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WW1 Armistice General Pershing returns home

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Posted by Jones1945 on Wednesday, November 14, 2018 6:45 AM

Overmod

 

 
M636C
While looking for something else entirely, I found this: https://www.frenchrailwayssocietyarchive.org/FRS-Nord-Nord-Belge/

 

Yes! this find deserves its own separate post.  Note what else is in the French Railway Society archives, too...

 

Second that! That is one truly amazing Album, look at all those precious pics, drawings, and texts of those elegant steam locomotives of France! Jaw-dropping! You made my day, Peter. Coffee

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Posted by Overmod on Wednesday, November 14, 2018 6:21 AM

M636C
While looking for something else entirely, I found this: https://www.frenchrailwayssocietyarchive.org/FRS-Nord-Nord-Belge/

Yes! this find deserves its own separate post.  Note what else is in the French Railway Society archives, too...

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Posted by M636C on Wednesday, November 14, 2018 5:33 AM

While looking for something else entirely, I found this:

https://www.frenchrailwayssocietyarchive.org/FRS-Nord-Nord-Belge/

I was thinking of starting a new thread entirely, but this page includes quite a lot of photos of "Pershing" locomotives in operation on the Nord, as well as many other locomotives from the WWI period, including the "Orphan" Pacific 3.1150 that was at the workshops of SACM when the Germans invaded and ended up on the Nord basically because they needed anything they could get after the war. One possibly wartime photo of a Dutch 4-6-4 Tank lettered "ROD 2", from an order left in Britain in 1914 and taken over by the British Army.

The Canadian built "Pershings" converted to 2-8-2 Tanks in the 4.1600 series...

But basically amazing photos of the Nord, the best collection I've ever seen. Photos of one off locomotives, the Pacifics 3.1249 and 3.1250 before their conversion to Cossart valve gear (and after).

The most amazing Art Deco signal boxes (towers) I've ever seen.

The strange curved sided steel passenger cars which had either inward or outward opening doors depending on the floor plan.

Peter

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Posted by Overmod on Tuesday, November 13, 2018 11:45 PM

Miningman
Overmod-- Mike weighs in with 'they chose the wrong Bolero.'

I did not say 'wrong composer'.  The Ravel piece to have played was this:

 

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Posted by Miningman on Tuesday, November 13, 2018 11:28 PM

M636C-- Yes that's exactly it. Only differance is all the monuments here varied quite a bit. Yes the WWII names were added later on the same monument.  Many towns had cannons/artillery or the barrel mounted on concrete. There was not a town from the Pacific to the Atlantic without one. The 'lost generation' as they called it as it was the finest of a generation that died in such great numbers. Even up here in remote Northern Saskatchewan we have a Cairn outside the library/town hall building with a dozen names on it. Well known and recognizable names around town, mostly Native folk. Those Native settlements were small and scattered around here, usually 100-150 people but had been here for centuries. 

We had a small ceremony, maybe 50 folks in the cold and snow but the Bagpipes were present as usual. They say they don't wear underwear under their kilts but I sure hope they did, it was -17C. Gives credence to the phrase " freeze your a** off". 

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Posted by M636C on Tuesday, November 13, 2018 11:02 PM

I imagine the situation in Canada was similar to that in Australia where a whole generation left from small rural communities, many never returned and of those that did many were seriously injured.

When I was at high school, a book appeared, "My Brother Jack" by George Johnston, an autobiographical novel. George's son Martin was in my class, so I made a point of reading it. It didn't mean much to me at the time, but subsequently I realised the meaning of the text. The book became a trilogy, but George died before the third book could be completed, and Martin finished it.

The book, set between the World Wars, made a point of  the fact that in many homes, the items required by returned soldiers, crutches, artificial limbs, and wheelchairs could be seen in the entrance hallways, and were not remarked upon since they were so common.

The government had standard designs for war memorials, and every small town and many suburbs had them, each listing the names of those that didn't return. These were hastily updated in 1945, with further names added underneath or to the side if there was no room.

