The First World War 'Battle Of The Somme' like you've never seen before: A.I. enhanced and in color!

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024
  • The Battle of the Somme took place between 1 July 1916 and 18 November 1916. It was one of the major battles of World War 1, fought between the armies of the British Empire and French Third Republic against the German Empire and took place along the banks of the French river Somme, East of the town of Albert. The full 72 minute enhanced and colorized version of this film can be viewed here : • Stunning footage of th...
    This film concentrates on the battles around the 1 July 1916 and is viewed entirely from a British perspective with a substantial amount of glorification of the battle results.
    The army of the British Empire is often referred to as "Kitchener's Army" or even "Kitchener's mob" in view of the fact that it largely comprised of volunteers drafted as the result of an agressive "Call to Arms" campain setup by Field Marshall Lord Kitchener in August 1914. Kitchener who originally was a succesful British commander of the Egyptian army, had been appointed as Secretary of State for War by prime minister Herbert Asquith. His army initially consisted of traditional batallions manned by lower class soldiers. However, after forming socalled "Pals" battalions, huge numbers of middle class recruits joined as well to form groups that were separate from the lower class battalions.
    By the summer of 1916 the recruitment had been so successful that the British were able to form no less than 5 armies comprising of approximately 2 million men. Unalike WWII there was no role for women in WWI.
    To avoid a misconception, Lord Kitchener was never directly involved in the Battle of the Somme, simply because he was already dead at that time. Kitchener was on his way to Russia on HMS Hampshire to attend negotiations with Tsar Nicholas II when on 5 June 1916 it was struck by a German mine near the Orkney islands, Scotland. It sank taking Kitchener down to a seamans grave as one of the 737 casualties.
    Preceeding the main attack on 1 July, a severe bombardement of the German lines started on 24 June, the so called drum fire or Trommelfeuer, which lasted until it peaked at "Zero Hour" on 1 July. Kitchener's men could only hope that this bombardement had stunned the enemy into submission.
    Once the attack started, the British and French soldiers were pushed towards "no mans land" into a stream of machine gun fire and under continuous bombardements from both sides of the line. Kitchener's men underwent a fate of mixed success and failure, largely related to the leadership, terrain, the width of no-mans land and other local circumstances.
    The losses on the British side were staggering, with 19,420 men dead and 35,493 wounded in that first day. 2,737 men went missing or became POW resulting in a total number of losses of 57.000 men. It was the bloodiest day in British military history ever. In particular at Serre, and at La Boisselle heavy losses were due to strong German resistance.
    In the months thereafter the battle continued, but at a less intense level until it died down on 18th November due to rain and winter conditions.
    This film starts with splended shots of battallions preparing for the attack at the end of June followed by many shots behind the combat lines of men preparing for attacks, resting after the attacks on 1 July, wounded being carried away from the battle scene, being treated for their injuries and soldiers marching away to regroup for new attacks in the days and weeks ahead.
    The original B&W film was clearly shot in the lee of the actual battle as it hardly contained any close up views of the atrocities that took place.
    In view of RUclips's rules, the remaining scort scenes with combat fatalities are not shown. It is quit obvious that the results of the British army were glorified in the making of this film.
    This is a 16 minute summary. You will be able to view the full 75 minute film soon on my channels. Just follow the link at the end of the video and in the description once it becomes available.
    The full 72 minute enhanced and colorized version of this film can be viewed here : • Stunning footage of th...
    I am not Peter Jackson with a budget of millions, but as a mere film restoration hobbyist and colorizer with basically no budget, I am quite proud of these results. Watch the original poor quality footage on archive.org do make a comparison!
    NOTE: There are no attrocities nor dead, mutilated casualties shown in this film.
    Thanks for watching!
    Source: Archive.org (57 minute B&W Public Domain film, stretched to 72 min. due to speed correction).
    Music:
    Bonnie Grace - "March Towards The End"
    Jon Björk - "The Great War"
    Bonnie Grace - "Heroes Will Fall"
    Bonnie Grace - "In The Red Soil"
    Gerald Franklin - "For The Greater Good"
    Jon Björk - "The Launch"
    Bonnie Grace - "March Towards The End".

Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @Rick88888888
    @Rick88888888  2 года назад +108

    *Please don't forget to subscribe to my channel! There are nearly 300 restored and colorized historic videos on this channel* .
    *The full 72 minute enhanced and colorized version of this film can be viewed here* : ruclips.net/video/32WjuRZJsts/видео.html
    This video contains scenes that some viewers may find distressing. However, care has been taken not to show violent combat footage.
    Please try to view this highly interesting material from a WW-I (1916) perspective and kindly avoid making comparisons with today's bizar world. The prime objective of this channel is to re-live history and soak up visual and audio impressions as the world used to be!
    *My most important films can now also be watched (in higher quality!) on* archive.org *via my website* : www.ricksfilmrestoration.com/indexEN1.htm

    • @zazoobah
      @zazoobah 2 года назад +5

      Thanks for giving history a chance to speak again. As always, well done Rick

    • @cenzoredworld
      @cenzoredworld 2 года назад +2

      Thanks for sharing this B&W footage and make it more relatable to this day and age. Absolutely depressing and hellish war to be in.

