 2nd World War. Can you please explain the role of Jewish Officers on both sides of the conflict and if there were any Jewish senior/high ranking officers? Keep up the Great Wark

    • @silverdeathgamer2907
      @silverdeathgamer2907 6 років тому

      They generally avoid talking about things after ww1 if you cannot relate them to WW1 somehow.

    • @NickRatnieks
      @NickRatnieks 6 років тому

      You must have heard of General Sir John Monash? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Monash

    • @stelleratorsuprise8185
      @stelleratorsuprise8185 6 років тому +3

      AFAIK the German Imperial Army did not had Jewish officers in their higher ranks. There where some officers up to the rank as major(?) but I heard there ranks where restricted to 'officer of reserve' preventing them from making a career after the war.
      Some interesting figures Jewish Germans in the WW I where:
      Walther Rathenau organizing the economy during the war time.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walther_Rathenau
      Wilhelm Frankl fighter ace: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelm_Frankl
      Fritz Beckhardt fighter ace flying under Göring with a swastika as personal talisman: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelm_Frankl (srry.: German only)
      Or a man like Leutnant Hugo Gutmann who approved Adolf Hitler for the Iron Cross.

  • @telsah1
    @telsah1 6 років тому

    It's important to watch your videos. For I would never know any of these facts if I did not watch them. Thank you for making and sharing.

  • @zuha9541
    @zuha9541 6 років тому +4

    I like that you specified that the Germans weren't the first ones who used poison gas. They're always portrayed as the villains, sheesh.

    • @TheDJGrandPa
      @TheDJGrandPa Рік тому +1

      No they were the first to use poison gas, just not the first to use any kind of gas.

  • @82dorrin
    @82dorrin 6 років тому +1

    Interesting factoid about Rickenbacker: he was adrift at sea for 24 days in WWII before being rescued. He'd been on board a B-17 that ran out of fuel after it got lost due to faulty navigation equipment.

  • @ilikeshroomgals
    @ilikeshroomgals 6 років тому

    Bar behind the lines thats awesome

  • @paulwalsh7134
    @paulwalsh7134 6 років тому

    Sound, class lad.

  • @myfamilycountrylife5280
    @myfamilycountrylife5280 6 років тому +3

    Oft overlooked Canadian ace Raymond Collishaw (60 victories) survived the war as well. There are some historians (Canadian of course) who believe that he may have been the actual ace of aces of the war. He often took rookies up to bag their first enemy and gave them credit for one of his own scores. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raymond_Collishaw

    • @hlynnkeith9334
      @hlynnkeith9334 6 років тому +1

      The Senate of Canada looked into Billy Bishop's record and confirmed his score. Political? You betcha. Frederick Libby, the first American ace, called Bishop a liar. His favorite fighter pilot was Albert Ball whom he knew and flew with.
      Collishaw stayed with the RAF and rose to the rank of Air Vice Marshal during WW2. He commanded the RAF in Egypt when things were dicey.

  • @neurofiedyamato8763
    @neurofiedyamato8763 5 років тому +1

    wait WTF, A Entente bar under enemy trenches?! Indy, you got to tell us that tale in more detail!

  • @panzerabwerkanone
    @panzerabwerkanone 6 років тому

    Thank you for all the work you do producing The Great War. I would like to buy you all a round but, regulations.

  • @jhb9526
    @jhb9526 6 років тому +1

    I'll drink to this video!

  • @MercuriusORG
    @MercuriusORG 3 роки тому

    Hi! In a recent episode of WW1 I I watched, you said that England had purchased some number of tons ( 500000? ) of wheat. However by that point ( 1916) Bulgaria already invaded Serbia, so Romania was surrounded by central powers on all sides, except Russia, and the Bosporus channel was controlled by the Ottoman Empire and was mined. So my question is, how did all that grain get to England? I also have a second part to this theme. How did various countries get their food and material shortages replenished in logistics terms, if the opposing factions made deals?
    Thank you for sharing your excellent breadth of knowledge with us! Your channel is the best thing that happened to history classes :)

  • @brokenbridge6316
    @brokenbridge6316 4 роки тому

    I enjoyed how informative it was to learn what the status of booze was during the war. Great job.