Peter

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Posted by Miningman on Tuesday, November 13, 2018 10:29 PM

Thank you Firelock. The Vimy monument is quite stunning. 

Overmod-- Mike weighs in with 'they chose the wrong Bolero.

They picked the wrong Bolero to commemorate the Great War

 

 
 

 

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Posted by Firelock76 on Tuesday, November 13, 2018 8:28 PM

Miningman's mentioned Vimy Ridge, and guess what, I lucked into a short film on that magnificent feat of Canadian arms. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FMJ_yjchLrc

Damn.  Good.  Soldiers.

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Posted by Miningman on Tuesday, November 13, 2018 5:29 PM

Not sure France will be recognizable in 2045. 

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Posted by Overmod on Tuesday, November 13, 2018 12:08 PM

Miningman
I would have thought the 100 year anniversary of WWI ending would be a real big deal. Certainly more meaningful and substantial speeches instead of a bunch of posturing, virtue signalling and empty headed rhetoric.

On the other hand, it truly does represent many of the results that actually came out of the Armistice (and then the Treaty) after the European weasels bamboozled poor old Wilson.  We should probably think of that as something just as memorable, if considerably less respectful to those who deserve, even now, to be remembered with poppies and better.

What would Robespierre or Nappy think?

That is needlessly cruel and Francophobe when all you need remember is ... Petain.

Suspect the French will be no more forthcoming with thanks in 2045.  As Shakespeare said 'the good men do is oft interred with their bones', and the doughboys' bones are long interred, as are those of the people who remember what kept the French out of annihilation after April 1918...

When I was in college, on the billiards-room wall was a French-issued commemoration of someone who had died serving in the Lafayette Escadrille -- their sacrifice was characterized there as partial payment of America's debt to France.  I thought then, and still do, that this was laying it on a bit thick for republican France, which did very little for the United States (except peripherally, while serving its own interests) over its whole existence.

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Posted by Miningman on Tuesday, November 13, 2018 11:12 AM

But...when in France....one must be grateful.

I would have thought the 100 year anniversary of WWI ending would be a real big deal. Certainly more meaningful and substantial speeches instead of a bunch of posturing, virtue signalling and empty headed rhetoric.  

Well I'm sure the food was first class and up to snuff. Now eat your goose liver, frog legs and snails.  Perhaps a songbird or two. 

What would Robespierre or Nappy think? 

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Posted by Overmod on Tuesday, November 13, 2018 7:08 AM

Miningman
enjoy Lavel's Bolero.

They picked the wrong Bolero to commemorate the Great War

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p2_BuZNTk-w

 

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Posted by M636C on Tuesday, November 13, 2018 6:34 AM

Vimy Ridge is considered a 'coming of age' event, a nation apart from Great Britain.

I missed this line....

Gallipoli fills this role for both Australia and New Zealand.

There has been an active campaign to raise the profile of the Western Front relative to Gallipoli but it hasn't been that successful. The most recent campaign has been to raise the profile of John Monash, an Australian general on the Western Front. Taken at face value, it could be assumed that Monash single handedly won the war. Of course he didn't have much competition from the British General Staff as a whole, and it was the troops that did the actual fighting. The arrival of the US Army may have helped, too.

But it is interesting that three Dominions came to the same conclusion at the same time.

In fact it wasn't until 1942 when the USA became a preferred source of equipment (although local construction of military aircraft to US designs started in 1938).

The real indication in Australia is the annual celebration of the Battle of the Coral Sea, which I remember from my earliest school days. The celebration still occurs but is much less prominent today.

Peter

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Posted by Jones1945 on Tuesday, November 13, 2018 2:04 AM

Firelock76

It was nice of the Koreans to send back that Pershing locomotive, but I kinda wish they'd sent back that Erie K-1 the Erie Railroad gave them instead.

Oh well, they didn't have to send anything back when you come right down to it.  Very nice of them to do what they did at any rate.

