Living conditions in trenches

    • [DOCX File]The idea of digging into the ground to give some ...

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      Living conditions Trench conditions varied widely between different theatres of war, different sectors within a theatre, and with the time of year and weather. Trench life was however always one of considerable squalor, with so many men living in a very constrained space.


    • [DOCX File]Homepage | Ark Victoria Academy

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      The poor living conditions of the trenches made the spread of dysentery possible. It is spread by bacteria in unclean food and water. Once inside it causes sickness and diarrhoea. This disease can be fatal as it causes the body to dehydrate. The problem was many soldiers had to get their water from very unclean water sources such as craters.


    • [DOC File]Trench Conditions

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      Life in the trenches was completely new to the soldiers. For the first time whole armies were living close to each other, shelling, sniping at each other and suffering the same wet, miserable conditions. New soldiers found that just surviving was a problem, far less than fighting the enemy.


    • [DOC File]The Trenches

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      As well as trenches the shells from the guns and bombs made big craters in the ground. The rain filled up the craters and then poured into the trenches. Letters Home: 1) Private Livesay, letter to parents living in East Grinstead (6th March, 1915) Our trenches are... ankle deep mud. In some places trenches are waist deep in water.


    • [DOC File]The Story of a Soldier - Armidale world war one research

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      Living conditions in the trenches depended on a number of factors: How long & how quickly they had been established. If they were temporary or permanent structures. Weather conditions and the nature of the ground. The extent of enemy attacks and bombardment, etc. British trenches were generally of a lesser quality to the German trenches.


    • [DOC File]mrburnsenglishclass.com

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      Trenches began as shell-holes in the ground or ditches the soldiers dug to take cover. It was a well-known fact that it was easier for the enemy to shoot you when you were standing up than when you were lying down, especially if you were in a hole in the ground. This was proved in modern times in the Gulf War (1990), where a man in the open was ...


    • [DOC File]World War 1

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      Many soldiers fighting in the First World War suffered from trench foot. This was an infection of the feet caused by cold, wet and unsanitary conditions. In the trenches men stood for hours on end in waterlogged trenches without being able to remove wet socks or boots. The feet would gradually go numb and the skin would turn red or blue.


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