Digging Up The Trenches of WWI

Aug 20, 2009
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Digging Up The Trenches of WWI



Published on Nov 11, 2013

Digging up the Trenches reveals each stage of trench warfare by focusing on the remarkable finds made by this unique excavation. As each rifle and artifact is unearthed, dramatic re-enactments show how these tools and weapons were used by soldiers 90 years ago. We see how men fired sniper rifles, reeled from artillery, and destroyed enemy machine gun nests. The result is a glimpse into how trenches helped define the progress of the entire war, starting as shallow rifle pits, and evolving to become vast underground fortresses housing thousands of men.
Among the astounding discoveries found by the dig are the bones of four soldiers, believed to have died in the war's first gas attack. The archaeologists also find scores of bullets, live shells, underground shelters, and the scars left by mining tunnels.
Historians and archaeologists at the dig are our guides. As each mud-coated artifact is cleaned off, historians like Peter Barton explain how it was used on this very spot 90 years ago. Archaeologists explain trench warfare tactics as they discover bones and rifles. Dramatic re-enactments show how these same artifacts were once the key to life and death struggles in these same trenches.
Digging up the Trenches tells the remarkable story of a dig and a war defined by trenches. Trenches that were built as shelter against machine guns became so sophisticated that they were almost impossible to conquer. Understand the birth and death of these trenches, and you understand the war.
 

Charlie P. (NY)

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My Grandfather was a Lieutenant in WWI and stayed on in the Army of Occupation. I never heard him speak of the War; but instead spoke of what happened after. Sixth Infantry, Company I, Fifth Division - first into German territory and from what my Father said he had it pretty rough at times.

Recently I came across an old newspaper article relating how "he had a narrow escape from death in the trenches when a piece of shrapnel pierced his mess kit."

DSCN1105_zpse5c10938.jpg
 

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Red James Cash
Aug 20, 2009
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Horrible stuff it was charlie.In some ways much worse than WW2.You know its going to be bad when the only option is frontal assault.You grand dad was lucky.
 

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