Getting Dressed in WW1 - British Soldier

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  • Опубліковано 6 лис 2018
  • How a British WW1 soldier in the Artists Rifles dressed.
    Thanks to support from www.loveniplaw.co.uk/
    Director/Cinematographer: Nicole Loven / crowseyeproductions
    www.flickr.com/gp/54875660@N0...
    Producer/Costumier: Pauline Loven / periodwardrobe
    Soldier: Reece Ackerman
    Music from 'Tell Them of Us' composed and recorded by Chris Gordon www.chrisgordon.info/
    Voice-over: Liv Free
    Make-up: Liv Free / livfreemakeup
    The knitters:
    Katy-Jayne Lintott, Joanne Winwood, Sandra Gibbons, Freyalyn Close and Jackie Soans.
    British Officer - Ross Stephenson
    Artists Rifles Soldier - Ben Atkinson
    Soldier - Adam Fox
    Highlander - John Devlin
    Highlander - Tom Greenshields
    German soldiers - Luke Harrington, Blake Borland, Gavin Baker, Liam Kernagan, Michael Massmore, David McCabe, Kevin Gray, Josh Curran
    Thanks to:
    Scott and Joanne Read, Bell Tent
    Soldier of Fortune, Uniforms www.sofmilitary.co.uk/
  • Навчання та стиль

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3 тис.

  • @CrowsEyeProductions
    @CrowsEyeProductions  5 років тому +1021

    If anyone is interested in supporting us to make more films you can become a patron at our Patreon page, where you can access photo galleries, previews of future films and behind the scenes material. www.patreon.com/crowseye

    • @YourJudgeLaw
      @YourJudgeLaw 5 років тому +25

      CrowsEyeProductions That is absolutely quality content that is displayed here. I appreciate the work, time and effort you put into these videos of how simplistic backed up with knowledge of even displaying a British soldier from the entirety of this video. I think you guys deserve a sub from me as well as a donation. Thank you.

    • @jet-up2474
      @jet-up2474 5 років тому +4

      I enjoyed this and watched the entire video. Nice. Yes I woukd.

    • @Vesporeon
      @Vesporeon 5 років тому +4

      This is an amazing video. I subscribed just cause of it. I hope you do more of these

    • @LUCKIPUP
      @LUCKIPUP 5 років тому

      Fake he forgot to shit his pants

    • @proraptor7291
      @proraptor7291 5 років тому

      Where can i find them trousers

  • @iamsparechange
    @iamsparechange 4 роки тому +2008

    imagine fighting in ww1, you see everyone around you die and you almost die, you return to home to your girlfriend, you propose. you have a few kids, almost 30 years later, your sons get drafted. and you can’t do anything about it.
    the heart break my lord.

  • @eliegbert8121
    @eliegbert8121 5 років тому +6744

    Rule 0 in the military:
    KEEP. YOUR. SOCKS. *DRY.*

    • @Xachremos
      @Xachremos 5 років тому +552

      Trench foot ain't a joke

    • @voiceofraisin3778
      @voiceofraisin3778 5 років тому +333

      Not always possible in WW1 since you were standing in a trench and water goes downhill. the pumps couldnt aways keep up.
      The army supplied whale oil and other oil based solutions to coat your feet and keep out the water. Squishy but effective apparently and as a bonus whale oil is flammable so you can also use it in portable spirit stoves for cooking on the front lines.

    • @cypher4783
      @cypher4783 5 років тому +122

      During Napoleon's wars of conquest it was common practice to for go socks in favor of pig grease which would moisturize and water proof the feet.

    • @danteagnotejr9463
      @danteagnotejr9463 5 років тому +24

      Are you a military

    • @cypher4783
      @cypher4783 5 років тому +49

      @@danteagnotejr9463 oh no I just read du picq's battle studies. A study on the French military during the 1800.

  • @PLuMUK54
    @PLuMUK54 4 роки тому +1774

    Older men declare war. But it is the youth that must fight and die.
    Herbert Hoover
    One of those to die was my Great Uncle Frank, aged 21. RIP you are not forgotten.
    When you go Home, tell them of us and say,
    For your Tomorrow, we gave our Today”
    John Maxwell Edmunds
    1916

    • @User18dog
      @User18dog 4 роки тому +30

      Philip Meers wow that was powerful, thank you.

    • @ladybugpoet2247
      @ladybugpoet2247 4 роки тому +28

      Philip Meers my great uncle, Arthur Scott does age year 17 in 1916. He and his friend supposedly died together, so it is nice to know he wasn’t alone when he died. I always looks up to him because of the immense strength and courage he showed, as he joined the war when he was 15 (he lied about his age). He was a great man, a great fathers, a great brother, and a great soldier.

    • @ladybugpoet2247
      @ladybugpoet2247 4 роки тому +10

      Sorry I meant to say he died age 17 in the year 1916. The first sentence sound like a bunch of gibberish sorry

    • @thafishguy4973
      @thafishguy4973 4 роки тому +1

      Great great grandfather

    • @fimbulwinter-outdoor
      @fimbulwinter-outdoor 4 роки тому +14

      My great grandfather fought in WW1 on the german side. He faced the horrors of Verdun and never talked about what happened in that time. Shortly before the end of the war he was shot in the lung and was rescued by a nurse who lived at a nearby village. Few years later, he was drafted into WW2 and was stationed in Paris. He was very lucky to be at the western front and when asked about the time in Paris, he always stated that the French were nice people who taught him how to cook. =) But he never talked about the horrors of war which were still haunting him.

  • @engelwyre
    @engelwyre 4 роки тому +260

    "Receiving them in the post was like touching home"
    Wow

    • @J-IFWBR
      @J-IFWBR 4 роки тому +2

      Yeeh good line

  • @giogarcia5446
    @giogarcia5446 5 років тому +7493

    Crazy to believe it has been 100 years since The Great War.

    • @louise-yo7kz
      @louise-yo7kz 5 років тому +5

      Gosh

    • @13Psycho13
      @13Psycho13 5 років тому +205

      Better yet, 3 days from now marks the 100th year since the end of the war.

    • @invisibleman4827
      @invisibleman4827 5 років тому +247

      Agreed. I actually met one of these old blokes when I was four years old, and he came to my school to talk about his experiences on the frontline. He talked about the trenches smelling differently in certain places, one place it smelled of rotting sandbags, another of disinfectant, and he spoke of going over the top. 100 years ago, and I've heard a first hand account of it. Afterwards I got the honour of speaking to him personally, and shook his hand. We talked about trains, because I was mad about Thomas the tank engine, and he told me about what they were like back in his day.
      His last words to me were 'It was very nice to meet you, young man.'

    • @ulliulli
      @ulliulli 5 років тому +54

      And we are in the 80th year since start of WW2.

    • @Novusod
      @Novusod 5 років тому +52

      It seems like it was more than 100 years ago. The savagery of both world wars feels very far removed from the 21st century.

  • @kyjw10
    @kyjw10 5 років тому +5280

    I imagine that there were some soldiers who looked at their uniforms when they first got them and thought "I'm gonna die in these clothes." Quite sad to think about really.

    • @peggedyourdad9560
      @peggedyourdad9560 4 роки тому +154

      @@adobotachibana732 Especially the french uniforms early on in the war.

    • @sethleoric2598
      @sethleoric2598 4 роки тому +78

      @@peggedyourdad9560 FOR THE PANTALOOONS

    • @phantom-xb6wv
      @phantom-xb6wv 4 роки тому +13

      Pepperoni Gayboy Nah it isnt that sad, they chose to enlist

    • @fordrestored4646
      @fordrestored4646 4 роки тому +163

      Makaveli - actually it’s called a mandatory draft... most nations don’t have a large standing army...the military numbers are from reservists and selective service applicants just like how you have to fill one out on the US

    • @phantom-xb6wv
      @phantom-xb6wv 4 роки тому +2

      Crazy Crocodile Everyone has a choice, you always do. A “mandatory draft” is not a reason. If you dont want to be a martyr for your country you best fight for your right to live.

