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| IRISH
BATTALIONS - AT WAR |
| The
Great War introduced weapons either newly invented or not used before
on such a large scale including: barbed wire, machine guns, heavy
artillery shells, planes, tanks and possibly most fearsome, chemical
warfare - poison gas. In the motor age, it is easy to forget that
Cavalry regiments did battle and horses and donkeys were widely used
for transporting goods, pulling ambulances and artillery, etc. In
the early days of the war, the British army had a great deal of difficulty
getting both troops and supplies to where they were needed. |

Life in the trenches. |
Throughout
the war, men in the trenches were not relieved as quickly as they
should have been and many were literally at the front-line for several
weeks without respite and often without adequate supplies. Rat infestation
was common in the trenches and those which gorged on the bodies of
gassed soldiers, were also crazed with poison. An extremely unpleasant
nuisance, the vermin also spread disease.
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Dead and wounded had to be carried by stretcher-bearers or comrades
from the battlefield and through the trenches. For every man killed,
several more were wounded. Field treatment was limited to a dressing
and some morphine, regimental aid posts often being located in shell-holes
or in a trench. Seriously wounded soldiers would be moved to an Advanced
Dressing Station a few miles from the front but they often had to
wait hours for the cover of darkness to attempt the journey. |

A dead
soldier in the trenches. |
Those who survived were transferred to Casualty Clearing Stations
or Stationary Hospitals until they could either be returned to the
front or evacuated (often by Hospital ship) to a military hospital
in the UK. Many women actively participated in the war in the medical
services. A great many others did voluntary work at home, fundraising
or manufacturing supplies.
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Soldiers writing home tried to reassure their families and would not
have written much about the horrors they experienced - their letters
were also censored. At such a distance from the battlefields and with
government propaganda releasing only approved information, the Irish
people had little exposure to the realities of the war. However, U-boat
attacks on shipping did result in several ships being wrecked close
to the Irish coast and with bodies being washed onto beaches, Irish
civilians did experience just a little of the Great War at home.
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IRISH WOMEN IN THE WAR
Nationalist and Unionist politicians alike, did not plan on including
women in the electorate. Suffragettes protested for franchise rights
for women at Home Rule meetings. Northern and Southern women who wished
to stand by their men found themselves excluded and formed their own
organizations such as the Ulster Women's Unionist Council, the Irish
Women's Franchise League and an auxiliary unit to the Irish Volunteers,
Cumann na mBán. |

Lance
Sergeant William O'Reilly, who was captured in 1914. |
Women
became involved in the recruiting committee for the Royal Dublin Fusiliers,
not only assisting in recruitment, but organizing for the comfort-fund
(sourcing cardigans, gloves, pipes and tobacco for new recruits and
Prisoners-of-War).
Many women did voluntary work making dressings, bandages and surgical
supplies. Others joined Voluntary Aid Detachments or VADs, and served
in field hospitals in Europe and at home. The British Red Cross Society
was predominantly female, though many men also did voluntary non-combat
work.
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AT
SEA
Ireland was distant enough from the battlefields for the public
to be somewhat removed from the horrors of war. In previous conflicts,
hitting civilian targets was, by and large, considered bad form.
This war was different. German U-boats began to attack any vessel,
'flying the British flag or a flag of her allies'. This quote
appeared in newspaper advertisements warning travellers that they
sailed on British ships at their peril. The ad was placed by the
German embassy in the U.S. and appeared alongside an advert for
the Lusitania. The Lusitania was torpedoed by a U-boat off the Old
Head of Kinsale and 1,198 men, women and children were lost (including
Sir Hugh Lane, the famous art collector); many were buried in Co.
Cork where their bodies were brought ashore.
Just a month before the war ended, the R.M.S. Leinster, a
City of Dublin Steam Packet Company ship, was torpedoed having left
Kingstown (Dún Laoghaire). 501 of the 771 people on board
died, including crew, postal workers, civilians, Voluntary Aid nurses
and eight Royal Dublin Fusiliers.
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