  • @cpl.yuminagumo6754
    @cpl.yuminagumo6754 6 років тому +12

    #TheGreatWar. Will you ever do a Special on Werner Voss? He is my favorite ace of the First World War

  • @gallendugall8913
    @gallendugall8913 6 років тому +27

    I served with a number of alcoholics in the navy. It's scary to be working around dangerous machinery in enclosed spaces with those people. Dangerous when drunk and useless self pitying wrecks when sober; always self destructive. After a few days at sea they'd try things like boiling shoe polish in order to make something remotely alcoholic. I've had to stand watches over people puking blood because they'd dissolved the lining of their stomachs by drinking medicinal alcohol. Mostly I remember the stink. Alcoholics constantly sweat a rancid stench; even after days of not drinking. Drug addicts are bad too, snorting obviously poisonous substances in the hopes of a high, but they generally don't have that stink.

    • @chrispza
      @chrispza 6 років тому +3

      Worked with an ex-RN engineer named “Kish” after the sound of him opening his first from the fridge next to his bed.

  • @thomasbiel7741
    @thomasbiel7741 6 років тому

    Great episode! I always wondered about booze in WW1

  • @blakerobson9312
    @blakerobson9312 6 років тому +1

    WAIT, WHAT!!
    there was a brewery under enemy trenches?!?! yo you gotta do a special about that

  • @AR-gu2no
    @AR-gu2no 2 роки тому

    Indy is our WW1 holy guru 😂

  • @steelhammer103
    @steelhammer103 6 років тому

    For the second question, I would like to add the U.S Air Force has a base named after Eddie Rickenbacker just south of Columbus Ohio. It's named The Rickenbacker International Airport, and it's used for civilian and military use now, but was used first used by the U.S Air Force and was named with atonement for Rickenbacker.

  • @kknives36
    @kknives36 6 років тому

    That Arnold Schweig guy is cool.

  • @t5ruxlee210
    @t5ruxlee210 4 роки тому

    A common British war measure, starting off, was reducing the alcohol strength of liquor by 50% or so and also boosting taxes on it. Needless to say, once the war was at an end, "the emergency war pricing" was never rescinded by many governments in many countries.

  • @headshot4524
    @headshot4524 6 років тому

    Regarding Breweries in France, as all the copper was used to make bullets and shells, most of little breweries and many of big ones was dismounted and molded. @thegreatwar may you consult history of Kronenbourg brewery or Champigneulle one

  • @ryanafacation
    @ryanafacation 6 років тому +5

    alcohol is humanity's friend. Can I abandon a friend?

    • @peggedyourdad9560
      @peggedyourdad9560 6 років тому +3

      Steve Kaczynski The cause and solution to all life's problems.

  • @djwoody1649
    @djwoody1649 6 років тому

    Casement sounded like a right piece of work.

  • @williamjohnson2277
    @williamjohnson2277 6 років тому

    as a child in Miami ,Eddie rickenbaker was president of eastern airline. My dad took me to north perry airport (grass field ) and I got to fly in a two winged airplane. Now for the rest of the story , the pilot was Eddie Rickenbaker.

  • @aceofspades1217
    @aceofspades1217 6 років тому

    We have a causeway named after Rickenbacker connecting miami to key biscayne. It's one of the largest causeways in south Florida (excluding the keys)

  • @stekarknugen9258
    @stekarknugen9258 6 років тому

    Finding that sweet spot where the rum would take the edge of the fear off but still enabling a soldier to function as well as possible was probably a science.
    The Germans rationed out schnapps quite liberally in WW2 as well.