  • @fairlyvague82
    @fairlyvague82 3 роки тому +77

    I used to love listening to my Great Grandmother (born in 1905) telling me about how she and her sisters used to knit socks and comforts for the front line soldiers in France. With the passing of that final generation with first hand memories of The Great War, we must place even more importance on videos like this and series like Tell Them Of Us ❤️

  • @denisescutt1865
    @denisescutt1865 2 роки тому +26

    My grandfather Percy Spencer Norden survived the Somme. His eldest son, my dad Jack Spencer Norden survived Dunkirk at age 18. Dad died six years ago aged 94. RIP my lovely dad. You wouldn’t recognise the world today.

  • @donoi2k22
    @donoi2k22 5 років тому +1838

    "each and every one of the young men in the great war was hopelessly, desperately, heartbreakingly vulnerable." That was a good line. Almost as if it came from the mothers daughters and sisters of those who died wearing them.

    • @witwoo1825
      @witwoo1825 4 роки тому +42

      Respect for every single soldier who took part, no matter their side

    • @cube_2593
      @cube_2593 4 роки тому +17

      @@witwoo1825 in ww1 no narion we're the Bad Guys, but every Monarch was

    • @witwoo1825
      @witwoo1825 4 роки тому

      @@cube_2593 sorry I didn't understand that?

    • @cube_2593
      @cube_2593 4 роки тому +22

      @@witwoo1825 the monarchs were the the ignorant one Sendung Their young men into a useless war Just for dick measuring

    • @lucyfredman7228
      @lucyfredman7228 4 роки тому +11

      Cube_25 um, i ain’t in the mood for a comment fight right now, but CHECK. YOUR. GODDAMN. FACTS.

  • @03019a
    @03019a 5 років тому +3304

    I finally learned what those shoulder strips are for

    • @cristianorobles1235
      @cristianorobles1235 5 років тому +32

      Same😂

    • @viktorthevictor6240
      @viktorthevictor6240 5 років тому +133

      I always thought it was for keeping straps on the shoulders, and turns out I was right!

    • @jordanbartlett3578
      @jordanbartlett3578 5 років тому +124

      They're now commonly used for rank slides nowadays to show what rank a soldier is

    • @SunflowerSpotlight
      @SunflowerSpotlight 5 років тому +73

      I like military inspired jackets because I like structured looks and I Can fasten my purse to my shoulder so I don’t have to either wear a cross body or be at risk of a purse snatcher. Super handy. Let’s hope for a day that’s all they’ll be used for.

    • @the1ne6ix9ine
      @the1ne6ix9ine 4 роки тому +3

      Sameeeeee

  • @bulut6759
    @bulut6759 4 роки тому +240

    As a Turk, I think it's very sad for everyone that had to go through this. During the Gallipoli War, the numbers of the children at school slowly decreased because they went to war and after the war, a lot of them didn't return to their seats :( We can't even imagine what people went through at that time

    • @jezfrench9435
      @jezfrench9435 4 роки тому +33

      In Britain in ww1 we had the 'pals' system whereby when you went to enlist you encouraged you friends, 'pals', to enlist too. Problem was, entire streets and villages lost all their men folk between the ages of 16 and 45. Needless to say it was discontinued.

    • @nicolelawless3199
      @nicolelawless3199 3 роки тому +2

      And in Beersheba especially too many Aussies have died but 700 horsemen survivors

    • @graememay5983
      @graememay5983 3 роки тому +5

      My Great Great Grandfather served and died in Gallipoli, he was detached to the ANZacs as he had served and survived the Boer War as Regimental Colour Sergeant. He was a hero after the Boer War, but just another number after WW1, very, very sad

    • @acdervis2
      @acdervis2 2 роки тому +2

      FYI, this is a myth. The Ottoman Army had enough able bodied men and did not need to encourage enlistment of or resort to conscripting children.

    • @bastobasto4866
      @bastobasto4866 2 місяці тому +1

      @@jezfrench9435 The white feather movement wasn't of much help, either...

  • @fimbulwinter-outdoor
    @fimbulwinter-outdoor 4 роки тому +21

    My great grandfather fought in WW1 on the german side. He faced the horrors of Verdun and never talked about what happened in that time. Shortly before the end of the war he was shot in the lung and was rescued by a nurse who lived at a nearby village. Few years later, he was drafted into WW2 and was stationed in Paris. He was very lucky to be at the western front and when asked about the time in Paris, he always stated that the French were nice people who taught him how to cook. =) But he never talked about the horrors of war which were still haunting him.

  • @zombieplus1423
    @zombieplus1423 5 років тому +4826

    Meanwhile the BBC did a video on this with friggin Skrillex in the background.

    • @sub2pewdiepie8yearsago17
      @sub2pewdiepie8yearsago17 5 років тому +24

      Could you please link it?

    • @zombieplus1423
      @zombieplus1423 5 років тому +247

      @@sub2pewdiepie8yearsago17 ua-cam.com/video/DjqdgGb739w/v-deo.html
      Fair warning, the music doesn't fit.

    • @drear20486
      @drear20486 5 років тому +275

      @@zombieplus1423 holy shit, that was bad. i couldn't finish the video

    • @proraptor7291
      @proraptor7291 5 років тому +41

      This was way better

    • @smacattack88
      @smacattack88 5 років тому +176

      That’s just disrespectful.

  • @TheWorldWarrior
    @TheWorldWarrior 5 років тому +3922

    Can we just notice how great the video quality and editing was for a youtube channel.

  • @thehistoadian
    @thehistoadian 3 роки тому +50

    Brodie helmets like all helmets were not designed to stop bullets, rarely you might hear of it happening but they were designed to protect just from shrapnel.

    • @EricCole69
      @EricCole69 2 роки тому +3

      Maybe if a bullet was fired from a long distance and lost speed it might reflect it. But yeah most of the time it'd go right through the helmet

    • @artificialintelligence8328
      @artificialintelligence8328 2 роки тому +3

      Oh I'm sure there must have been some efforts to make a bullet resistant helmet. There are definitely specialized ones meant for snipers and machine gunners in the war that could more reliably protect.

    • @EricCole69
      @EricCole69 2 роки тому +2

      @@artificialintelligence8328 Some Germans had a metal piece fixed onto their helmets.

    • @RhodokTribesman
      @RhodokTribesman Рік тому +2

      @@BluntofHwicce This is also a great lesson in statistics. After helmets were used, head injury rates went WAY up. Why? Because many of those injuries would have been deaths otherwise

  • @eleazar529
    @eleazar529 4 роки тому +1401

    "Two armies that fight each other is like one large army commiting suicide."

  • @maddybarnett1171
    @maddybarnett1171 5 років тому +1687

    There is something so comforting knowing about the women who would knit for these men. Not knowing who you were sending it to, would he die wearing it or would it be passed on to his children. I like to think the men were comforted knowing that they were wearing clothes made with such love and care and I will thank these brave soldiers with every morning I wake.

    • @louise-yo7kz
      @louise-yo7kz 5 років тому +10

      Such beautiful stories

    • @Loretopo
      @Loretopo 5 років тому +2

      ❤️

    • @davidbernard7885
      @davidbernard7885 5 років тому +6

      Indeed, the love of community and country this reveals is something we have lost in this brave new world.

    • @Tiger74147
      @Tiger74147 5 років тому +37

      Having been on the receiving end of such tokens, I can tell you it's sometimes enough to make a man cry out there. It's just a shame that the sentiment is rarely found when we come back...