I once thought about starting a post about all American steam engines served outside the US for different reasons, but since my energy drained out very fast recently so I haven't started yet. : )

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Posted by Miningman on Monday, November 12, 2018 11:45 PM

Pull up a chair next to illuminatae Macron, Merkel, Putin and President Trump, light up a smoke, twist off a brewski, and enjoy Lavel's Bolero. Don't let them stare at you. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IupgJIyz9_g&t=1h1m44s  hypnotic monotony

 

 

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Posted by Firelock76 on Monday, November 12, 2018 8:26 PM

Jones1945
 
BaltACD

Imortalized as The General Pershing Zephyr

 

 

I really like the Pershing Zephyr, if only diesel power was developed base on the form and style of the Zephyr. The six-wheel truck was not for everyone but I think it was the most interesting part of it. 

 

A Korean National CS-2 2-8-0s: 

Background history: http://donsdepot.donrossgroup.net/dr142.htm

"The second group of Consolidation, Class 2, were sent to Korea in 1947. There were 100 of the World War II USArmy S160 locomotives which were numbered 1 thru 100. In addition, there was a World War I Pershing which was numbered 101. It had been built by Baldwin in 1917. It was later renumbered 765 in honor of the shop battalion at Pusan, where it served as a shop goat. Later it was renumbered back to 101 and sent to the National Railway Museum at Green Bay, WI, by the Korean government in 1959."

 

It was nice of the Koreans to send back that Pershing locomotive, but I kinda wish they'd sent back that Erie K-1 the Erie Railroad gave them instead.

Oh well, they didn't have to send anything back when you come right down to it.  Very nice of them to do what they did at any rate.

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Posted by M636C on Monday, November 12, 2018 6:32 PM

Miningman

Thank you M636C. Good to know and have the right perspective.

Recent Canadian participation in conflicts: 516 dead in Korea, 23 dead in Bosnia, 158 Iraq, 159 Afghanistan. Not officially involved in Vietnam but 30,000 Canadians volunteered in the US Army, ( 134 dead)  and we took in a similar number 'coming the other way, conscientious objectors'. 

 

Australia was not involved in Bosnia and I don't know how we became involved in Africa, in Rwanda and Somalia. We were in Iraq and Afghanistan, but in very small numbers, mainly special forces, and providing air support. We have had ships in the Gulf since the first Iraq war. We have had our own problems in the Pacific Islands, Bougainville and East Timor in the Indian Ocean. I remember going to a celebration of the RAAF 77 Squadron returning from the Korean War as a child. They had gone to Japan with the occupation forces and never made it back until the mid 1950s. They flew Gloster Meteors, which replaced the Mustangs they left with. By chance the serial numbers of the Meteors were prefixed A77. I remember inspecting a De Havilland Vampire and being amazed that the wing was made of wood.

ANZAC Parade is lined with memorials and there has been a rash of new ones recently. The biggest of these is for the Boer War in South Africa which consists of three horsemen reproduced to twice normal size. The Korean Memorial is a forest of stainless steel rods, each representing a casualty.

Strangely, there is a memorial to Kemal Attaturk closest to the War Memorial itself and (of course) a memorial to Greek resistance fighters immediately opposite it, bringing home a long history of conflicts that we have not been involved with.

One day I'll walk down and look at all the memorials. I'll probably find new ones I've never seen...

Peter

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Posted by Miningman on Monday, November 12, 2018 5:07 PM

Thank you M636C. Good to know and have the right perspective.

Recent Canadian participation in conflicts: 516 dead in Korea, 23 dead in Bosnia, 158 Iraq, 159 Afghanistan. Not officially involved in Vietnam but 30,000 Canadians volunteered in the US Army, ( 134 dead)  and we took in a similar number 'coming the other way, conscientious objectors'. 

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Posted by M636C on Monday, November 12, 2018 4:16 PM

Miningman

The inference is that in Commonwealth countries the Remembrance Day ceremonies held on November 11 each year has a stronger emphasis on WWI. All the wars are remembered and honoured that day as well, including Korea and Afghanistan actions. 

The 'Great War', so named because we didn't know there would be WWII, had a profound effect on a far smaller population here and a fledgling Dominion barely 50 years old. The poem Flanders Fields and the poppy have become one with Remembrance Day. Vimy Ridge is considered a 'coming of age' event, a nation apart from Great Britain.