  • @rkitchen1967
    @rkitchen1967 3 роки тому

    Poison gas was originally a byproduct of the chemical dye production process and Germany had the leading industry in this field, prior to the war. This made the development of the weapon easy for the Germans.

  • @patrickholt2270
    @patrickholt2270 6 років тому +1

    "I am that man, that very fat man, that waters the workers' beer".

  • @canicheenrage
    @canicheenrage 6 років тому +1

    About alcohol, a french survivor mentionned how him and his comrades used to not drink the assault ration before going over the top, as dishinibated soldiers would have their reflexes eroded, and often be too slow when advancing from cover to cover, or even make stupid decisions, like standing and taking aim at an entrenched machine-gun instead of dropping to prone and crawling to grenade range.

    • @blakekenley1000
      @blakekenley1000 6 років тому

      canicheenrage that happened without alcohol too. French infantry tactics were poor and most replacements on both sides were making poor decisions simply because they knew no better.

    • @chrisd8866
      @chrisd8866 6 років тому +1

      Poor tactics? Early on sure, but not at the end of the war, though. What I've read on infantry tactics of the french army (and nearly every late-war participant) is that it was very effective at the squad level, with a combination of "short hops", covering fire from Chauchat LMGs and rifle grenades to assault a position. After years of bloody trial and error, there must have been improvements. But your point about new recruits making (often deadly) beginners' mistakes in their first engagement still stands of course.

  • @kieranfitz
    @kieranfitz 6 років тому

    The national museum in Collins barracks has a uniform of the Irish brigade in the soldiers and chiefs exhibition.

  • @raygiordano1045
    @raygiordano1045 6 років тому

    6:14 That's some high stakes punctuation.

  • @MARPROPRODUCTIONS108
    @MARPROPRODUCTIONS108 6 років тому +2

    How often did soldiers use drugs in the front back then? I know that in times of the first world war drugs like cocaine and heroin were used to help ease pain or for other tips of illness but what about addiction?

  • @crossoverparanormalsociety2722

    I sure like these videos, I hope that you keep on doing them. I just subscribed you and I do some history on my shows. I have a talk show on UA-cam and Facebook every Sunday and every other weekend my dad an I do paranormal live on Facebook and we have a history guy.

  • @martinhughes2549
    @martinhughes2549 6 років тому

    The pubs in Carlisle where nationalised in WW1, they where only denationalised in the early 1970s. There is a fascinating exhibit in the Carlisle museum.( The area made high explosives) David Lloyd George represented a Welsh speaking non conformist constituency that strongly disaproved of alcohol. In fact the first Act of Parliament to deal solely with Wales was the 1881 Sunday pub closing Act (Wales). Methinks Lloyd George was speaking to the converted, and cementing his base.

  • @Grungir2
    @Grungir2 6 років тому +2

    Ok i need to know more on the illegal pub from the tunnel behind enemy lines ....who where when how ?? Anyone got any info in this?

    • @faceoctopus4571
      @faceoctopus4571 Рік тому

      Commenting on the off chance you get an answer so that way I get it too.

  • @michealohaodha9351
    @michealohaodha9351 6 років тому

    The recruits to the Irish Brigade had a very colourful end to the war. Following the dissolution of the Brigade many recruits were redistributed to German units, notably Bavarian units (mainly Catholics). For instance a certain Michael Keogh fought for the British in 1914, was captured then joined the Irish Brigade, he ended up fighting in the 1918 Spring Offensives and the Freikorps post war. By the end he had been decorated by the armies of Great Britain, Imperial Germany and in the 1920's the Irish Free State.

  • @trilobite6569
    @trilobite6569 6 років тому +6

    Hello indy and crew, I was doing research and I stumbled across a little section talking about an electric fence that was set up on the belgium Netherlands border. I would like to know what this did to further anti german sentiment in other countries and what it did to the citizens. Thank you, love the show.

