PodcastsHistoryBattles of the First World War Podcast

Battles of the First World War Podcast

Mike Cunha
Battles of the First World War Podcast
Latest episode

218 episodes

  • Battles of the First World War Podcast

    New Jersey's Role in World War I - with LTC (Ret.) Richard Wasserman

    18/06/2026 | 34 mins.
    ***Technical note: My apologies on the audio reverb that may be heard in this episode. 
     
    A concise history revealing New Jersey's vital industrial, military, and civilian contributions to America's World War I effort.
     
    During World War I, New Jersey played a prominent role in the manufacturing of war-related munitions, created the infrastructure necessary to train and mobilize troops, and supplied a portion of the manpower necessary to fight overseas.
     
    Without the support of New Jersey's industrial base, the war effort of the United States may very well have failed. Contributions from New Jersey ranged from artillery rounds from Amatol, fuses from Bloomfield, shells from Lyndhurst, gun carriages (Singer), aircraft engines (Duesenberg), Handley Page Bombers from Elizabeth, and ship building (New York Shipbuilding and ELCO).
     
    Over 140,000 New Jerseyans served during the war, and the state was home to 38 military installations by the end of the war, including Camp Dix. Troops from New Jersey included National Guard units activated and assigned to the 29th Division that trained at Camp McClellan, Alabama, and National Army soldiers (draftee) assigned to the 78th Division that trained at Camp Dix. New Jersey-based units from the 29th and 78th Infantry Divisions would fight in the Meuse-Argonne offensive. Women, too, underwent training in New Jersey, in preparation to serve in the Army Signal Corps, while women from the state volunteered to serve with aid organizations including the Red Cross, and raised money for the war effort.
     
    In the post-war years, over 160 monuments were constructed across New Jersey to memorialize the war dead and honor the veterans who served in the Great War, including several of the famous "Spirit of the American Doughboy" statues produced by E. M. Viquesney. New Jersey mothers and widows would travel in pilgrimages to the battlefields and cemeteries of France, such as the Meuse-Argonne American Cemetery, as well as to Brookwood cemetery in Great Britain to visit the graves of their loved ones in the 1930s as part of the Gold Star Mothers and Widows Pilgrimage.
     
    This book will for the first time reveal the full extent of New Jersey's pivotal role in America's war effort during the Great War, and will shed light on prominent figures and their connections to New Jersey, such as Dr. Fred Albee, the father of bone grafting, Cecil Dorrian, the first American female War Reporter in World War I, Amabel Roberts, the first American nurse from New Jersey to die during the war in France, and Lillian Marx, who danced and sang in Newark during war support donation events.
     
    Where to buy: https://www.brooklinebooks.com/9781955041478/the-war-to-end-all-wars/



    The BFWWP is on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/BattlesoftheFirstWorldWarPodcast. 
     
    Any questions, comments or concerns please contact me through the website, www.firstworldwarpodcast.com. Follow us on BlueSky at @WW1podcast.bsky.social:
     
    https://bsky.app/profile/ww1podcast.bsky.social
     
    and the BFWWP website, www.firstworldwarpodcast.com. Email me directly at verdunpodcast@gmail.com with any questions, comments, or concerns. 
     
    Please review the Battles of the First World War Podcast on iTunes! :)
  • Battles of the First World War Podcast

    Matz - La Mort du Sergent Jules Héme

    11/06/2026 | 45 mins.
    The story behind an often erroneously captioned photograph of the First World War, and remembering the man in it. 
     
    The BFWWP is on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/BattlesoftheFirstWorldWarPodcast. 
     
    Any questions, comments or concerns please contact me through the website, www.firstworldwarpodcast.com. Follow us on BlueSky at @WW1podcast.bsky.social:
     
    https://bsky.app/profile/ww1podcast.bsky.social
     
    and the BFWWP website, www.firstworldwarpodcast.com. Email me directly at verdunpodcast@gmail.com with any questions, comments, or concerns.
  • Battles of the First World War Podcast

    Second Marne - Friedensturm

    01/06/2026 | 18 mins.
    This episode will visit the German strategic situation in June 1918 and the resulting plans for their next offensive, which would be called "Friedensturm:" the Peace Offensive.



    The BFWWP is on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/BattlesoftheFirstWorldWarPodcast. 
     