    • @zitoschouten5068
      @zitoschouten5068 2 года назад +1

      Is het mogelijk om elders de gevechten wél te zien? Mvg Zito

    • @darrell3716
      @darrell3716 Год назад +3

      Exceptional work 👏

    • @alanconroy9882
      @alanconroy9882 Год назад +2

      Fascinating and upsetting at the same time.

  • @markshrimpton3138
    @markshrimpton3138 2 года назад +35

    My paternal grandfather, born in 1890, took part in the Battle of the Somme. Luckily, he survived. His older brother, Robert, born in 1889, didn’t, and is one of the 72,337 British and Empire troops commemorated on the Thiepval Memorial. My grandfather who rose to the rank of Captain, was demobbed in 1919, having volunteered in 1914. He never spoke about his war service. On his death bed in 1980, slipping in and out of consciousness, mentally he was back in the trenches giving out orders. His last words were “the horses, the horses, we’ve got to save the horses”. In peace time he was a farmer in Devon, later Cornwall and always had a special bond with horses.

    • @bilbobigbollix7318
      @bilbobigbollix7318 2 года назад +8

      Mark, how fascinating. Very similar to my paternal grandfather. He was 18 at the Battle of the Somme and 'copped his Blighty wound' there. The story was always a bit garbled as he wouldn't talk about it, but after a series of strokes towards the end of his life he began to regress just like your grandad. My spine is tingling now as I recall him lying in what was to be his deathbed in his bungalow on the south coast all those years ago screaming and shouting in a cockney accent I had never heard during my lifetime. "Ow, aghhhh, the bleeders have got me." It seems he was caught in an artillery blast and was semi-conscious in a shell hole for a day or so. He was found and evacuated. And then he woke up in a field hospital in Kent some 10 days later! He essentially lost one of his kneecaps and had his leg was buggered and he used a walking stick from then on. I remember my dad saying that when he grew up, "There were an awful lot of young men using walking sticks." He went on to become a teacher and then headmaster. After he died we found his medals. I had them restored and mounted and they are in my living room along with a photo of him and his army pals in a village in France in 1915. Incredible that this was over a century ago.

    • @mastomasto6197
      @mastomasto6197 Год назад +1

      Grande Herói, e de coragem.

    • @mastomasto6197
      @mastomasto6197 Год назад +1

      ​@@bilbobigbollix7318 Homens de coragens. Parabéns.

    • @bilbobigbollix7318
      @bilbobigbollix7318 Год назад

      @@mastomasto6197 obrigado.

  • @tranquilb1
    @tranquilb1 Год назад +15

    All for nothing , look what the politicians have done today ..
    So sad

  • @albionmyl7735
    @albionmyl7735 Год назад +467

    I am German and my grandfather served in this useless insane war.... he was a real Saxon from Westphalia.... It's so sade that Anglo-Saxon and Saxons killed each other... we are one tribe.... one family the closest tribe in Europe... 🙏❤️🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇩🇪

    • @robinjunghans5358
      @robinjunghans5358 Год назад +5

      Da ist doch mal wieder der Wunsch Vater des Gedankens. 💩 Niedersachsen und Westfalen sind die gutgläubigsten Regionen, wie man an den immer gleichen Wahlergebnissen sieht. Wann siedelst du über? In Sussex soll es schön sein.

    • @darrell3716
      @darrell3716 Год назад +24

      Very well said common sense view 👏

    • @pauls064
      @pauls064 Год назад +19

      @3 tours mkay troll 😂

    • @johnspencer6777
      @johnspencer6777 Год назад +51

      I am English from a county called Essex (East saxon).
      My great grandfather was killed in the battle of the somme, his body was never recovered.
      Yes it was an insane stupid war with many pointless deaths on both sides.
      The main thing is that we are now friends and allies.
      I hope you're grandfather went on to live a long healthy life.
      Happy new year to you and your family. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇩🇪

    • @albionmyl7735
      @albionmyl7735 Год назад +31

      @@johnspencer6777 people from my area founded the Kingdom of Wessex = Westsachsen.... I have been in Dorset, Wiltshire, Hampshire, Oxfordshire, Gloucestershire, Herefortshire, Sussex, Kent, City of London and many other cities.... In the recent years.... I love country and people... despite the past we are one Anglo-Saxon tribe...

  • @marcusingram522
    @marcusingram522 2 года назад +13

    It’s unimaginable what these boys went through, but with this film is gives a small snapshot.