    • @Pvd1121996
      @Pvd1121996 6 років тому

      After the construction of the fence the anti german sentiment in the Netherlands grew. But the fence was build to stop soldiers fleeing the battlefield to the Netherlands.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wire_of_Death

  • @djwoody1649
    @djwoody1649 6 років тому +2

    Did the Germans get the Mosin Nagant rifles to supply the paddies with through the capture of deserted caches left behind by the Russian army?

  • @assasinsplaylp5241
    @assasinsplaylp5241 4 роки тому +1

    Ernst Udet actually invented the Stuka

  • @kommunevonberlin7611
    @kommunevonberlin7611 5 років тому

    Intrestingly enough, the German "Reiheitsgebot", originaly was introduced in 1516 to, among other things, ensure that brewing Beer would'nt have so much an effect on the Food Situation (which was quite bad in the Medival times). It orignaly only allowed Hop, Barley and Water for the Brewing of Beer. Later the law was changed an it was for example alowed to put Laurel (since 1551) and Juniper (since 1616) into it. But the law never was expanded to allow any more grains, apart from Yeast. This means that German breweries could not use important nutritional grains like Wheat, Rye or Spelt- which also could be used to make Bread.

  • @stephen9869
    @stephen9869 6 років тому +1

    Hi Indy, we all know that "War were declared" in 1918. When was the last time a declaration of war was officially made by a country?

  • @GravesRWFiA
    @GravesRWFiA 6 років тому +4

    at 4:54 listing casement as a humanitarian activist? I suppose you'd give the same title a war later to Lord Hawhaw and Quisling eh?

  • @victorestrada9060
    @victorestrada9060 4 роки тому

    How do I know your spitting real Facts?

  • @SpazzyMcGee1337
    @SpazzyMcGee1337 6 років тому +2

    Wait wait wait. What was that about orchestrated drug dependencies?

  • @Bird_Dog00
    @Bird_Dog00 6 років тому

    I'm guessing moral at the front would have ben even worse without alcohol.
    It would be interesting to know more about the issue of moonshine both at the front and back home.

  • @kurtvanduran7725
    @kurtvanduran7725 6 років тому

    Question for out of the trenches. We're units from Silesia split along ethnic lines, also where they mostly station on the Eastern front?

  • @burntsavvy8299
    @burntsavvy8299 6 років тому

    Hey Indy and the Knowledge Regiment,can you guys cover on the next OOTT episode on the recorded Filipino soldier who fought in World War 1?
    I read about it recently,a young boy,died aged 18 on the Western Front fighting for the U.S.A. Even had a airfield named after him back in his country.

  • @Bullminator
    @Bullminator 6 років тому +1

    I think we need a special abauth the music in ww1.

  • @deadermemes6676
    @deadermemes6676 6 років тому

    Im pretty sure the man that founded the boeng company served as a pilot for america during ww1, he was from michigan such as me

  • @KonradvonHotzendorf
    @KonradvonHotzendorf 7 місяців тому

    I genuinely feel for Udet
    He didn't want any of the stuff that followed and ruined the Luftwaffe
    He met a tragic end😓

  • @franzfanz
    @franzfanz 6 років тому

    A couple of years ago some amendments were made to the alcohol laws in NZ which could have made it illegal for RSAs (Returned Servicemen Associations) to serve alcohol following ANZAC Day services. Needless to say this caused some degree of angst due to a shot of rum being traditionally drunk following a service. An exception was carved out in the law for RSAs.

  • @onetoshi
    @onetoshi 6 років тому

    The most lasting effect the war had on alcohol production in Britain was that due to increasing grain prices the breweries started to brew thinner ales, before the war the average bitter or mild ales had up to 7 percent alcohol, this was reduced in the war to about 3-4 percent. After it, the average alcohol content rose a bit again but never to pre war levels.

  • @Jamie-kg8ig
    @Jamie-kg8ig 6 років тому

    Not sure if it's still free, but Company of Heroes 2 was free on Humble Bundle yesterday and I think it still is.

