Kansas
History: A Journal of the Central Plains
Autumn (Vol. 29, No. 3)
Remembering World War I: Special IssueR. Eli Paul, "'In Honor of Those Who Served': Introduction." Read this article online Focusing briefly on the November 1921 dedication of the Liberty Memorial site, Eli Paul, the museum director at National World War I Museum at the Liberty Memorial, introduces this special issue on Kansans and the Great War and highlights the importance of this type of examination. The veterans to whom Kansas City's great monument was dedicated could not have anticipated the extent to which "their world war would become as overlooked, under appreciated, even largely forgotten as it has become a few generations later," writes Paul. "The fog of that collective amnesia may be lifting," however, and we trust "this wide-ranging collection of articles on the experiences of the state's citizens during those years" will contribute to that trend. Sandra Reddish , "An 'All Kansas' Regiment: The 353d Infantry Goes to War" Though "woefully unprepared," the United States of America entered the First World War in April 1917, almost three years after the carnage began in Europe. A shortage of men under arms was the foremost problem, so a "draft" was instituted. "Soon," writes historian Sandra Reddish, "young men from throughout the Great Plains left their farms and small-town homes and donned army uniforms. While some left with their National Guard units, others waited for the draft or volunteered for military service. The majority of Kansans served with the Thirty-fifth or Eighty-ninth Divisions." The former consisted of National Guard units from Kansas and Missouri, while "the Eighty-ninth Division comprised draftees from the Central Plains states, most having no previous encounter with military life." Although both divisions served "over there," they had very different experiences; but drawing on the writings of several enlisted men, Reddish focuses on the Eighty-ninth, which "performed well through the Saint-Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne campaigns and gained favorable notice from General John J. Pershing, commanding general of the American Expeditionary Forces (AEF). Indeed, after the war, Pershing considered the Eighty-ninth Division, which included the 353d Infantry 'All Kansas' Regiment, among his top four divisions that fought in France." Jonathan Casey, "Training in Kansas for a World War: Camp Funston in Photographs." Named for Brigadier General Frederick Funston of Allen County and constructed on the Fort Riley military reservation during the late summer 1917, Camp Funston was the largest of the army's sixteen national training cantonments. Thousands of volunteers and draftees trained here, most coming from Kansas and several other Midwest states, and Jonathan Casey, archivist at the National World War I Museum, captures a portion of their experience with the assistance of a variety of well-selected photographs from the museum's rich collections. "Camp Funston performed its assigned duties as a training ground for the draftees of the national army," concludes Casey. "Like other national training cantonments, Funston was part of the war-making machinery of a new global power that transformed hundreds of thousands of civilians into soldiers to serve and fight for ideals that shaped the twentieth century." Doran L. Cart, "'With the Tommies': A Kansas Nurse in the British Expeditionary Force, 1918. The Letters of Florence Edith Hemphill." Born on February 28, 1887, in Wilson County, Kansas, Florence Hemphill grew up in Chanute, Kansas, the sixth of nine children, and completed her nurse's training at Christ's Hospital Training School in Topeka. She work first as a private duty nurse, but answered the "call to arms" soon after the United States entered the European war on April 16, 1917. Before the end of the year, she was assigned to the British Expeditionary Force and left for France on January 18, 1918. Nurse Hemphill "was embarking on the biggest adventure of her life," writes museum curator Doran Cart, and "she wanted to share this adventure with the folks at home, so she wrote letters, many of which survive today" in the collections of the National World War I Museum at the Liberty Memorial. Robert H. Ferrell, "Angered to the Core: Henry J. Allen and the U.S. Army." Henry Justin Allen, who was elected governor of Kansas in November 1918 while still in Europe, headed the Young Men's Christian Association's work in France with the Thirty-fifth Division, a unit composed of ten thousand Kansas and eighteen thousand Missouri guardsmen. According to the eminent historian