  • @scottnyc6572
    @scottnyc6572 2 года назад +6

    Incredible frontline footage!!
    Such a senseless war where leaders egos brought the worst of consequences.Thanks again for bringing us these crisp clear images of what it was like during WW1.

  • @dave3657
    @dave3657 2 года назад +4

    Brings so much more understanding and humanity than black and white photos that is normally seen. 👍🏻

  • @bernhardschlottbohm5538
    @bernhardschlottbohm5538 Год назад +16

    I'm German. My mother told me that my grandfather was in war from day one till the end. He came back with tuberculosis, mental damage and in general total worn, He survived just a few years more also due to the hunger years following the lost war. That was the fate of millions. More people died after the war than during. Later on two brothers from my mother did not come back from Russia anymore in the 1940.
    My father had to go to war just 18 years old in 1941 to Russia and later to France. He came back in 1949 from POW time then 26 years old. As my mother said no more teeth, no more hear amd weighing less than 50 kg, 40 kg lesser than in 1941. He lost also a brother. My mother was a young nurse and survived the destruction of three mayor cities in Germany (Darmstadt, Mainz and Frankfurt) including of course the hospitals she worked. The final she said wad always the same. The Americans bombarded at day, the English at night. When looking back at my childhood now I understand their behavior towards us children much better. They had very little love to give because of their biography. But they teached us how to survive by simply saying from small on that we have to solve our problems alone. They had not extra resources left for us, dealing with their traumata all the rest of their lifes. .

    • @perulu
      @perulu Год назад +2

      Family of Braves...

    • @revoroad1789
      @revoroad1789 25 дней назад

      @bernhardschlottbohm5538 Thanks for sharing your family history Bernhard. I'm sorry for all the hardship your family suffered. Poor men.

  • @davidrudolph2825
    @davidrudolph2825 Год назад +4

    This is really quite an extraordinary short film of the Great War! The colorization is remarkable and the accompanying music is well thought out! Probably the best work that I have seen of The Somme! Everyone involved is to be congratulated!

  • @acidpunker1
    @acidpunker1 Год назад +13

    Great video. Thankyou for posting. Shed a tear for all the boys who wasted their lives for nothing. My GF was wounded twice but survived 1915 and 1918. If those poor lads could see how shit the country is now, would they have fought? I doubt it. I certaintly wouldn't.

  • @thomasm1964
    @thomasm1964 2 года назад +3

    Superb work as always. Your videos are literally a magic portal to a different, long vanished world.

  • @jeffjeannette9364
    @jeffjeannette9364 Год назад +14

    The fact that this footage is still around after 107 years blows my mind. Beautiful job enhancing it. The haunted looks in their eyes are very disturbing. Kids that went in at the age of 17 look like they've aged 60 years. Thank you for your service.

  • @simon5090
    @simon5090 Год назад +16

    The only thing we learn from history is that we don't learn from history.

  • @bobsyeruncle4841
    @bobsyeruncle4841 Год назад +12

    Humanity has learned nothing from all that sacrifice , tragic waste of life.

  • @yorkyswe
    @yorkyswe 2 года назад +11

    I find lots of your old footage deeply moving, but especially this film. To be honest I found it difficult to watch, even though all the men depicted here are long departed from us. So many lives lost, so many futures destroyed. The film feels very real, and I can't help wonder how many of these poor souls were to be shortly killed, leaving behind grieving mothers, wives and loved ones
    And barely 20 years later, after a whole generation of young men were cut down in the "war to end all wars" we ended up in another world conflict. We never learn, and our basic instincts are barely more developed than the aggressive, territorial apes we descended from. Now in 2022 Ukraine is fighting for its very existence, and with coming water and food shortages making vast swathes of the planet uninhabitable, things will only get worse. It's difficult not to fall into despair.

    • @Rick88888888
      @Rick88888888  2 года назад +7

      I totally share your sentiments: our World is on a path spiralling rapidly downward. Hopefully I will no longer be around when everything comes crashing down together.

    • @TerrenLiberte
      @TerrenLiberte 2 года назад

      Ce n'est pas nous qui sommes les responsables ! Ça fait partie du plan des élites qui veulent toujours éliminer les humains, ce sont des resets ! Et actuellement on en vit un autre!

    • @bartobruintjes7056
      @bartobruintjes7056 2 года назад

      @@Rick88888888 Do you have children or grandchildren?

    • @Rick88888888
      @Rick88888888  2 года назад

      @@bartobruintjes7056 I'm sorry, but I won't answer personal questions.

    • @bartobruintjes7056
      @bartobruintjes7056 2 года назад +1

      Okay. I only ask you this because you gave a personal answer about that you, hopefully, will no longer be around when everything comes crashing down together.

  • @chrisbrendandavis
    @chrisbrendandavis Год назад +15

    It's impossible to watch a video like this and not feeling immense sadness for the meaningless loss of life

    • @tbrowniscool
      @tbrowniscool Год назад +1

      My great grandfather survived it, Officer Horace Winstanley.

