TumblrPics.com
HOME
DMCA
Live
Gallery
Viewer
Ww1
violetnailpolish
bigspurt
arsinoitherium
naturalbeautyportraiture
seppycnp
LIVE
Austrian war painter Lieutenant Kainradl at work in a snow tunnel on the Italian Front, circa 1916.O
Two German prisoners of war captured by Canadians during the Battle of Vimy Ridge.Original image sou
Men from the West Indies, Australia and New Zealand stack shells near Ypres (Belgium, October 1917).
New York Times headline (December 15th, 1915).In a statement issued yesterday from the offices of th
A German troop train, sometime before 1914 [?].
Walter Trier (1890-1951), ‘Der raſende Wilſon’ (The Furious Wilson), “Lustige Blät
welsh world war one poetry
A Krupp 420mm cannon on a flat wagon (1916).This siege howitzer, also known as the Big Bertha, was o
Our heros.War dead memorial, Chemnitz 2018.
The French poet Apollinaire dies of the Spanish flu on November 9, 1918. He had survived the Battle
Britishtroops attach a message to a carrier pigeon on the Western Front(1917).
Original caption: “Lens, France, April 11, 1919. Man and wife,living in cellar of their former
NORMAN WILKINSONThe Ohio Entering MaltaOil on Canvas762 x 1016 mm
Some of the destruction caused by an explosion on July 1st,1918, in the Amatol Mixing House at the N
enrique262:Armée de terre in color, The Great War.
Southampton Royal Pier (Hampshire, 1905), designed by EdwardStephens.The pier was opened in 1833 by
Karl Czerpien (1878-1947), ‘Das Werben um die Neutralen’ (Advertising for the Ne
Peace is celebrated even at the most remote corners of the earth. The Pribilof Islands are far above
British troops having a Christmas meal with staff at the free buffetat Euston railway station (1917)
Sergeant Henry Gunther, the Last Casualty of World War I Pictured - Gunther’s grave in east Ba
A WW1 submarine with a hull number of U-118 was found washed ashore on the beach at Hastings, S
Combat is taking place up to the minute of the armistice. Losses on all sides that day totaled 11,00
Passengers at Paddington Station stop and observe the first two-minutes silence on November 11, 1919
Parades End
Prev Page
Next Page