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World War One Articles - Siberian Expedition

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Lake Baikal, Siberia, Rus...

To read articles purely dealing with the topic of trench warfare, click here.

American Soldiers Remember Siberia (American Legion Weekly, 1919)

The Doughboys of the the U.S. Twenty-Seventh Infantry remember the bad old days in Vladivostok guarding the trans-Siberian railway line:

"The Czar's old government used to send its enemies to Siberia, to exile; Uncle Sam's government sent its own men there to guard a railroad. Whose railroad it was and what it was there for and why Americans should be taken away from a perfectly good war in France and stationed up there to take care of it -- surely you can answer all these questions. If you can't, don't go to any of the veterans of the Siberian Expeditionary Force, because they won't give you very coherent answers. They think the whole trip was a post-season special, staged especially for their benefit."

*Watch Harold Lloyd in 'A Sammie in Siberia'*

A Yank in Siberia (American Legion Monthly, 1934)

Illustrated by a photograph depicting the cold weather uniforms worn by each of the six Allied armies that served time in Siberia(North Russia), this article is a reminiscence told by one of the American veterans of that cold, uncomfortable and forgotten campaign:

"That far-off group of Americans, consisting of the 27th and 31st Infantry Regiments, Ambulance Company No. 4, Field Hospital Company No. 4, a telegraph company and several supply units, became known as the 'Wolfhounds' or 'Snowdogs'..."


Supplying the A.E.F. of Siberia (Stars and Stripes, 1918)

"Special woolen coats and breeches and underwear, long mufflers, worsted socks and long stockings, gloves and gauntlets are other things which are being issued to the Doughboys in Russia. Alaska Yanks are said to be right at home in their new surroundings, although they complain sometimes of the heat."

An additional article is attached concerning the supply of medals that had to shipped North; reading between the lines, you will get a sense that much gallantry was expected...

When the Doughboys complained, they complained heavily about their uniforms; read about it here.

 
You might also like these articles
World War One Articles: Prelude
World War One Articles: Letters
World War One Articles: Writing
World War One Articles: Aftermath
World War One Articles: Versailles Treaty
World War One Articles: Stars and Stripes Archive
World War One Articles: Color Photographs
World War One Articles: African Americans
World War One Articles: British Uniforms
World War One Articles: Inventions and Weapons
World War One Articles: Clip Art
World War One Articles: Snipers
World War One Articles: Cemeteries
World War One Articles: Animals
World War One Articles: Belleau Wood
World War One Articles: Artists
World War One Articles: Doughboys
World War One Articles: Lusitania
World War One Articles: Gas Warfare
World War One Articles: Women
World War One Articles: Fashion
World War One Articles: Armistice
World War One Articles: Trench Warfare
World War One Articles: Cartoons
World War One Articles: Draft Dodgers
World War One Articles: Posters
World War One Articles: Poetry
World War One Articles: Censorship


 

 
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