    • @tbrowniscool
      @tbrowniscool Год назад

      @@frankp7411 Haha wake up Frank. gOd iSNt reAl :)

  • @manny_f
    @manny_f Год назад +10

    Each and everyone of these men had a name, a surname, a family, a childhood, a life.

  • @adders45
    @adders45 Год назад +9

    My Grandfather was there from 1914 - 1917 when he was captured by the Germans, he somehow ended up in Ukraine and didn't get home untill 1921.

  • @phil65nottingham
    @phil65nottingham 5 месяцев назад +9

    My grandfather was at the somme he said it's was a terrible experience and a huge waste of human lives on both sides which achieved nothing. God bless all those brave men on both sides 🙏 rest in peace

  • @ludo9234
    @ludo9234 Год назад +12

    And all for what' just look at the UK today.

  • @tempestvideos9834
    @tempestvideos9834 Год назад +8

    The most savage and suffering war fought in the Modern era.

  • @58johnjohn
    @58johnjohn Год назад +12

    Lions led by donkeys.!!

  • @clairereesretouching
    @clairereesretouching 11 месяцев назад +8

    It's so humbling to see these brave men smiling and interacting with each other, I can't even begin to imagine how terrible it must of been to fight that war. Your enhanced and colourised videos truly do bring it all to life. My grandparents (sadly all deceased now) fought in the second world war and they never wanted to talk about it with me when I was a child, my maternal grandfather was very upset when remembering his time fighting.

  • @EtonieE25
    @EtonieE25 Год назад +6

    Firstly. Thank you for posting and with such amazing quality of footage.
    Personally to me 57,000 young men, many under the age of 20, loosing their lives, body parts and sanity in the first day of fighting for (SWEAR word) what! That great British pride word of. “Over the top lads”! Oh well there goes another 24,000 lives, let’s do it again tomorrow and see if we can top yesterdays figures and reach 37,000 lives!!!
    And of yes l forgot the best bit…...If you or l disagreed with the constant slaughter of friends and fellow countrymen, we would of been shot in the back of the head by our own commanding officer……Anyone else want to raise a glass to insanity! 🤔
    Sorry to go on but to continue the insanity……the Germans said their static machine guns literally seized up with heat as they couldn’t kill anymore Brits, especially the ones caught on the barbed wire, which these poor sods were cutting with hand held wire cutters!!!!! Abysmal can’t even describe what these 17 year old kids must of went through 😢😢😢
    And remember, no counselling back then and PTSD wasn’t even a phase or terminology used

  • @matteoshulze5761
    @matteoshulze5761 Год назад +10

    It is a whole different look after being enhanced and colour. I’m actually amazed. I thank these people who served in World War 1 for their services participating in one of the deadliest , bloodiest wars in history.

  • @JackvanderHeijden
    @JackvanderHeijden 2 года назад +2

    Never saw this kind of footage “ amazing “

  • @CoreyJason
    @CoreyJason Год назад +6

    This is what banksters produce and they have plenty of friends in high places to help them to accomplish it.

  • @paulmcardle9542
    @paulmcardle9542 Год назад +4

    Thank You for this footage...
    The innocence and naievity of these 'Victorian Soldiers' facing an industrial slaughterhouse always renders me heartbroken .
    The First World War was the greatest crime ever to befall humanity!!

    • @sharis4130
      @sharis4130 Год назад

      Then you haven't heard about it's sequal, the Second World War

    • @mastomasto6197
      @mastomasto6197 Год назад

      Serviu para desmascarar as mornarquias, e vitalizar o comunismo.

  • @RichformO4
    @RichformO4 Год назад +3

    Respect, God bless those able to bring footage back to light. One able to upload this, God bless you as well.

  • @wesleypresley1000
    @wesleypresley1000 Год назад +6

    I went on a leger travel coach tour a few years ago. Ypres,Hooge crater etc and many places on the Somme. . A real eye opener.
    I'll never forget one day stopping at a small military cemetery in the middle of the Somme as a special request for one of our coach party. I and my wife didn't walk around this small cemetery but we walked down a small county lane, through an open gate and into a recently planted corn field. We just stepped inside a few yards and there in the soil were bones. What looked like part of a jawbone lay there An almost complete femur was just lying there in the young corn too. When we boarded the coach,I told our tour guide and he said that unfortunately,it is perfectly normal to find bones like this. That more than anything else bought home the horror of WW1 for us.

    • @julianwaugh8221
      @julianwaugh8221 Год назад +1

      I don't believe in ghosts but it seems I had a vivid snapshot of the devastation a picture in my mind of cartwheels and dead horses and the detritus of gear no humans just a still death the whole area arras Amiens mons has an ominous and dreadful aura about it despite being beautiful countryside..