    • @jackhammer6179
      @jackhammer6179 5 років тому +1

      3.03 round leaves a big wound.

  • @amc3
    @amc3 5 років тому +491

    How can a young man getting dressed be so moving, so poignant and so incredibly sad. My Great Uncle fell at the Somme and is remembered at Thiepval, I have visited and saw his name amongst 70,00 others, just like him, young and lost forever, we must never forget.
    This production is quite incredible, simple, yet wonderfully crafted, narrated and performed, thank you so much.

    • @TheFatAmericans1
      @TheFatAmericans1 5 років тому +3

      My great grandfather was wounded on the Somme and sent home. I wonder if they ever met?

    • @mlk7092
      @mlk7092 5 років тому

      @@TheFatAmericans1 same here

    • @ashsalmi5806
      @ashsalmi5806 5 років тому +4

      anglekan great doesn’t mean good. The word great is often used in a positive mannar. Look at the term “great war” for example. It was horrid. Great means huge and vast. But not good.

    • @wn8022
      @wn8022 5 років тому

      They all died too young. They were all great men. God bless them.

    • @Chloede_
      @Chloede_ 5 років тому +1

      I found out last year that my great great uncle also died during the Somme. He too has his name on the Thiepval. I plan to visit It some day. He was born 100 years before me and I can’t even begin to imagine what the war was like for him at only 19 years old! He was, like many others, a boy fighting a mans war!

  • @NomSauce
    @NomSauce 4 роки тому +51

    4:40 I've lived my entire life waiting for this moment, being told what those flaps/straps are actually for

  • @rr-ek5hd
    @rr-ek5hd 4 роки тому +179

    "alright guys I finished dressing up."
    "uh, mike the war ended like 2 days ago."

    • @Sun-vm5fz
      @Sun-vm5fz 3 роки тому +7

      lmao ptsd routine

  • @SlimTony
    @SlimTony 5 років тому +997

    Man, I wish that uniform jacket was in fashion, it looks so good

    • @offender0
      @offender0 5 років тому +101

      You can pull it off in winter. Just don't get one that's obviously a reproduction military coat. You can get them with epaulets (the bits on the shoulders) that are inspired by military clothing.
      There's a lot of old surprlus Vietnam era US gear that works well for winter wear too.
      This is a good video; ua-cam.com/video/yJcfBDv-zVE/v-deo.html

    • @firthlaist218
      @firthlaist218 5 років тому +11

      offender
      Guilty pleasure: binge watching surplus store vids☝🏼😆

    • @fanta4897
      @fanta4897 5 років тому +83

      Then wear it, make it a fashion. I wear military boots all the time, and there was a time when I wore german M40 coat as winter coat, although a bit peculiar because of the colour, it was still comfy, warm, provided enough movement (not like modern coats which can tear if you do as little as put your hands up) and the cut of it looked badass.

    • @LDwestwood1986
      @LDwestwood1986 5 років тому +10

      @@fanta4897 Maybe he'd rather not look like a hipster

    • @zeljitokekreisi277
      @zeljitokekreisi277 5 років тому +23

      It is actually fashion right now
      Not the exact jacket but very close to those

  • @Vlad-gu2pz
    @Vlad-gu2pz 5 років тому +733

    When a WW1 soldier dresses nicer than I do for work...

    • @alexanderdemir7659
      @alexanderdemir7659 4 роки тому +4

      Brennan Ursu not funny

    • @katinmazniv4714
      @katinmazniv4714 4 роки тому +27

      @@alexanderdemir7659 yes funny

    • @blue3381
      @blue3381 4 роки тому +33

      @@alexanderdemir7659 The comment is saying that the uniform looks great (which it does.) There is no disrespect inferred here. It's a compliment.

    • @lewistranmer2399
      @lewistranmer2399 4 роки тому +1

      n trainer did he say it did? He did it wasn’t funny

    • @blue3381
      @blue3381 4 роки тому +3

      I have a: - Must be difficult for you to be the guy that nobody wants around. I promise you that everyone who knows you says what a jerk you are behind your back. But you'll keep on trolling the internet thinking that you're clever and liked. You're neither. I hope you're saving your welfare checks, because that's about the best you'll ever do in life.

  • @KimFraustro
    @KimFraustro 4 роки тому +25

    My great grandfather was a german soldier in the WW1, thanks for sharing this

  • @keblo
    @keblo 4 роки тому +365

    Me: european
    World: talking about WW3 start
    UA-cam algoritm:

    • @J-IFWBR
      @J-IFWBR 4 роки тому +12

      If a WW3 ever happens we are all doomed, WWI already reached a level of destruction men could not bear... With the power of Nuklear Destruction, Humanity would crush itself..

    • @vizx8574
      @vizx8574 4 роки тому +6

      WW3 will happen more in Asia than in Europe .

    • @simonhaas6480
      @simonhaas6480 4 роки тому +15

      Me as a German:
      Ah shit, here we lose again

    • @campkira
      @campkira 4 роки тому

      @@J-IFWBR doubt they would shot nuke at each other and if they do... well time to go at the end of the earth...

    • @MeatBallFreak333
      @MeatBallFreak333 3 роки тому

      @@simonhaas6480 OFFF

  • @demos113
    @demos113 5 років тому +144

    Don't downplay wool, it's many times better than cotton in a cold/wet enviroment and this was before synthetic fabrics.

    • @elwolf8536
      @elwolf8536 5 років тому +3

      Thought same

    • @justowner3633
      @justowner3633 5 років тому +13

      IIRC wool retains some of its thermal protection even when wet, but cotton will not.

    • @calliph
      @calliph 4 роки тому +1

      Most synthetic fibers are not nearly as robust as their natural counterparts.

    • @DynamicDurge
      @DynamicDurge 4 роки тому

      Cotton kills

  • @jeddjoseph237
    @jeddjoseph237 5 років тому +425

    This comment section is by far one of the best i've seen, no negativity, just a wonderful community!

  • @thefavoured1411
    @thefavoured1411 4 роки тому +31

    In my head, the soldier we followed in this video was J.R.R.Tolkien.

  • @troyam6607
    @troyam6607 4 роки тому +88

    "A society grows great when old men plant trees in whose shade they know they shall never sit"

    • @bluhcrih3127
      @bluhcrih3127 4 роки тому +1

      Whom is the quoted ?

    • @affectionatepunch
      @affectionatepunch 4 роки тому +2

      @@bluhcrih3127 its an old Greek proverb

    • @bauhiniafolia9673
      @bauhiniafolia9673 4 роки тому

      A beautiful one indeed, i shall quote this

    • @sm3675
      @sm3675 3 роки тому +1

      In islam it also says that you can still earn after death from planting a tree for somewone elses benifit.

  • @G1NZOU
    @G1NZOU 5 років тому +277

    Very good video, however there's one mistake I noticed, the helmet wasn't designed to protect from bullets, it wouldn't stop a fullpowered rifle round, however you could be lucky if it scored a glancing hit.
    It's major purpose was shrapnel defence and protection from above (hence the wide brim) since shelling caused clumps of earth to be flung up into the air, injury statistics actually went up when the helmet was introduced but that was because what originally would be a lethal injury became a recoverable one.

    • @adamgm84
      @adamgm84 5 років тому +5

      fascinating info, thanks Harry

    • @Tina06019
      @Tina06019 5 років тому +14

      The same might be said of modern military medicine - why do we see so many soldiers and Marines now home with missing limbs? Because now we can save more of these people when their limbs are blown off or mangled beyond repair.

    • @justowner3633
      @justowner3633 5 років тому +5

      @@Tina06019 Before we had good antibiotics, most men wounded in such ways wouldn't have survived the surgery because of infection. Its a strange thing, as medicine got better, we see the suffering more.

