February
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1918-2018
Happy New Year to all of our readers. This will be the last year of our Centennial coverage of the war and you will notice a few changes in the Trip-Wire that will be reflecting the changing nature of the war in 1918. We will be looking at the German spring offensives early in the year and the Allied push for victory in its second half. And we won't be neglecting those other fronts either, especially Salonika and Allenby's brilliant campaign in Palestine. . . In this issue you will also notice that I have abandoned the "Can you name this veteran" feature. My selections were either too hard or too easy and so I received either overwhelming or nil responses. Anyway, onward!
MH
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2018
Images of the Great War: America Crosses the Atlantic
National WWI Museum & Memorial
Kansas City, MO
Now thru 13 May 2018
Details: HERE
Mid-Atlantic Chapter Meeting
League of WWI Aviation Historians
National Air and Space Museum’s
Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center
Dulles Airport, Washington, DC
20 January 2018
Click on the Image to Visit Our Daily Blog.
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Portrait of the Month
Crown Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria
Considered the most competent of the royal commanders for the Kaiser's army, Rupprecht would play a critical role in the German spring offensives of 1918.
Your 1918 Map Kit
Trench warfare ends on 21 March 1918, when the German Army launched the first of their spring offensives, Operation Michael, in the Somme sector. A war of movement ensued until the Armistice. You'll need some good maps to follow the action as the Centennial news follows the action. Here is a set that covers the first half of the year.
Operation Michael, 21 March
Operation Georgette, 9 April
Zeebrugge Raid, 23 April
Operation Blücher, 27 May
Battle of Cantigny, 28 May
The AEF at the Marne: Fifth German Offensive, Château-Thierry, Belleau Wood, Vaux, Rock of the Marne, Second Battle of the Marne, May-August
(Maps Scattered Throughout PDF Document)
Battle of the Piave, 15 June
Battle of Hamel, 4 July
A Number from the Great War
174
This is the number of Americans killed in Northern Russia and Siberia during the Great War, some after the Armistice.
A Prewar Change
On or about December 1910, human character changed. I am not saying that one went out, as one might into a garden, and there saw that a rose had flowered, or that a hen had laid an egg. The change was not sudden and definite like that. But a change there was, nevertheless; and, since one must be arbitrary, let us date it about the year 1910.
Virginia Woolf
1924 Essay "Mr Bennett and Mrs Brown," 1924
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U.S. Centennial Organizations & Resources

worldwar-1centennial.org/

theworldwar.org/

www.ww1-centennial.org/

www.firstdivisionmuseum.org/

www.abmc.gov/

www.overthefront.com/

www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/

www.worldwar1.com/dbc/

facebook.com/wwiinventory

wisconsinhistory.org/

www.uswarmemorials.org/

www.macarthurmemorial.org/

www.saving-hallowed-ground.org/

www.theprgroup.org/

pamilmuseum.org/
Support Worldwar1.com's Centennial Effort
Shop at Amazon.com
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The Centennial Ticker
America's Centennial Commemorations in Europe

A Commemorative Cermony and a Luminary Event Will Be Held at the Meuse-Argonne Cemetery on 23 September 1918
The American Battle Monuments Commission has organized 18 events in 2018 to commemorate the efforts of the nation in the First World War. Hopefully, some of our readers will be able to attend these events which will be held on the U.S. battlefields and cemeteries where our fallen rest. Below is the full schedule. To get details about a particular event, click on the image to go to the ABMC version of the page, which has clickable links for each event.
America's Centennial Commemorations in EuropeU.S. World War I Commemorative Coins Now Available for Purchase

President and Mrs. Wilson Lay a Wreath at Suresnes Cemetery,
Memorial Day 1919

The Imposing, But Little Visited, U.S. Memorial at Blanc Mont
in the Champagne

Deck Crew Firing from Destroyer USS Little on Convoy Duty

The Spectacular Memorial Atop Montfaucon, Captured 27 September 1918
To browse the entire collection, just click on the link below and go to the "Cemeteries and Memorials" section.
ABMC.gov
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21 February 1918
Allenby Captures Jericho
General Allenby and His Staff in Occupied Jerusalem
On the morning of 21 February 1918, combined Allied forces of British troops and the Australian mounted cavalry capture the city of Jericho in Palestine after a three-day battle with Turkish troops.
Winter rains had put an end to campaigning for British General Edmund Allenby's forces after the advance from the Gaza–Beersheba line to the capture of Jerusalem in December 1917. This lull in the fighting offered the opportunity for the captured territories to be consolidated. Extensive developments were also required along the lines of communication to ensure that front-line troops were adequately supplied, approximately 150 miles (240 km) from their main bases at Moascar and Kantara on the Suez Canal.
Allenby wrote on 25 January: "I want to extend my right, to include Jericho and the N[orth] of the Dead Sea."[9] This advance would remove the more serious threat to his right by pushing all the enemy across the Jordan River and securing the Jordan River crossings. It would also prevent raids into the country to the west of the Dead Sea and provide a narrow starting point for operations against the Hedjaz Railway.
Allenby's Allied troops began the renewed offensive on Tuesday, 19 February, on the outskirts of Jerusalem. Despite battling adverse weather conditions and a determined enemy in the Turks, the Allies were able to move nearly 20 miles toward Jericho in just three days.
Australian Lighthorsemen on the Advance
On the morning of 21 February it was apparent that the Turkish line had been broken, and the Allied forces entered the holy city of Jericho without much resistance at just after 8 a.m. Upon realizing they had lost control of the city, Turkish troops chose to retreat rather than fight. During the three-day battle, Allied troops captured 46 Turkish prisoners.
The capture of Jericho proved to be an important strategic victory for the Allies, who now controlled some of the most important roads in the region, including the main road to the coast and the mountain highway leading to Jerusalem, and had reached the northern end of the Dead Sea, the lowest point on earth at 1,290 feet below sea level.
Source: History Today and Wikipedia
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Our 2018 Centennial Battlefield Tours
2018
The Kaiser's Offensives &
the British Army's 100 Days

6 – 14 May 2018: Study of Germany's Last Effort to Win the War and the British Victory Offensive.
Includes: German advances in the Somme, Flanders, and the Marne Sectors, the Black Day of the German Army, the St. Quentin Canal, and the pursuit to Mons.
Reduced Price — $3,450 (dbl occupancy, sgl supp avail)
The full brochure covering the trip and registration details can now be downloaded
HERE
AEF: Pershing's Doughboys Centennial
Now Fully Booked – Waiting List Only

7 – 17 August 2018: Comprehensive Study of the American Expeditionary Force
Includes: All major battles, memorials, cemeteries, and service sites of your family members.
Price — $3,750 (dbl occupancy, sgl supp avail)
The full brochure covering the trip and registration details can now be downloaded
HERE
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Thanks to each and every one of you who has contributed material for this issue. Until our next issue, your editor, Mike Hanlon. |
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(Or send it to a friend)
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Design by Shannon Niel
Content © Michael E. Hanlon
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