Tuesday, June 26, 2012

'O,' sweet: National Doughnut Day recalls doughboys of World War I

I didn’t realize the doughnut’s connection to WW1 or Chicago.

Doughboys 

What's most interesting about Doughnut Day is its origins. It succeeds a fund-raising event created in Chicago by The Salvation Army in 1938, to help the needy during the Great Depression and honor the women who served doughnuts to soldiers during World War I. 

As the story goes, soon after the United States' entry into the war in 1917, the Salvation Army conducted a fact-finding mission in France to see how they might best assist enlisted troops. One conclusion was that soldiers needed canteens or social centers (called "huts") that provided friendly smiles, baked goods, writing supplies and stamps and a clothes-mending service. The huts were established in the U.S. near Army training centers.  

About 250 Salvation Army volunteers went to France. There, because of difficulties in providing freshly baked goods from huts established in abandoned buildings near the front lines, volunteers Ensign Margaret Sheldon and Adjutant Helen Purviance are credited with coming up with the idea of providing doughnuts. It's said the sweet rings were sometimes fried in soldiers' helmets. They were an instant hit. Salvation Army records reveal that, after one busy day, Sheldon wrote, "Today I made 22 pies, 300 doughnuts and 700 cups of coffee."

'O,' sweet: National Doughnut Day recalls doughboys of World War I - The Dispatch

Front-line Flora: Remarkable story of the only Western woman to enlist to fight in First World War

A review of A Fine Brother: The Life of Captain Flora Sandes by Louise Miller is published by Alma Books, £25.

Sandes fought for the Serbs twice: once in WW1 and again in WW2.  Quite a story.  Will add to my Shelfari list.

Front-line Flora: Remarkable story of the only Western woman to enlist to fight in First World War | Mail Online

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

French Soldiers Crafted Cave Murals in World War I - SPIEGEL ONLINE

Includes a gallery of 14 photos.

Deep in the cool, dank blackness of an underground limestone quarry in northern France stands an altar, carved from the wall by soldiers of the French army who sheltered here during World War I.

The dread they must have felt as they knelt here, under the inscription "Dieu Protege la France!" ("God Save France!"), is hard to imagine. A flight of steps next to the altar led to the trenches of the front line.

"People still come here to pray every Sunday," said Jean-Luc Pamart, a farmer who owns the land around here. "When they kneel here on this earth, the cold rises up their legs, it impregnates them. It gives them a sense of history."

French Soldiers Crafted Cave Murals in World War I - SPIEGEL ONLINE