    Any questions, comments or concerns please contact me through the website, www.firstworldwarpodcast.com. Follow us on BlueSky at @WW1podcast.bsky.social:
     
    https://bsky.app/profile/ww1podcast.bsky.social
     
    and the BFWWP website, www.firstworldwarpodcast.com. Email me directly at verdunpodcast@gmail.com with any questions, comments, or concerns.
  • Battles of the First World War Podcast

    Memorial Day - "The Young Dead Soldiers Do Not Speak"

    25/05/2026 | 10 mins.
    A short exploration of the American poet Archibald MacLeish's connection to the First World War, and his poem "The Young Dead Soldiers Do Not Speak."



    The Young Dead Soldiers Do Not Speak
     
    Nevertheless they are heard in the still houses: who has not heard them?
     
    They have a silence that speaks for them at night and when the clock counts.
     
    They say, We were young. We have died. Remember us.
     
    They say, We have done what we could but until it is finished it is not done.
     
    They say, We have given our lives but until it is finished no one can know what our lives gave.
     
    They say, Our deaths are not ours: they are yours: they will mean what you make them.
     
    They say, Whether our lives and our deaths were for peace and a new hope or for nothing we cannot say: it is you who must say this.
     
    They say, We leave you our deaths. Give them their meaning.
     
    We were young, they say. We have died. Remember us.




    The BFWWP is on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/BattlesoftheFirstWorldWarPodcast. 
     
    Any questions, comments or concerns please contact me through the website, www.firstworldwarpodcast.com. Follow us on BlueSky at @WW1podcast.bsky.social:
     
    https://bsky.app/profile/ww1podcast.bsky.social
     
    and the BFWWP website, www.firstworldwarpodcast.com. Email me directly at verdunpodcast@gmail.com with any questions, comments, or concerns. 
     
    Please review the Battles of the First World War Podcast on iTunes! :)
  • Battles of the First World War Podcast

    Citizen of the Shadows - The Lives and Lies of Lothar Witzke

    17/05/2026 | 35 mins.
    Authors Paul Friedland and Robert Hornick join us on the podcast to discuss their thoroughly researched, well-argued and thrilling biography of a now-forgotten German spy during WW1. 
     
    One of the most notorious German spies of the twentieth century, Lothar Witzke lived a life that reads like a thriller. Convicted of espionage in 1918, he was the only German spy sentenced to death by the United States during World War I. After the war, he was pardoned by President Calvin Coolidge, only to be later accused of responsibility for one of the most spectacular acts of sabotage in US history: the Black Tom munitions depot explosion.
     
    After being repatriated to Germany, Witzke lived in Latin America and China as a German expat and later joined the Nazi party. He ran espionage squads in Great Britain during World War II and became a prominent businessman in Hamburg after the war. He was killed in Hamburg in 1962, possibly by an East German agent as payback for suspected double agent work on behalf of the British.
     
    With Citizen of the Shadows, the first full biography of Witzke, Paul Friedland and Robert Hornick trace Witzke's morally complicated life and show readers how an infamous spy thrived in the interwar years and after. They probe his trial, conviction, and pardon, and analyze whether Witzke was really involved in the Black Tom explosion. In doing so, the authors uncover that many of the details of Witzke's life—long assumed to be true—were lies.
     
    Where to buy: https://utpress.org/9798895270332/citizen-of-the-shadows/
     
    The BFWWP is on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/BattlesoftheFirstWorldWarPodcast. 
     
    Any questions, comments or concerns please contact me through the website, www.firstworldwarpodcast.com. Follow us on BlueSky at @WW1podcast.bsky.social:
     
    https://bsky.app/profile/ww1podcast.bsky.social
     
    and the BFWWP website, www.firstworldwarpodcast.com. Email me directly at verdunpodcast@gmail.com with any questions, comments, or concerns. 
     
    Please review the Battles of the First World War Podcast on iTunes! :)
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About Battles of the First World War Podcast
The Battles of the First World War Podcast goes in-depth into the battles of the Great War of 1914-1918. The goal is to really go into the details of how and why these battles unfolded and happened as they did. In telling the narrative of these clashes we can revisit some of the stories of the men and women who lived, fought, and died during the first titanic struggle of the 20th Century, for these people have stories that deserve to be told.
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