  • @harryedwards9318
    @harryedwards9318 Год назад +7

    The leaders of countries cause this . Innocent Men and innocent horses far too many lost their precious lives before they had a chance to even experience so many things
    Really really Sad and it’s still going on all over this Planet
    Thanks to these Brave people and animals I’m sorry that you had to go through that Hell you deserved much better ❤

  • @stephenmackenzie9016
    @stephenmackenzie9016 Год назад +10

    What a blessing to get a leg wound and get sent home from that hell hole

  • @geowidman
    @geowidman 2 года назад +3

    Magnificent work Rick, a reminder of the great "They Shall Not Grow Old" by Sir Peter Jackson. Thank you!

  • @ubangiestomp
    @ubangiestomp Год назад +6

    When you think you're having a hard life today. Just look at these poor souls in this video. And I guarantee any of them would trade you places in a heartbeat.

  • @kenmealing5306
    @kenmealing5306 Год назад +7

    My great uncle died the first day on the Somme at Beaumont Hamel they never found his body .

  • @SteveBrownRocks2023
    @SteveBrownRocks2023 Год назад +7

    I can’t watch a video like this without being overwhelmed by the logistics of what had to be done to prepare for an offensive, or the sheer amount of men, equipment, ammo, etc. that must be moved around & handled all day. It’s just mind-boggling! 😵‍💫

  • @robertspeakman3726
    @robertspeakman3726 9 месяцев назад +20

    It was a stupid war with an insane waste of human life on unprecedented scale and mainly due to two royal families who had a tiff with one another. What a discrace to their people ...after all they were all related
    English ,Saxon the same...damn waste

  • @thewaxpackdad
    @thewaxpackdad Год назад +4

    Fantastic video and a look at real life in the trenches and WW1

  • @yudhiadi6100
    @yudhiadi6100 2 года назад +5

    Imagine what they think about a world 100 years after them. Imagine what they think if their battle was watched by many people younger than their grandchild with handy tv we called smartphone. They was gone but eternal with this recorded film, what will they feel?

  • @davedavids9619
    @davedavids9619 2 года назад +2

    Mooie tijdsdocument, heel knap gedaan !

  • @astiwine2354
    @astiwine2354 2 года назад +5

    June 1st 1916 800 + soldiers of the First Battalion, Newfoundland Regiment. went over the top at Beaumont-Hamel. The next day 68 survivors answered the Roll Call, the rest having been killed, wounded or missing, although some of the missing made their way back to British lines over the next few days. The Regiment had been raised in the then-colony of 250,00 inhabitants, and the losses made such an impression that is still being remembered in the now Canadian province today, Every July 1st., Canada's National Day, is also Memorial Day, and in the morning flags fly at half-mast and a military parade and wreath-laying ceremony is held at our 'National War Memorial' in St. John's. At noon, the flags are raised to full mast and Canada Day is celebrated.

    • @Shadolife
      @Shadolife 2 года назад +1

      Thanks, I didn't know about First Battalion, Newfoundland Regiment. Terrible losses. I was in Canada this last July 1st, Vancouver, and got to enjoy the celebration of Canada Day. Met some excellent people, including some vets. I found out then it was also Canada's Memorial Day.

    • @Rick88888888
      @Rick88888888  2 года назад +2

      Interesting. Do you mean `June 1st` or July 1st ??

    • @astiwine2354
      @astiwine2354 2 года назад +2

      @@Rick88888888 Sorry! July 1st of course

  • @ledrevonellyledrevo606
    @ledrevonellyledrevo606 2 года назад +2

    Mon dieu,que ces hommes étaient très courageux,nous leurs devons tant,merci pour ce film,très bien restauré

  • @moester75
    @moester75 Год назад +8

    There’s a good documentary on Tubi about George Hackney a British Lance Corporal photographer in WW1 called “The Man Who Shot The Great War”. There are images never seen before that are incredible.

  • @cadilacdesert
    @cadilacdesert 10 месяцев назад +9

    We still have not learned anything. Look how bloody the 21st century has started.

  • @varnliche
    @varnliche Год назад +5

    These guys on the front lines look happier than the people I see at the grocery store in 2023

  • @was920
    @was920 7 месяцев назад +6

    It's crazy to think that every single person in these recording's is no longer alive. RIP to the men of war. Sad that it has become normal

  • @zapre2284
    @zapre2284 Год назад +8

    Imagine showing those lads what the UK has become today . Our politicians have spat on everyone of these lads and the generation that came 20 years later.

  • @masaharumorimoto4761
    @masaharumorimoto4761 2 года назад +5

    @7:11 lower left, 2 poor souls have the 1000 yard stare, that really illustrates how some were laughing and smoking and jesting, while others right next to them were in full shell shock.

  • @brucestewart5939
    @brucestewart5939 Год назад +2

    Well done! I think I've only seen one stretcher bearer scene in previous videos. These are truly fresh and awe inspiring films! The hell these men lived thru should have been testament to never repeat this madness...but man has grown to fond of war.