Robert H. Ferrell, professor emeritus of history at Indiana University and the author of numerous books on twentieth-century U.S. history, including Collapse at Meuse-Argonne: The Failure of the Missouri-Kansas Division, Allen was "angered to the core" by the manner in which the division was treated by its regular army commanders. Here Professor Ferrell examines Governor Allen's "most ambitious," if ultimately unsuccessful, campaign to reform the post-World War I U.S. Army. It was, nevertheless, a praiseworthy "effort to change an institution that in many ways needed it; an effort to update the institution and bring it into the Progressive Era for which Allen had so much respect and affection." Doran L. Cart, "Kansas Football 'Over There'." Precious few of America's citizen soldiers were eager to stay on in Europe after the November 11, 1918, armistice. But occupation duty beckoned, and as Doran Cart explains, "American unit commanders tried a number of activities to keep the soldiers busy and entertained when not on duty. . . . The Eighty-ninth Division, which included many Kansans in its ranks, became a powerhouse of the football competitions" in Germany and France during the early months of 1919. Drawing heavily on the unpublished manuscript of Sergeant Charles S. Stevenson of Olathe, Kansas, Cart recounts the championship game played between the squads of the Eighty-ninth and Thirty-sixth Divisions on March 29, 1919. Numerous former and future gridiron stars engaged in a hard fought but more pleasant kind of battle that day on a field in Paris. Steven Trout, "Forgotten Reminders: Kansas World War I Memorials." Read this article online Steven Trout, author and professor of English at Fort Hays State University, explores the ways in which "Americans at a given moment in history collectively remember a past conflict" and here examines efforts of Kansans to honor the sacrifice of the World War I generation. "At first glance," writes Trout, "the desire to memorialize American soldiers, especially the war dead, and to celebrate the nation's role in the Allied victory seems to have been universal during the interwar years. . . . If judged by the number and scale of the memorials that it inspired, World War I produced an outpouring of pride and patriotism unparalleled in American history." Upon closer examination, however, war memorialization efforts during the 1920s and 1930s seem to reveal a "growing public apathy, intense disagreement over the form that memorials should take, and widespread uncertainty over the meaning of American participation in World War I." Book Notes American Women in World War I: They Also Served. By Lettie Gavin.
(Boulder: University Press of Colorado, 2006. xiv + 295 pages, paper $23.95.) Thunderbolt From a Clear Sky: The Irrepressible Life of Robert W. S. Stevens. By Robert C. Stevens, with Betty Adams.
(Rochester, N.Y.: WME Books, 2006. xii + 311 pages, cloth $39.95.) Forging the Shield: Eisenhower and National Security for the 21st Century. Edited by Dennis E. Showalter.
(Chicago: Imprint Publications, 2005. xiii + 235 pages, paper $24.95.) Banners South: A Northern Community at War. By Edmund J. Raus Jr.
(Kent, Ohio: The Kent State University Press, 2006. xiv + 333 pages, cloth $39.00.) "Behind Bayonets": The Civil War in Northern Ohio. By David D. Van Tassel, with John Vacha.
(Kent, Ohio: The Kent State University Press, 2006. x + 125 pages, cloth $35.00.) Wind Across the Prairie. By Linda F. Slebodnik.
(Baltimore: Publish America, 2005. 379 pages, paper $24.95.) At Home on This Moveable Earth. By William Kloefkorn.
(Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2005. 217 pages, cloth $22.95.) A Paratrooper's Panoramic View: Training with the 464th Parachute Field Artillery Battalion for Operation Varsity's "Rhine Jump" with the 17th Airborne Division. By Robert L. Wilson and Philip K. Wilson.
(Bloomington, Ind.: AuthorHouse, 2005. xiv + 229 pages, paper $13.40.) Reviews Flint Hills Cowboys: Tales of the Tallgrass Prairie Terrible Swift Sword: The Legacy of John Brown To Intermix With Our White Brothers: Indian Mixed Bloods in the United States from Earliest Times to the Indian Removals Charlie Siringo's West: An Interpretive Biography Autobiography of Samuel S. Hildebrand: The Renowned Missouri Bushwhacker Revolutionary Heart: The Life of Clarina Nichols and the Pioneering Crusade for Women's Rights "Take Up the Black Man's Burden": Kansas City's African American Communities, 1865-1939 John Brown, Abolitionist: The Man Who Killed Slavery, Sparked the Civil War, and Seeded Civil Rights |
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