Plus seasickness
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Description
Most soldiers aboard British troop ships headed to the front in World War I got seasick. Some of them became ill on the first day out and remained sick until they died or completed the voyage, whichever came first. There were burials at sea, and even though the cause of death was probably influenza, it was easy for the survivors to blame the food and voyage.
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Published 07/05/17
In time, the true costs of World War I were revealed. Wounds of war included fourteen million people—civilians and combatants—killed; over $3 billion spent; four empires destroyed; the world map changed by revolution and treaty; and an unknown loss of spirit for many. Twenty years after the...
Published 07/05/17
Although many soldiers did not come home following World War I, the number of U.S. casualties was small compared to that of European armies. Still, the 585 Days between Declaration of War on April 6, 1917, and the Armistice of November 11, 1918, comprised a deadly period in American military...
Published 07/05/17