    • @Eezzy108
      @Eezzy108 Год назад +2

      To much profit in arms now
      First and Second World War help set the arms race up

  • @santodomingo1605
    @santodomingo1605 5 месяцев назад +5

    Trivia - 0:55 shows Lt. Douglas Keep leading D Coy of the 7th Bedfords on its way to the front. He somehow survived 1916 but was killed in action the following year.

  • @josemartin1727
    @josemartin1727 Год назад +6

    It's crazy knowing that every single person in this footage is now deceased. May you all rest in peace.

  • @maximhollandnederlandthene7640
    @maximhollandnederlandthene7640 Год назад +3

    Amazing features 🤗
    Geweldig verhaal en bedankt voor het online zetten Rick 👋🙂

  • @q1q1q1q1q1q1q1q11
    @q1q1q1q1q1q1q1q11 Год назад +7

    Brave men who would weep if they could see how they have been betrayed.

  • @kiky2232
    @kiky2232 Год назад +9

    Dead men walking.

  • @danscott3880
    @danscott3880 Год назад +6

    My daughter asked me once. " What started WORLD WAR 2. I ANSWERED WORLD WAR 1"..

  • @mygoditsfullofstars9148
    @mygoditsfullofstars9148 Год назад +10

    The greed and egos of a few leading to the suffering of millions.

    • @sharis4130
      @sharis4130 Год назад

      I don't think "Greed" played much of a role in WW1 nor really caused it.
      As you said it, "Ego", false Pride and massive amounts of incompetence were the cause of it and brought doom to the Germans, Russians, Austrians and Ottomans.

    • @MaartenTeunissen
      @MaartenTeunissen Год назад

      Nah, every war has it's spoils. There is always greed and lust for power involved. WW1 prevented Germany to become an economic rival to the British Army. Not to mention the industrialists making huge profits on both sides during that (and every) war.

    • @sharis4130
      @sharis4130 Год назад

      @@MaartenTeunissen The only Nations that really profited from WW1 were the USA and Japan. The rest went into an economical crisis which fucked over society, economy and stability.
      You are also missing out that the British Empire joined WW1 due to the arms race of the fleets it had with the German Empire and because Germany invaded Belgium which had a Garantee of Independence from the british.

  • @signoguns8501
    @signoguns8501 10 месяцев назад +7

    One thing i always found fascinating was that writing on projectiles is nothing new, humans have been doing that for thousands of years. Archaeologists found lead balls used by auxiliary slingers in the roman army that had messages carved into them. Stuff like "ouch!" and "watch out" lol.

  • @terrycarter2900
    @terrycarter2900 Год назад +5

    Poor guys, killed by other poor guys as usual. Semper fi to all. Ooh rah!

  • @bluekarma6849
    @bluekarma6849 Год назад +2

    Soul after soul recycled,war after war,time after time the battles rage on.Great footage.

    • @stephenmills6315
      @stephenmills6315 Год назад

      Must have been a top man, so proud of him!!!!!

    • @stephenmills6315
      @stephenmills6315 Год назад

      So sorry for your loss, he'll always be in hearts 💕

  • @donaldoldaker6914
    @donaldoldaker6914 Год назад +8

    My Grand Pap fought in The Great war. Said it was very bad. He was shot twice He lived to the age of 98.

  • @louisimission2153
    @louisimission2153 10 месяцев назад +5

    With respect and un-ending rememberance to all Brits and all Germans who served Their nations.
    We treasure Your memory and seek to remember the lessons of Your time.
    We honour Your sacrifice on this Armstice day, 2023.
    You gave everything, and We won't forget You. 💮

  • @schmitty139
    @schmitty139 Год назад +8

    I can't even imagine what these men went through. We all need to watch and read about our history and be so thankful for our freedom. 🇺🇲🤝🇬🇧🤝🇨🇦🤝🇫🇷

  • @terencefree
    @terencefree 2 года назад +6

    Fantastic job with the video, but at the same time sad to watch.

  • @Who.Knew-The.Salt.MustFlow
    @Who.Knew-The.Salt.MustFlow 2 года назад +6

    It makes me sad and angry that so many young British men had to die and kill many German brothers too... All for nothing, yet, the reverberations are felt today... The men should have had families and the millions of descendents should have been alive today... Its such a shame that ordinary men where led by elitist cowards when we should have formed alliance and friendship. Also to mention the suffering and death of thousands of innocent horses / donkeys too.

  • @alanbarden9778
    @alanbarden9778 Год назад +5

    Main reasons why July 1st was a disaster;
    1/The 'drum fire' artillery bombardment had absolutely no effect as the Germans were all safely sheltered deep underground in trench bunkers. 2/ The ground was just a quagmire full of shell holes and the going was impossible. 3/ All the troops were overloaded taking supplies forward. 4/ All the troops were told to WALK towards the German lines as none of the Germans could have survived the artillery. 5/ Not a single German machine gun was damaged BEFORE the troops 'went over the top' . Lions led by Donkeys cost 60,000 casualties on the First Day July 1st 1916.

