Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

Categories: History |

On July 28, 1914, one of the most large — scale armed conflicts in the history of mankind began-the First World War, although it became so called after the beginning of the Second World War. At that time, the war was called Great or Great. The countries involved in the conflict lost more than 10 million soldiers and about 12 million civilians killed, about 55 million people were injured.

In 2014, to mark the centenary of the outbreak of the First World War, the Reuters news agency presented a selection of previously unpublished photographs from a private collection from the war. The pictures offer an unexpected look at the contrasts of the war years, when high-tech artillery was combined with mobile dovecotes, and officers who were having fun in their apartments — with the grim reality of life and death in the trenches.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War
Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

Women work at an ammunition factory, 1916.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

A party of German officers of the 280th flight unit in a house near the Western Front, 1918.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

An officer of the German Air Force poses with a stuffed boar near the house where his unit is staying, near the Western Front, 1918.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

American soldiers in gas masks used in different countries, at the Laboratory of Chemical and Technological Research in Philadelphia, 1919.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

German military diver, 1917.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

Morning exercise on a German ship, 1917.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

German officers at an observation balloon near the Western Front, 1915.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

German prisoners of war on the field in Longjo, Western Front, August 1, 1916.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

The downed German seaplane, 1916.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

A horse in a flannelette respirator at the Laboratory of Chemical and Technological Research in Philadelphia, 1919.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

Officers of the Imperial German Air Force conduct athletic competitions at a squadron meeting near the Western Front, 1917.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

A German submarine sinks an Allied merchant ship in the Atlantic Ocean, 1915.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

German Air Force officers on a picnic with friends, 1918.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

German seaplane "Friedrichshafen", which fell on a building in Germany, 1918.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

French anti-aircraft self-propelled gun, 1918.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

The German dovecote on the Western Front, 1916.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

German observation post on the front line on the Iser River, Belgium, 1917.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

A British soldier carries pigeons to the front line, Western Front, 1916.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

The consequences of the bombing on the Western Front. The picture was taken from a British plane, February 16, 1918.

Pigeons and gas masks: the other side of the First World War

The German camp behind the front line, 1916.

Keywords: War | History | Soldiers | World war I | Pigeons | Reuters | Gas mask | XX century

     

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