    • @Tina06019
      @Tina06019 4 роки тому

      Justowner3 True, very true.

    • @loganfox2386
      @loganfox2386 4 роки тому

      It’s probably a huge psychological thing too

  • @hartleymartin
    @hartleymartin 5 років тому +49

    The reason so much wool was used in the uniforms was that wool retains about 80% of its normal thermal capacity when wet. It also tends to charr rather than burn, so it offers better fire protection than most materials. If it is processed correctly, it will also tend to shed water for a long time rather than get completely soaked by rain.

    • @calicocloth
      @calicocloth 5 років тому +5

      Wool is a fabulous textile, but was defeated by the horrendous conditions in which the soldiers fought, especially at Paschendeale.

    • @hartleymartin
      @hartleymartin 5 років тому +12

      Pauline Loven - I don’t think there would have been any available materials or technologies at the time which could have fared much better in the trenches of WW1. The uniforms and equipment of the time were designed with open field warfare in mind.

    • @calicocloth
      @calicocloth 5 років тому

      Martin Hartley Yes indeed.

    • @yareyare_dechi
      @yareyare_dechi 5 років тому +1

      i imagine it was also because the empire had a lot of wool thank to all the British and australian sheep farming

    • @Tina06019
      @Tina06019 5 років тому +4

      Wool was a lot better than anything else available at the time - in fact better that a lot of newer fabrics, and much better in cold weather than cotton. The challenge, of course, was the impossibility of staying dry.
      Give me linen undergarments, a layer of thin wool “long johns,” wool shirt & trousers, with woolen “comforts” and some stout leather boots with modern water-resistant gaiters ... and top it off with a GOOD waxed-cotton parka or poncho (or preferably a modern US Army Gore-Tex long rain jacket and over-trousers), and I would be as comfortable as possible, under the circumstances. (As long as I could bathe and change clothes often enough to discourage the damn lice.)
      Wool falls dramatically short compared to skins & furs in the polar regions, but otherwise it is a damn fine fiber. A tightly woven wool fabric can offer decent protection against rain, unless you are stuck out in the rain for long periods of time.
      Fine tropical-weight wool is my absolute favorite choice for business suits in hot climates, too. Looks great, feels fine.

  • @ozzygrunt4812
    @ozzygrunt4812 3 роки тому +6

    Australian Army 1989 to 2012, I was in one unit were boxed up comforts of home to sent to the troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. Seeing this clip reminded me of what my uncles went through in WW1, they were both KIA. Thank you so much for keeping their memories alive.

  • @NJtheawesome
    @NJtheawesome 4 роки тому +253

    American: *Watches battle scenes*
    British: *Watches the soldiers get dressed*

    • @ShanksNLMB
      @ShanksNLMB 4 роки тому +4

      But the British would smite America ? And y’all kno that that’s why u guys want us to help

    • @zablektronik3511
      @zablektronik3511 4 роки тому +4

      German isn’t a bad language

    • @senorsleepyhead9690
      @senorsleepyhead9690 4 роки тому +11

      @Liberty or Death You mean showing up just over a year to the armistice? And then claiming the same trite BS about how we would be speaking German if it weren't for you?
      You even showed up late to the one after until you cut off oil supplies to the Japanese and they sprung a quick one on you in Hawaii.
      Doesn't take much to win a war if your only doing 10% out of the 90% given by other countries pal...

    • @senorsleepyhead9690
      @senorsleepyhead9690 4 роки тому +4

      @Liberty or Death intervention? Is that what you call it eh? Show me the sources of your facts then.
      And that crucial part was what exactly? The part where you Yanks realized that if and when Britain were to fall the whole of the Atlantic would have been under German occupation? Still wouldn't have had to worry about it if you didn't wait until the last moment and expect a "Thank you" and a handjob nearly every time for ol' Woody keeping Neutrality in other countries affairs until he realized you all probably should have done something sooner.

    • @kohinarec6580
      @kohinarec6580 4 роки тому +4

      One quip and internet patriots go blitz over their keyboards.

  • @masuganut2082
    @masuganut2082 5 років тому +1054

    The rifleman’s mitten amazes me, From a knitters perspective but it’s also so sad . What they had to deal with 😥

    • @jovanweismiller7114
      @jovanweismiller7114 5 років тому +20

      Of course, they're machine knitted now, but they're still worn in Canada by smokers. You can hold a cigarette without burning your mitts.

    • @Zluken
      @Zluken 5 років тому +8

      Use similar gloves here since I Hunt in arctic conditions with sub -20 and sometimes below -30. Only difference is thumb is always covered and there’s a pull over part that covers all fingers.

    • @Excludos
      @Excludos 5 років тому +16

      @@jovanweismiller7114 Still issued to the Norwegian army. I've used them exactly nonce. Either it's warm enough that you don't need them, or it's cold enough that you'd rather use anything else.

    • @GraemePryce1978
      @GraemePryce1978 5 років тому +1

      Yeah, they were very sad. I got a bit of a catch in my throat when I saw the thumb and finger exposed. Wow. :-(

    • @GraemePryce1978
      @GraemePryce1978 5 років тому +2

      @@theevilempire6935 Well, you're name says exactly why you somehow don't get why this video upsets some people. I feel sad for you that you don't and will never understand the empathy involved in watching stuff like this.

  • @masuganut2082
    @masuganut2082 5 років тому +1483

    This makes me cry.
    I knit, crochet and sew and when I make something I give a piece of myself in it. To make something for someone you don’t know in the hopes it will provide them comfort brings a tear to my eye.
    So much wasted, so many sons lost. This just breaks my heart. I felt it was very eloquent to say “no matter what side” the young men fought on. It’s so true.
    My grandfather fought in WW2 and he never spoke of it to anyone. I can only imagine.
    Thank you so much for putting this video out. ❤️

    • @williamkeith8944
      @williamkeith8944 5 років тому +65

      As a former soldier in Viet Nam I received care packages from strangers and family. It was so much appreciated as a part of home. It was a morale booster I have never forgotten. I left my health and innocence there.

    • @masuganut2082
      @masuganut2082 5 років тому +35

      William Keith let me start by saying, Thank you for your service to our country.
      I am so sorry for anything that has happened to you. I am sure I cannot even begin to imagine.
      My Uncle joined the navy during the Vietnam War. He was exposed to agent orange and is now in a veterans home. The only people he really remembers are my parents. His health is very bad.
      I am grateful to the people who sent you packages. I know i tried to do that years ago (sending a package to a random soldier) but due to security measures I wasn’t allowed.
      Please know that I and so many others are grateful to you. I wish you the very best. Thank you so much 🙏🏻❤️

    • @hovanti
      @hovanti 5 років тому +17

      William Keith, I thank you too for your service. I received similar packages during my time in Desert Storm, and answered a letter addressed "To Any Soldier." I began a correspondence with a sweet young lady in school who is now married with a family, and though we never met, are still in touch.
      Kathleen Vassallo, if you get a chance, view the 2005 French film "Joyeux Noel." It is loosely based on the 1914 Christmas Truce, and depicts French, Scottish, and German soldiers, their arms set aside, come out of the trenches, and greet each other, exchanging drinks, treats, and photographs of loved ones back home. It is most heartwarming, the humanity in the midst of that awful war. Despite the liberties the filmmakers may have taken, it shows the soldiers of all sides as human beings.