  • @vonne465
    @vonne465 2 года назад +4

    Beautiful! The best, loved it, thank you Rick. All those faces

  • @nitroyetevn
    @nitroyetevn Год назад +4

    My great grandfather was there at the Somme. Eventually sick with trench fever and met my great grandmother who was a nurse.

  • @tokomac7728
    @tokomac7728 Год назад +7

    The real question is who’s made the money from this battle….whose financed both sides???????

  • @halethewhale
    @halethewhale 8 месяцев назад +6

    This is an amazing video, we take it for granted nowadays but having the opportunity to see the faces of these men is something special.
    My great grandfather fought, he was wounded by shrapnel, it stayed with him until the very end, even though he had dementia and couldn't remember his own family the war was not forgotten, he went crazy once and locked my nan in the bedroom thinking she was a German prisoner it's very sad at least I was honoured enough to have met him ❤

  • @VanMoonrunner
    @VanMoonrunner Год назад +9

    NO MORE BROTHER WARS!

  • @davidcomtedeherstal
    @davidcomtedeherstal Год назад +5

    My Greatgreatgrandfather was in the Belgian Army at the time, he was in King Albert`s General Staff.

  • @joncygardner
    @joncygardner Год назад +2

    Great images high quality of lenses very clear and detailed images. Wonderful job in correcting and coloring

  • @timsparks1858
    @timsparks1858 10 месяцев назад +5

    The Dominos fell then in 1914 and are ready to fall again in 2023!

  • @johntheclyde2816
    @johntheclyde2816 Год назад +5

    My great uncle was killed that first day, and like so many others, was never found. His name is on the wall at Thiepval.

  • @ledrevonellyledrevo606
    @ledrevonellyledrevo606 2 года назад +4

    Vraiment, vraiment formidable, c'est émouvant de pouvoir visionner cette tragédie du passé,beau travail 👍🙏👏

  • @CostantinoLenzi
    @CostantinoLenzi Год назад +6

    such a stupid war. this stupid war build also the second war and maybe the third..

  • @geebeaux
    @geebeaux 6 месяцев назад +7

    You win Somme, you lose Somme.

  • @schopy287
    @schopy287 Год назад +8

    The major thing I noticed was German POWs just striding along side their captures, even helping carrying the wounded. Just that little bit of humanity peeking thru is amazing to me.

    • @julianwaugh8221
      @julianwaugh8221 Год назад +2

      During ww2 my father had German POWs ( volunteers) work as fire crews at his airstrip.
      He told me they were very professional and saved many bomber crews that crash landed.
      How ironic that the enemy was helping their enemy that was bombing the enemy.

    • @joopspeth6483
      @joopspeth6483 Год назад +1

      @@julianwaugh8221 Many Germans went because they had to. Refusing service was no option. Perhaps they were glad to be out. Read Heinrich Böll.

  • @steelwitness
    @steelwitness Год назад +5

    I like to think these soldiers were a lot like me. They were just young and wanted to have fun and live their life. But when the times got hard they didnt ask questions and they stepped up to the task. They didnt stop to think about the things they were doing until they were over and it was too late to change any of it. They didnt have any clear idea why they were there, they didnt have any way of coping with their allies death, they didnt get any say when stuck in the trenches for years.

  • @Conference87
    @Conference87 Год назад +5

    My great grandfather served in the Somme...got shot through his shirt pocket (or tunic pocket or whatever it was they wore), the bullet passed through a pocket bible he had in it and stopped at a spoon behind it...that spoon was a family heirloom, but it's whereabouts has since become a mystery!! The story lives on though!! He survived the Great War, for if he hadn't there would have been a long lineage that would never have existed!!

  • @wtfbuddy1
    @wtfbuddy1 2 года назад +5

    Great video of moments in time that have not been seen in 75+ years, thank you for sharing this and keeping history alive. Cheers and stay safe. Pete

  • @Hitman-ds1ei
    @Hitman-ds1ei Год назад +5

    Even now it's hard to watch and fathom what it was truly like, even though my family migrated from Germany just before this its hard to not sympathise with both sides in the aftermath and senselessness of it all

  • @randyhavard6084
    @randyhavard6084 Год назад +2

    This footage is great, and I like the commentary too

  • @ThomasPrior-wv6zn
    @ThomasPrior-wv6zn Год назад +5

    all those men to fire just one shell r i p all who died

  • @carltheblue.2531
    @carltheblue.2531 Год назад +5

    Bravest of the brave. Never forgotten RIP 🇬🇧 🇮🇪

  • @halojump123
    @halojump123 23 дня назад +3

    @6:53 the officer was the first one over the top. That would rarely happen today.