  • @redwanhasan1721
    @redwanhasan1721 6 років тому

    Very important question! If this is the chair of wisdom, how does that wisdom get into you?

  • @nostradamusofgames5508
    @nostradamusofgames5508 6 років тому

    pretty sure there's be a special for this but i'll give it shot for OotT:
    how did car manufacturers benefit from the war? did the war help designs for future cars?
    i would say "great show" but you already know about that ;)

  • @easya3293
    @easya3293 6 років тому +2

    BF1 TURNING TIDES TRAILER ANALYSIS

  • @colnagocowboy
    @colnagocowboy 6 років тому

    Ive read accounts of italian units getting extra rations of alcohol just before an attack.

  • @gandalfthehipster2881
    @gandalfthehipster2881 6 років тому +8

    The website specifies "the great war"? WW2 show confirmed?

    • @watermelontreeofknowledge8682
      @watermelontreeofknowledge8682 6 років тому +3

      Noah Edge WWI was called the Great War, not WWII

    • @gandalfthehipster2881
      @gandalfthehipster2881 6 років тому

      Yeah, yeah. I meant that them specifying the great war in the link meant that they may have a second world war series in the future with a similar link

    • @nietzchepreacher9477
      @nietzchepreacher9477 6 років тому

      sweeeet

    • @josephstalin2829
      @josephstalin2829 6 років тому

      We'll need a UA-cam! With Blackjack! And Vsauce!
      When? Where?

    • @topgadget2095
      @topgadget2095 6 років тому +1

      ua-cam.com/video/p2aTnnN-jMs/v-deo.html

  • @chrisi237
    @chrisi237 6 років тому

    2:18 Steamboat Willie from saving private ryan. 😂

  • @grayflaneur4854
    @grayflaneur4854 6 років тому +1

    Great War Saturday in front of the Christmas Tree with fluffy snow outside, toast with Irish Butter and hot Italian Roast coffee made with filtered water in a French Press. It doesn't get better than this!

  • @mikearmstrong7830
    @mikearmstrong7830 6 років тому +2

    Tear gas vs. Any other is no contest. One causes tears to run down your face. The other types could cause your face to run down your face.

  • @Thearrowroot13
    @Thearrowroot13 6 років тому

    looks like a comfy chair where did you get it from?

  • @julz3tt3
    @julz3tt3 4 роки тому +1

    Survives as a fighter pilot in WW,1
    Dies in a plane crash in 1926 😭😓

  • @kingbruh5866
    @kingbruh5866 6 років тому +9

    Was there any tanks aces

    • @stanislaskowalski7461
      @stanislaskowalski7461 6 років тому +1

      denell fowler If your criteria is the number of enemy tanks destroyed, probably not, as the Germans had only 20 tanks in total. Not enough targets to make a score.

    • @foxymetroid
      @foxymetroid 6 років тому +3

      That's only the number of tanks Germany produced. Most of Germany's tanks were Allied tanks that they had captured. It's like saying the US didn't use tanks in World War One because they didn't develop their own tanks until after the war.

  • @ramonruijgt4532
    @ramonruijgt4532 6 років тому

    when the race for the sea happend how close are the trenches to the beach or even sea.

  • @360H3ADSHOT
    @360H3ADSHOT 6 років тому

    The expost facto judgement

  • @fortis3686
    @fortis3686 6 років тому +1

    For a Who Did What in WW1 episode, can you do William Lyon Makenzie King, Canada’s 10th Prime Minister?

  • @KonradvonHotzendorf
    @KonradvonHotzendorf 7 місяців тому

    80%😮

  • @fairhurst101films
    @fairhurst101films 6 років тому

    Hi Indy and Great War Team! I am just curious, at 1:24 you used a picture of British Propoganda. Is it from the series of books that were titled “The Standard History of the All European Conflict?” I ask because my grandfather passed some years ago and when going through what my dad had taken back 3 years ago, I found a set of them and have been fascinated since. Just curious given I’ve been struggling to find information on them!