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A Russian soldier standing guard on a moonlit winter night reflects on his youthful fun and friendships. A Russian postcard with a message from a German soldier dated March 28, 1915.
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Field postmarked message dated March 28, 1915 from a brother to his sister, thanking her for the cake she sent.

A Russian soldier standing guard on a moonlit winter night reflects on his youthful fun and friendships. A Russian postcard with a message from a German soldier to his sister dated March 28, 1915.

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Field postmarked message dated March 28, 1915 from a brother to his sister, thanking her for the cake she sent.

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Friday, February 2, 1917

"— The long spell of bitter cold, the lack of coal, are compelling many people in the country to use wood for heating purposes. Thus the war is destroying our trees as well as our people. It is an irreparable loss both for the earth and for the human race.

— The 2nd. The cold spell has lasted a fortnight. But not one word appears in the papers about the terrible hardship in the trenches, with twenty degrees of frost. Such hardships are passed over in silence by the more patriotic papers. Very convenient! They conceal their sufferings from the enemy so carefully that they even conceal them from themselves."

Quotation Context

Entries for February 1 and 2, 1917 from the diary of Michel Corday, French senior civil servant. On January 24, Corday recorded that a coal crisis had broken out, that women were queuing outside stores, and that shops had no fuel for central heating. The winter of 1916–17 was Germany's 'turnip winter', but the cold bit across the continent. Russia's railway network fell victim to it, preventing deliveries of food to the cities and supplies to the army.

Source

The Paris Front: an Unpublished Diary: 1914-1918 by Michel Corday, page 229, copyright © 1934, by E.P. Dutton & Co., Inc., publisher: E.P. Dutton & Co., Inc., publication date: 1934

Tags

cold, turnip winter, winter 1916-1917, coal, winter