  • @joeblow2183
    @joeblow2183 10 месяцев назад +7

    Utube is getting really tiring with all the censorship. 100 year old war film and you can’t show what war is. I hope another channel will stop this censorship so we can get back to normal.

    • @Rick88888888
      @Rick88888888  9 месяцев назад +2

      You mean "another platform than RUclips" (not channel). I fully agree: making historic documents is like walking on eggs: RUclips much rather prefers silly dog, cat and TikTok-alike contemporary rubbish. The problem is: there is no such alternative. I tried Dailymotion but it is a waste of time. The website of archive.org has lots of potential, but sadly no many people use it (yet). Currently I am uploading my most important videos to archive.org for posterity. They can also be viewed via my website in higher quality too: www.ricksfilmrestoration.com/indexEN1.htm

  • @walteralter9061
    @walteralter9061 Год назад +5

    Kitchener, that foot stool of the British Empire, didn't let the high casualty rate bother him too much with the all too typical ruling class attitude that they were the lower classes and a bit too numerous, and prone to liberalism, don't you see.

  • @ptrekboxbreaks5198
    @ptrekboxbreaks5198 Год назад +4

    Good lord....they lost 57K men in one day?!?!?!?! Just think about how many people that is

  • @bilbobigbollix7318
    @bilbobigbollix7318 2 года назад +2

    Rick. Incredibly moving stuff. Is my grandfather there?! I posted the following as a reply to a comment below. Others may be interested though.
    "Very similar to my paternal grandfather. He was 18 at the Battle of the Somme and 'copped his Blighty wound' there. The story was always a bit garbled as he wouldn't talk about it, but after a series of strokes towards the end of his life he began to regress just like your grandad. My spine is tingling now as I recall him lying in what was to be his deathbed in his bungalow on the south coast all those years ago screaming and shouting in a cockney accent I had never heard during my lifetime. "Ow, aghhhh, the bleeders have got me." It seems he was caught in an artillery blast and was semi-conscious in a shell hole for a day or so. He was found and evacuated. And then he woke up in a field hospital in Kent some 10 days later! He essentially lost one of his kneecaps and had his leg was buggered and he used a walking stick from then on. I remember my dad saying that when he grew up, "There were an awful lot of young men using walking sticks." He went on to become a teacher and then headmaster. After he died we found his medals. I had them restored and mounted and they are in my living room along with a photo of him and his army pals in a village in France in 1915. Incredible that this was over a century ago."

    • @jimjams8320
      @jimjams8320 2 года назад

      thanks for sharing as adds even more color to what Rick did.

  • @lafawnduh1543
    @lafawnduh1543 Год назад +5

    Good video. North East France is basically a graveyard after WW1 and WW2.

  • @best89ik93
    @best89ik93 Год назад +6

    شباب المساكين الذين ماتوا او تعرضوا الإعاقة اللهم امنع الحروب وانشر السلام

  • @Grumszy
    @Grumszy 10 месяцев назад +5

    Two of my great uncles were killed in WW1... Their names are on the Town remembrance gates.

  • @Watusifarm
    @Watusifarm Год назад +4

    This is my great grandfathers war. So much suffering. Thank you God that I am not made to die for a rich man to win.

  • @robertwalker7960
    @robertwalker7960 Год назад +7

    60.0000 gone in 1 day we remember them 🇬🇧

    • @Rick88888888
      @Rick88888888  Год назад

      Thanks! Don't forget to watch the full 72 minute version on my other channel!
      ruclips.net/video/32WjuRZJsts/видео.html

  • @esticolis
    @esticolis 7 месяцев назад +5

    Awesome footage, yet infinitely sad as it portays the suicide of Europe! Thank you so much!

  • @steveokula5762
    @steveokula5762 Год назад +9

    Great work producing the video, fascinating stuff. What strikes me most is - what a waste! Waste of men, money, time, resourcres. Imagine how well we all would be living if all that effort were put into something constructive.

  • @MrBat60
    @MrBat60 Год назад +5

    Mon dieu, bon nombre de ces jeunes hommes sont inhumés dans nos campagnes, cherchant l'aventure et trouvant la souffrance et la mort…. Plus jamais ça…. 30 ans après il a fallu recommencer quelle honte, quel gâchis.

  • @bill-wd7zs
    @bill-wd7zs 9 месяцев назад +8

    Haunting, I like to freeze frames now and again to look into some of these soldiers faces and wonder what they were thinking.

    • @gavinlew8273
      @gavinlew8273 9 месяцев назад +1

      Probably thinking of getting out alive and being home with their family and eating a warm shepherd's pie. Soldiers lose faith in humanity quickly after seeing the first casualty..

    • @Frank-kx6ky
      @Frank-kx6ky 7 месяцев назад

      same here....

  • @timdickieson4619
    @timdickieson4619 2 года назад +2

    Excellent job well done 👍 fantastic footage !