    • @affectionatepunch
      @affectionatepunch 5 років тому +9

      Thank you for that piece Kathleen it actually brought a tear to my eye it brought back memories of my mum who's name was also Kathleen who would look so content while she would knit and I know if you lived in that era you would be busy putting your heart and soul in your important work bless you I served in the royal navy and while I never saw any "action" it's always comforting to know people back home "care" cheers

    • @randomhumanoidblob4506
      @randomhumanoidblob4506 5 років тому +10

      My Grandfather fought in WWI and my parents were both children in WW2 (both generations had very, VERY late babies!)
      I'm saying this cos my mother still knits, and she made me a pair of mittens last Christmas. We were talking about it, and she was saying her mother, who was a young girl during WW1, passed on these basic patterns. Everyone knitted "for the lads" and part of the homely feel was that it was never new wool - these parcels that came really were a piece of home, because the wool used was from outgrown, outworn clothing carefully unravelled and re-knit. There's something very poignant about these boys - and they were only boys - out in absolute hell, receiving socks made out of their old school jumpers.
      I didn't know my grandparents; all but one died before I was born or when I was a baby. But, although perhaps unusual, my family shows how near in time these huge, cataclysmic events were. They're not just a distant past of long-dead ancestors, they're within living-memory.

  • @imprecisedev6069
    @imprecisedev6069 3 роки тому +12

    Imagine how fast you have to wear all those clothes when the Instructor is like: "GET UP SOLDIERS."

  • @user-dw6ux8rw4d
    @user-dw6ux8rw4d 4 роки тому +7

    To run into the attack while holding a rifle in this way, omg best actor

  • @None.of.ya.business666
    @None.of.ya.business666 5 років тому +767

    This particular video made me sadder than I thought it would. One tends to forget that soldiers weren't a soulless bunch of robots, but there were actual people who probably loved and were loved, who had thoughts, feelings.... fears. Who wanted to live, grow old, be happy. And they often had no choice but to fight and "serve their country" because the ones in charge cling to their power and, even today, way too often prefer turning other people into food for the crows instead of discussing things and solving issues themselves without spilling innocent people's blood.

    • @jackhammer6179
      @jackhammer6179 5 років тому +15

      And the elite saw that they were butchered and damed regardless of what side they fought for.

    • @iamthe12th
      @iamthe12th 5 років тому +15

      We aren't and weren't robots. But we were mostly footnotes in the papers to most. :( Too many died for the betterment of old rich men. Every one of us only wants the end to war.

    • @candybar791
      @candybar791 5 років тому +3

      Noneofya Business I felt exactly the same way. I can’t even comprehend what they went through in WW1, 2 or any war for that matter 😞

    • @CrusaderGER
      @CrusaderGER 5 років тому +2

      your words hit my soul and my heart.
      Thank you, you know the real story of Christmas Truce 1914 in WW1,,?
      Please Share .
      ua-cam.com/video/NWF2JBb1bvM/v-deo.html
      Best from Germany my friends.

    • @Briselance
      @Briselance 5 років тому +5

      "Discussing things" only works as long as the others want to discuss things.

  • @GlamorousTitanic21
    @GlamorousTitanic21 5 років тому +108

    It just passed 11:00 am, the armistice was just signed a century before.

  • @celestialbr0nze
    @celestialbr0nze 2 роки тому +5

    I watched the movie 1917 for the first time recently and I recognized several parts of the military uniforms worn because of this video! I felt very proud of myself for noticing the cloth strips wrapped around the legs :)

  • @hopelessgeneration7979
    @hopelessgeneration7979 4 роки тому +8

    'Down to Gehenna, or up to the Throne, He travels the fastest who travels alone.' - General Erinmore

  • @kungfuman82
    @kungfuman82 5 років тому +96

    This video, more than any other documentary or film, really brought the proper perspective to WW1. You see pictures, you hear stories, okay. To see what your average rifleman had to go through like this though? Incredibly poignant.

  • @diekje8728
    @diekje8728 5 років тому +339

    Those leg strips hurt so bad after a while. Marching makes your legs swell up, but the cloth stays tight. We tried it for the Passendale remembrance

    • @jetsetuk
      @jetsetuk 5 років тому +66

      As an Army Cadet Force volunteer back in school, we wore puttees as well (1980's - we were still issued with 37 webbing and carried Lee Enfields!) I'd agree with Jay Leno here, it's down to how you wrap them, though to be honest we never wrapped them as in this instance, but as an ever increasingly thickening band around the ankles - now in later Life I re-enact Vikings as a hobby, and the Leg Wraps have re-appeared as Winingas - worn by pretty much all of the peoples back in the dark ages, they performed much the same function and were made from wool mostly, as were the ones I had in the cadets - again, winding them is critical, and through experimentation I now wind in the opposite direction to that used for the Puttees of both the 1st and 2nd World Wars, starting at the knee and winding down to my toes, as they act as both leg protection and sock. I wear them all day and with the method I use, they never fall down or gather loosely at my ankles, and provide some support for the lower leg as well as protection... As a cadet I quickly bought my own Combat Trousers, Lightweight and SAS Combat Smock as opposed to using the clothing seen here but from the second world war (Pattern 1949 I believe) - it made Weekend Excersizes a lot more comfortable... The Serge material of the Blouses and trousers would rub you raw in a matter of hours if you didn't wear decent long johns and a shirt, just a vest and normal underwear didn't give you the protection you need! My only criticism of this video is to do with the Soldier from the Artist's Rifles not fastening his Webbing belt correctly, he passed it through the first part of the buckle but didn't feed it though the second part of the buckle before catching it in the Keeper further down the belt... tut tut - that would put him on a report if he was caught by his Sargeant Major...

    • @RiflemanMoore
      @RiflemanMoore 5 років тому +32

      If they're hurting your legs you're wearing them incorrectly or perhaps using modern reproductions made of the incorrect weave of cloth. Originals are made of a wool cloth with an open, bandage like weave, you can actually see this in the video, and as such they have some stretch in them and both mould to the leg and allow some give for swelling, etc.

    • @jetsetuk
      @jetsetuk 5 років тому +3

      @@BillSikes. As I mentioned in my comment a couple up from this... *Puttees... not Putties... and as far as I know, these days the British Army are using the PCS-CU system of clothing which was introduced in 2011. With this system, the trousers have integral ankle ties to allow the trouser cuffs to be bloused at the top of the boot... no puttees are currently used in the British Army.

    • @louislungbubble
      @louislungbubble 5 років тому +6

      @@jetsetuk when I was in army reserve in Australia we had to blouse our greens at the top of GP boots , there was no ankle tie and if you tried to tuck them into the boot the effect was messy , we used to keep them out of the boot and blouse them up with thick rubber bands .

    • @jetsetuk
      @jetsetuk 5 років тому +1

      @@louislungbubble I agree with you... the Lightweights I wore in the cadets suffered from the same problem, and I, like you, used a separate way of blousing them, but when I checked on the features of the latest trousers - the PCS-CU ones - the source advised they came with integral ties. You can still get some twisted elasticated cotton ties with a clasp on them for exactly this purpose for trousers without their own built in ties... I used to use spare leather boot laces, then if the ones in the boots snapped, I'd have the spare to hand, and a knot in the lace didn't hamper blousing the trouser cuff... ;o)

  • @judefreeman4097
    @judefreeman4097 4 роки тому +20

    2:00
    mom walks in
    "wtf are you watching"

    • @trefoli
      @trefoli 3 роки тому

      @Lizzy Del Fierro LMAO

  • @PaulGarthAviation
    @PaulGarthAviation 4 роки тому +3

    Very informative and adds to my ancestry research. My GGF was a 1st Lifeguards Trooper (Hyde Park Barracks) from 1899 to 1921, and rated a marksman in 1903. Went to Zeebrugge in October 1914. Survived from peers providing lessons learned from Boer War, training, skill, and plenty of luck.

  • @AndreiAlcorizaAndreius
    @AndreiAlcorizaAndreius 5 років тому +35

    Solemn music playing in the back ground seems so peaceful. 100 years ago wearing this will give you butterflies.