Just not sure if the same emphasis exists in Australia. The close by threat of Japan in the Pacific and bombing of Darwin, actions in Borneo and such, might place greater remembrance on WWII down under. 

 

The emphasis on the First World War declined as the last of the veterans died.

Of course we have ANZAC Day (Australian and New Zealand Army Corps) Day on 25 April which commemorates the date of the landings on Gallipoli. While the ceremonies are much the same, there are parades of veterans (and current serving servicemen) on ANZAC Day. The road leading to the War Memorial is named "ANZAC Parade" and is lined with gardens of brush plants from Gallipoli. The road is aligned with Parliament House on the opposite side of the lake.

The War Memorial was opened to commemorate the First World War and its expansion to include later conflicts hasn't been straight forward. There are plans to expand dramatically the exhibition areas (while attempting to maintain some integrity with the old building) to cover Australia's continuing involvement in more recent conflicts.

The real problem began at the end of the Vietnam War, which was not popularly supported, and vetrans were not given "welcome home" parades. This combined with the usual post war problems of stress and PTSD resulted in conflict between veterans of more recent wars with those from WWII (who were entrenched in the "official" veterans organisations.)

So the result has been that while both dates bookend Australia's involvement in World War I, care is taken to appear inclusive of veterans from more recent conflicts. I don't think Canada has been as involved in such recent conflicts, although it was much more involved in the "Cold War".

Peter

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Posted by Miningman on Monday, November 12, 2018 1:57 PM
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Posted by Miningman on Monday, November 12, 2018 10:29 AM

The inference is that in Commonwealth countries the Remembrance Day ceremonies held on November 11 each year has a stronger emphasis on WWI. All the wars are remembered and honoured that day as well, including Korea and Afghanistan actions. 

The 'Great War', so named because we didn't know there would be WWII, had a profound effect on a far smaller population here and a fledgling Dominion barely 50 years old. The poem Flanders Fields and the poppy have become one with Remembrance Day. Vimy Ridge is considered a 'coming of age' event, a nation apart from Great Britain.

Just not sure if the same emphasis exists in Australia. The close by threat of Japan in the Pacific and bombing of Darwin, actions in Borneo and such, might place greater remembrance on WWII down under. 

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Posted by Jones1945 on Monday, November 12, 2018 10:09 AM

Overmod

Does the movie "Gallipoli" ring a bell?

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Posted by Overmod on Monday, November 12, 2018 6:12 AM

Miningman
I'm sure WW1 is just as much of a serious remembrance as it is here.

Does the movie "Gallipoli" ring a bell?

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Posted by M636C on Sunday, November 11, 2018 10:25 PM

Now how the heck did a mining company end up with a Zephyr car from the US?

One of the original joint venture partners was an American company called AMAX. I'm sure you know more about them than I do. Apparently the "Silver Star" was between engagements and the CEO of AMAX bought it and had it shipped to Port Hedland in 1974. There were four cars, 300-303. At least two are in museums in the USA. For some reason, Silver Star, 301, was the oldest.

A movie was played earlier in the week "The Railwayman" about British prisoners on the Burma Railway in Thailand. I'd seen it a couple of times before, but actually noticed that it was an Australian production. The railway scenes in the UK and in Thailand are remarkably good.

I've mentioned before that my father served in Africa and the Pacific in WWII and he never owned a Japanese car. An uncle served in WWI on the Western Front and suffered from a gas attack and was classified "Totally and Permanently Incapacitated". Despite this he was quite active and appeared quite bright and outgoing.

At the ceremony on Sunday there was a big turnout of bikers from the "Veterans Motorcycle Club". This was originally called "Vietnam Veterans Motorcycle Club", but the first word was dropped to take account of all the subsequent wars. I noted Somalia, Rwanda and Afghanistan listed on the jackets. The club symbol is a skull with the Australian Army "slouch" hat. This first appeared in an early 1970s movie called "Stone" (about Vietnam Veterans) and was adopted in real life with permission from the filmmakers...

Peter

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Posted by Miningman on Sunday, November 11, 2018 9:47 PM

Well I'll be darned. A Burlington General Pershing Zephyr car in Australia and now a coffee shop to boot. Glad for that and thanks for passing that on.

Like ourselves and New Zealand, and other Commonwealth countries, Australia was in both wars from the start, so we share that commonality. I'm sure WW1 is just as much of a serious remembrance as it is here. WWII as well. Think you guys had your hands full with the Japanese and the Pacific in WWII. We had troops in Singapore when it fell and attached to other British units. Many into forced labour. 

Now how the heck did a mining company end up with a Zephyr car from the US? 

We had a small ceremony this am at our Library. Very cold and snowing. Watched the CBC feed from Ottawa, then Mike very kindly sent to me as well and I posted. The first 5 minutes or so is well worth watching. Rest of the day I watched the HBO show 'Band of Brothers' which is still on, playing all the episodes, stayed warm and indoors and monitored the Forum and posted. Great day. Tomorrow is a holiday for Remembrance Day since it fell on a Sunday this year. 

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Posted by M636C on Sunday, November 11, 2018 6:22 PM

I spent Sunday morning at the Australian War Memorial, only a block from my home. A very impressive operation, opened in the rather unfortunate year of 1942.

Our Prime Minister came as did most of the ambassadors. We don't have a US Ambassador. You know that your country isn't regarded as a threat when you can go a couple of years without a US Ambassador. The US Naval Attache laid a wreath in the absence of an Ambassador. Our Governor General was in in France, of course.

To return to Pershing, the trailing car of the General Pershing Zephyr is in Australia, having been used by BHP as a Business Car. It was called Sundowner but has its original name of Silver Star back. It is now used as a cafe in Port Hedland quite near the harbour. Pershing's signature was engraved on a stainless steel plate on the car's rear door, and is still visible. The cafe is very popular and serves a lot of take away coffees, as well as full meals.

Peter

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Posted by Firelock76 on Sunday, November 11, 2018 6:03 PM

Vexillophile, now that's a word you don't hear every day!  I guess you could say I'm one myself.  Flags and their stories (and controversies) are quite a fascinating study when you get into them, I've been hooked on 'em for years.

PS:  I just watched the Remembrance Day ceremony from Ottawa.  Very impressive and moving.  The war memorial and tomb of your Unknown Soldier is just beautiful.

And there's just something about bagpipes, isn't there? 

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Posted by Miningman on Sunday, November 11, 2018 5:00 PM

You are correct Firelock. No conscription. Vimy Ridge was our greatest moment. 

Nice presentation with the Flags . Good for you.

Back when I lived in Burlington we had a genuine vexillophile across the street and a couple down from our house. He had a huge v shaped array with multiple poles and flag hanging locations. Every day there was 5, 10, 20 flags flapping away. He had thousands of flags. Interesting guy. 

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Posted by Firelock76 on Sunday, November 11, 2018 4:46 PM

November 11th used to be called "Armistice Day" here in the US, and part of the observations were at 11:00 on that day everything came to a halt for a minute of silence for those lost.  In the big citys it was quite a sight to see.

Then in the 1950's considering there had been two wars since 1918 it was changed to Veterans Day.  Just fine, but sad in a way because it pushed the World War One vets into the background a lot faster than they might have been otherwise.

Uusally on Veterans Day I display an assortment of American service flags in addition to the Stars and Stripes, but considering today was the 100th anniversary of the Armistice I went a little different.

I put out a correct for the period 48 star flag from the collection, an Italian flag for my grandfather who fought in the Italian army during WWI, an old Newfoundland Red Ensign and an old Canadian Red Ensign for Lady Firestorms Canadian connections.  Man, that old Canadian Red Ensign looked good!  Very dramatic and striking!

And those Canadians that fought the First World War were damn good soldiers!  And as far as I know there was no consciption in Canada during the First War, they were all volunteers.  I might be wrong on that though.

 

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