    • @bandit5747
      @bandit5747 5 років тому +2

      Not dubstep? *cough cough, BBC*

  • @katluvr7973
    @katluvr7973 5 років тому +246

    This is so beautifully sad.

  • @ericrodriguez1828
    @ericrodriguez1828 4 роки тому +2

    My great grandad was from Trinidad & fought under the British army. He survived the war to tell his story. RIP🕊

  • @seonsgtz
    @seonsgtz 4 роки тому +4

    The evolution of just everything is amazing.

  • @Abzun777
    @Abzun777 5 років тому +98

    We will not forget you, you brave souls...

  • @miriamdruyan
    @miriamdruyan 5 років тому +119

    Great video - also heartbreaking. All wars are horrible, but the trenches of WW1 were just unspeakably bad.

  • @kiva_J_T
    @kiva_J_T 4 роки тому +4

    I love how this video shows the humanity behind a soldier. They were young men sent to die for an old mans game. Beautifully done. ✨👏✨

  • @charlesbronson240
    @charlesbronson240 3 роки тому +2

    The info on the boots is incredibly accurate

    • @scowler7200
      @scowler7200 3 роки тому

      Chromium was likely used in the tanning process. Chrome-tanned leather is tougher.

  • @HavocParadox
    @HavocParadox 5 років тому +165

    the amount of layers is crazy.. honestly doing physical activity in that must have been hot..

    • @03019a
      @03019a 5 років тому +6

      It was the British winter tho

    • @RhodokTribesman
      @RhodokTribesman 5 років тому +37

      @@03019a French winter*

    • @sjm2726
      @sjm2726 4 роки тому +16

      LoganThe Llama my great grandfather lost his life in the trenches on the 29th Sept 1915, so just before winter set in. Having worn more or less the same uniform in the South African Conflict. The British Army obviously had the ‘one size fits all’ motto, when it came their uniform.

    • @jacksonbilgry8395
      @jacksonbilgry8395 4 роки тому +12

      the most "physical activity" soldiers back then would do would be marching. looking good was more important as a soldier really just needed to march and use his rifle, not like modern soldiers.
      However surprisingly the uniform isn't as bad as you'd think. it's very hot in the summer and irritates the skin (being rough wool) but one can run and march rather easily. not until ww2 did militaries realize how important maneuverability was to a soldier, to which they began making "combat uniforms" rather than a single universal uniform

    • @wakingfromslumber9555
      @wakingfromslumber9555 3 роки тому +4

      You say the only physical activity they did was marching and firing a weapon ? What about trench digging? Cutting through barbed wire ? Digging tunnels ? Charging sniper and machine gun positions ? Hacking people to death with clubs and all types of sharp objects in the trenches? Planting demolitions and booby traps and avoiding enemies ? Avoiding artillery shells? Living awful disgusting conditions at below zero temperatures?
      I would rather be a modern day soldier in all circumstances.

  • @SunniLeBoeuf
    @SunniLeBoeuf 5 років тому +35

    "Through these pale cold days
    What dark faces burn
    Out of three thousand years,
    And their wild eyes yearn,
    While underneath their brows
    Like waifs their spirits grope
    For the pools of Hebron again-
    For Lebanon's summer slope.
    They leave these blond still days
    In dust behind their tread
    They see with living eyes
    How long they have been dead."
    - "Through these Pale Cold Days", by Isaac Rosenburg, a British Jew on the Western Front. Written 1 week before his death at Arras.

  • @RoSario-vb8ge
    @RoSario-vb8ge 3 роки тому +2

    It is heartbreaking to think about how men from all professions painters, great writers...partly they went with enthusiasm in this war, thinking it would be over soon. Seeing so close how unprepared and vulnerable they were...The information about their socks being out worn after three days tells a lot.
    Thanks for bringing this information so close.

  • @jbcf4490
    @jbcf4490 4 роки тому +11

    I can't imagine how uncomfortable the uniform must have been especially in it days and months on end

  • @BloodyGranny311
    @BloodyGranny311 5 років тому +1072

    Imagine dressing up like this on duty.
    For your wife, your family, your country.
    For the war that will end war once and for all.
    No thoughts.
    Maybe prayers.
    While getting prepared for the hell unleashed.

    • @johncrapper3447
      @johncrapper3447 5 років тому +52

      Imagine dying to save Europe only to have it invaded and handed to the third world by your elected politicians 100 years later.

    • @abdel2894
      @abdel2894 4 роки тому +19

      British soldiers also got dressed like that to go to india and middle east to spread horror, steal the land and treat the people living there badly. 🙂

    • @emileponcelet3439
      @emileponcelet3439 4 роки тому +10

      ab0od like India is such a good place to live in nowadays 🤭🤣🤣🤣

    • @tonyoliver2167
      @tonyoliver2167 4 роки тому +6

      @@abdel2894 I believe the word is cuck, " someone who takes pleasure in watching their spouse or partner get fucked by someone else" - or at least someone who watches.... And to be fair with you, there's no point being salty. Europe was plundered and pillaged by other ethnic groups. It's only when the West became vastly powerful and able to do what everyone else did to them a lot better that people start getting upset. Honestly people need to suck it up with this "your ancestors did this to my ancestors" business - for one we cannot compare the mentality and zeal for land and property to that of today. People lived hard, people joined armies to gain booty, and often that involved flogging people in the country you were "liberating" and making profit from whatever else. Survival of the fittest and you all got raped.

    • @quinnflorence
      @quinnflorence 4 роки тому +3

      And sad violet music plays in the background as you read this comment to make it more sad.
      “War, War never changes” - Fallout

  • @yungcashregistera.k.alilbr8245
    @yungcashregistera.k.alilbr8245 5 років тому +587

    I want to suggest a movie, one about WWI but on the perspective of a German soldier.
    *"All Quiet on the Western Front (1979)"*
    Check it out.

    • @jessicaberg169
      @jessicaberg169 5 років тому +11

      I’ve seen the movie it’s good

    • @fanta4897
      @fanta4897 5 років тому +44

      Shame that there aren't many movies from the central powers point of view (those soldiers had it much rougher in some regards: food shortages because of blockade, fighting on more fronts, no rotation of units if I'm not mistaken, etc.). Only other one I can think of(which is serious and not a comedy like Good soldier Švejk) would be Red Baron.

    • @bandit5747
      @bandit5747 5 років тому +17

      I watched the one from the '30s

    • @ariton1952
      @ariton1952 4 роки тому +1

      thnx

    • @theginger7148
      @theginger7148 4 роки тому +10

      The 30s version is even better, and is on iTunes if you want it

  • @Brendissimo1
    @Brendissimo1 4 роки тому +1

    This has really good production value for an educational UA-cam video. I was not expecting those action shots at the end.

  • @oarch4ng3lo
    @oarch4ng3lo 4 роки тому +4

    These men and some women went through this to protect their home country and for world peace, to give the future a chance in life... Honorable and never forgotten, lest we forget

  • @_wanted_outlaw3007
    @_wanted_outlaw3007 5 років тому +146

    She sounds like she's going to inform me that we've captured objective *B*

    • @KadSkirita
      @KadSkirita 4 роки тому +3

      Speed Cola she reminds me of the voice at the beginning of certain sabaton songs.

    • @spencerleblanc9199
      @spencerleblanc9199 4 роки тому +12

      *We have captured objective Butter*

    • @rileyrocks813
      @rileyrocks813 4 роки тому +4

      @@KadSkirita *_for this is not the war to end all wars_*

    • @paralystepsis
      @paralystepsis 4 роки тому +7

      Speed Cola “we have taken objective Butter.” ....”we have lost objective butter.”

    • @GeAsita
      @GeAsita 4 роки тому

      Butter*

  • @BlackHatTy
    @BlackHatTy 5 років тому +19

    I have my great-grandfather's WWI portrait. its awesome.

    • @crazyd4ve875
      @crazyd4ve875 4 роки тому +1

      Same here. He survived the war too, 1913-1918

    • @minimouselucylu2752
      @minimouselucylu2752 3 роки тому

      idk about mine but I know he lived somehow

  • @BabyMieuw
    @BabyMieuw 3 роки тому +4

    A few years too late, but still I want to bring my compliments to @CrowsEyeProductions
    for publishing this video a few days just before the 100th anniversary of the end of the Great War.
    This can't have been an accident. They must have done it on purpose, to commemorate and honour all that fought and died during that horrific war.
    Thank you CrowsEyeProductions
    , for bringing them such a nice tribute ❤️
    Let's remember, so that it may never happen again.

  • @sudlander9447
    @sudlander9447 3 роки тому

    Tell them of us was a very good and emotional story. I enjoyed every second of it.

  • @DareToRS
    @DareToRS 5 років тому +61

    Seven hours later, seven hundred likes and zero downvotes - arguably, as it should be.
    Thank you for undertaking the effort to not only depict the vestments of those who served in World War I, but also to capture and present the soldiers and the function of the garments crafted for them in a personable and realistic manner.
    This series is truly excellent as a result of the production staff’s commitment to depicting people from different epochs in such a respectful manner - not only featuring their clothing, but the purposes of the garments and what they may have meant to those who wore them.

  • @najmahssn
    @najmahssn 5 років тому +34

    I just went Ypres in Belgium with school and saw a couple of monuments remembering the soldiers of the great war and it's very interesting to see how they used to dress

  • @eddiebrady4218
    @eddiebrady4218 4 роки тому

    Thank you for an informative set of productions and a fantastic channel. The best I have come across so far.

  • @wingertetienne2678
    @wingertetienne2678 3 роки тому

    Amazing video! Thanks for releasing it.

  • @RealityXOnlooker
    @RealityXOnlooker 5 років тому +132

    I can barely express how much I look forward to these videos. Thank you so much so the time and research that goes into these. Wonderful job as always and I look forward to the next instalment.

  • @gabrielle.s1896
    @gabrielle.s1896 5 років тому +297

    War is pure hell.

    • @graced4844
      @graced4844 5 років тому +21

      one could say that war is worse than hell. sinners go to hell. that was the choice they made. war doesn’t discriminate. the ordinary soldier, the civilian, the children, the elderly, the infirm all die at the hands of war. aggressive politicians profit and gain support and the people are killed and the populace trampled underfoot. one could understand why they deserve hell, but no one can understand why we deserve war.

    • @andreivalentinpavan5361
      @andreivalentinpavan5361 5 років тому +1

      Dislike

    • @ericcl5313
      @ericcl5313 5 років тому +4

      I'm glad i wasn't born a hundred years earlier. The horrors of having to experience, and probably also die in that war - it makes me speechless. War is hell, but The Great War was an industrial killing machine.

    • @Zoo-Wee-Mama-Sq
      @Zoo-Wee-Mama-Sq 5 років тому +2

      @@andreivalentinpavan5361 t. an edgy teen who has never even got into a fight

    • @bigsnugga
      @bigsnugga 5 років тому +2

      i think the worst part is when war is over,
      the feelings and memories that remain.

  • @bambino100011
    @bambino100011 4 роки тому

    What I love about these videos is getting a sense of the history and time. :)

  • @IntrepidMilo
    @IntrepidMilo 5 років тому +38

    After touring the some of the battlefields on the Great War and watching this I feel closer to my great-grandfather. I can get a glimpse into what his life would have been like during that horrible period.

  • @maki2925
    @maki2925 5 років тому +69

    4:20 So that is what they are for! I never knew.
    Highly interesting video as always, thank you for the effort you put into your content :)

    • @masuganut2082
      @masuganut2082 5 років тому +4

      Maki C ditto! I’ve always wondered that! I’ve seen them as useless adornments on women’s clothing nowadays so I assumed it was a fashion thing. So happy to find out it actually has a function and a good one at that!!

    • @barry9460
      @barry9460 5 років тому +1

      Maki C smoke weed erry day

    • @kyore789
      @kyore789 5 років тому

      Maki C: yooo I was thinking that, I guess it just trended to a lot of leather jackets in fashion.

    • @edanridge3023
      @edanridge3023 2 роки тому

      Lol my cousin fought in Syria (a rebel) and he said “I always hated how those looked until I had to carry an Kalashnikov Bandolier and the straps kept falling off my shoulder while I was fighting”

  • @gunhojput
    @gunhojput Рік тому

    Heartbreakingly vulnerable says it all. war never changes maybe we should stop making war full stop. thanks for a very informative video much love to all.

  • @justinwu153
    @justinwu153 4 роки тому +1

    This is probably one of the best productions I've seen in a while. As a suggestion for a future time period, maybe Classical times i.e. Greek and Roman? Keep up the great work.

  • @WillaLamour
    @WillaLamour 5 років тому +66

    My goodness! Another wonderful video that is so wonderfully made. This time, clearly made with love and respect in time for the anniversary of the war. As always, thank you for making this. It serves as an important reminder at the most appropriate time.

  • @C0ltxx45
    @C0ltxx45 5 років тому +111

    Have a pair of those boots in my closet that went through WWI. Let me tell you, the soles feel like cement, they weigh about 5lbs. each, and you couldn't probably kill someone if you hit them it in the head with one lol

    • @thepolarbear8449
      @thepolarbear8449 4 роки тому +4

      Colt Forty5 how did you get a hold of them? Any chance for a PIC?

    • @owenwolfco.8344
      @owenwolfco.8344 4 роки тому +16

      I’m an AEF reenactor and I have M1917 trench boots. Yeah, they can kill anyone with a simple blow to the head.
      Marching in them though, each of them weighing so much, I could’ve cried.

    • @peggedyourdad9560
      @peggedyourdad9560 4 роки тому +3

      One helluva curb stomp

    • @lordtickledck7012
      @lordtickledck7012 3 роки тому

      @@owenwolfco.8344 Where can I get some of these?

    • @owenwolfco.8344
      @owenwolfco.8344 3 роки тому +1

      Tzar Nicholas II of Russia , go to Whatpriceglory.com. They have the best US 1917 boots

  • @rawlivingwithdisabilities
    @rawlivingwithdisabilities 4 місяці тому +1

    This channel needs millions of subscribers it's outstanding 💯

  • @bamski88
    @bamski88 4 роки тому

    Thank you for the quality of information in this video and detail.

  • @rosaliecrawford1841
    @rosaliecrawford1841 5 років тому +9

    I watch and love all your videos, but this one really hit home for me...my husband is in the military and I watch him get dressed in his uniform every day with such pride. It warms my heart to see that he is echoing the brave men who came before him in the past. The times have changed, but the sentiments of those who serve hasn’t. ❤️

    • @Lothaii
      @Lothaii 5 років тому +1

      pride? your husband probably serves some bigass corporations, there are no more ideals and countries to serve for.

    • @rosaliecrawford1841
      @rosaliecrawford1841 5 років тому +2

      Herbal Care it’s sad that you feel that way, but it doesn’t change the fact that he does take pride in serving every day so people like you can go on living their lives... and voicing their opinions.

  • @cleopop7609
    @cleopop7609 5 років тому +32

    Makes me want to knit lol.
    Also great video, it is clear you guys put a lot of love into these.

  • @yamiatemyugi
    @yamiatemyugi 4 роки тому +2

    I have no idea why I'm tearing up. There's an underlying note of sadness to this entire video. Maybe its because many of these men never got to go home or see their loved ones ever again. The music certainly doesn't help

  • @timburr4453
    @timburr4453 4 місяці тому

    brilliant job with this and very well narrated. thank you. Very informative

  • @claudesturm6706
    @claudesturm6706 5 років тому +7

    Who would give this a thumbs down? This is about history, not someone's feelings......

    • @crusaderofthelowlands3750
      @crusaderofthelowlands3750 5 років тому

      People have a tendency to dehumanise history. When you see a massive bayonet charge on a black and white flickering screen, it can be easy to forget that all those little figures are actual human beings. If one falls down, it doesn't have much of an impact since we see much more graphical footage in movies nowadays.
      I highly doubt that people today would have been able to pull off what those boys did. We're too weak and spoiled.
      I'm not an exception. Rats running over me while I'm sleeping? No thanks.

  • @aldrineuri122
    @aldrineuri122 5 років тому +87

    *DAMN THAT'S A LOT OF LAYERS!*

    • @viktorthevictor6240
      @viktorthevictor6240 5 років тому +4

      I've seen more. And to be honest, I've worn more 😅

    • @spendall4gucciokrr337
      @spendall4gucciokrr337 4 роки тому +3

      Aldrin Euri shrek

    • @BeingFireRetardant
      @BeingFireRetardant 4 роки тому +2

      @josh grant
      ______
      What??
      That's not how weather works. Lol
      Those clothes needed so many layers, because they were paper thin. They said socks lasted three days. Our clothes are much, much better now, and more fitted to the human body. We have good insulation now.
      But, yes, it is just as cold these days as it has always been.

    • @wasgood2368
      @wasgood2368 4 роки тому

      @@BeingFireRetardant Climate Change

  • @schiatzeschiatze5002
    @schiatzeschiatze5002 4 роки тому +1

    I love this channel. It is very informative. It validates yet again, that clothes are not just clothes and it does maketh the man or woman and that we really are what we wear.

  • @AnthonyMonaghan
    @AnthonyMonaghan 2 роки тому

    Thank you for this fascinating and unexpectedly moving film.

  • @ElfishlyAmie
    @ElfishlyAmie 5 років тому +12

    Wonderful video! I felt like I was cutting onions this entire video...It's sad to see what these men had to go through :(

  • @Apollo890
    @Apollo890 5 років тому +68

    The Regiment the Artist Rifles still exists as a army reserve unit but today its known as 21 SAS

    • @corneliusscipio777
      @corneliusscipio777 5 років тому +1

      @MichaelKingsfordGray but are they special forces? Or it's only the name?

    • @rhysnichols8608
      @rhysnichols8608 5 років тому +2

      Cornelius Scipio
      They are special forces trained, they support and directly work with regular 22 SAS as communications support, reconnaissance and sometimes extraction support. They are trained to the same standard as special forces and the selection process is the same but advanced training differs somewhat to regular SAS

    • @corneliusscipio777
      @corneliusscipio777 5 років тому +1

      @@rhysnichols8608 okas, thank you very much for your answer. It's wonderful that a "reserve" force could have a so good training.

    • @rhysnichols8608
      @rhysnichols8608 5 років тому +3

      Cornelius Scipio
      No problem, all reserves forces are trained very similar to regular, they are not of lesser quality in training! Just their role and way of training is different but the army reserves can do everything the regular army does, once they have completed training

    • @EvenWaysMusic
      @EvenWaysMusic 5 років тому

      Yup Bear Grylls' regiment when he was in. I was going to try for 23 SAS but then three guys died on Test Week. Went Navy instead.

  • @pokilovesyou5449
    @pokilovesyou5449 4 роки тому +390

    Imaging being a British soldier and then you need to pee...☹️

    • @esco5593
      @esco5593 4 роки тому +24

      Shiiit I'd need a diaper

    • @vice-admiralhorationelson7137
      @vice-admiralhorationelson7137 4 роки тому +76

      My great grandpa wore a kilt so it was easy for him

    • @mr.stalin4070
      @mr.stalin4070 4 роки тому +10

      Also even American soldier lol

    • @alexanderfo3886
      @alexanderfo3886 4 роки тому +57

      Better yet: imagine an attack of violent diarrhea during an trench raid...

    • @theotterguy
      @theotterguy 4 роки тому +15

      I had three more layers than that in winter in Canada.You had to take your parka off to get the suspenders off your wind pants (thick winter pants) to go #2.Even peeing was a pain in the ass.I'd wear underwear,long johns,combat pants,wind pants,APC pants and white winter camouflage pants and that is just the bottom.You drive an APC in Canada with your head sticking out wear all that and you still freeze.At least I was not at war.

  • @bageled_meme2690
    @bageled_meme2690 4 роки тому +1

    I like how this video doesn’t take sides and just shows facts.

  • @st.morgnmufflyourpaladaddy8246
    @st.morgnmufflyourpaladaddy8246 5 років тому +48

    So many colourful uniforms.
    So much blood on them...

  • @Crosshill
    @Crosshill 5 років тому +6

    so those little shoulder things are for keeping webbing on, and later became an almost decorative element?
    watching these dressing videos really adds character and substance to historical people, makes them feel less like an abstract ghost. and just thinking about how everyone in a country at war had to work adds to the scale of it all. i can recommend wartime farm, just here on youtube, that shows the struggle of the farmers and the food crisis, and the volunteer work of the women. seeing this little video was a great supplement to imagine all the soldiers that werent shown in the series

    • @Alucard-gt1zf
      @Alucard-gt1zf 5 років тому

      Entraya Crosshill epiletts are also sometimes used to hold rank slides or other identification

  • @beth5633
    @beth5633 4 роки тому

    love this channel, so many interesting and informative videos

  • @tasha3757
    @tasha3757 4 роки тому +1

    Amazing filming!

  • @haley9976
    @haley9976 5 років тому +5

    Just in time for Veteran's Day. Beautiful. Makes me even more thankful for the heroes that risked their lives.

    • @haley9976
      @haley9976 5 років тому +1

      @Repeat After Me: Yep. Can't believe it's been 100 years. I wish I could talk to people that fought back then.

  • @brandonphipps4755
    @brandonphipps4755 5 років тому +313

    Amazing but also so sad. When I read or watch something on the wars I always think of the men who wanted nothing more then to be home warm clean loved and happy. It's just so sad that human kind has been in a non stop fight and it's awful! World peace hasn't happened ever in history and it doesn't feel like it ever will with these ego crazed maniacs who sit at the head of some of our countries. When will suffer and death be enough?

    • @None.of.ya.business666
      @None.of.ya.business666 5 років тому +8

      Thank you for those words. You're so right, so very right. Hugs from the other side of the sea.

    • @StephBer1
      @StephBer1 5 років тому +13

      @Brandon Phipps, I truly believe that if people want to make war then they should do the fighting, not the ordinary man. If politicians and dictators thought they might die in battle, there would be a lot more negotiation and peace.

    • @k3kboi665
      @k3kboi665 5 років тому +2

      Sadly the natural state of humanity is war

    • @goolmegaming1266
      @goolmegaming1266 5 років тому +4

      I can tell youre not an american, about the only country fighting needless wars, also the country trying to start WW3 with Russia and China making EU an battleground

    • @krdiaz8026
      @krdiaz8026 5 років тому +1

      It will never be enough until Jesus comes back. It's true. Anyone who says let there be peace on earth right now is living a dream.

  • @quickattackfilms7923
    @quickattackfilms7923 4 роки тому

    Awesome video. You can learn a lot about an era by the clothes they wear.

  • @sandrak.robbins6305
    @sandrak.robbins6305 4 місяці тому

    Thank you. Well done and informative!