
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Send us a text
Welcome to the final episode of 2024!
One of the great misnomers of WW1 is that soldiers spent all their time in the trenches fighting. Fighting battles took up a tiny amount of soldiers' time, so what did soldiers do when not in the line?
In this episode, we look at life behind the lines, where soldiers had the opportunity to spend their pay on treats to make soldiering more bearable. Many soldiers indulged in the age-old vices of women and gambling; gambling was technically illegal, but thousands of francs were known to change hands through unscrupulous soldiers using loaded dice to stack odds firmly in their favour. We look at the ubiquitous concert parties, hear about the leave lottery endured by soldiers, and discover why being a competent "anchor-man" was a financially enviable position. We also hear the sad story of Basil Radford, "Gilbert the Filbert", one of Edwardian theatre's greatest dandies who met a terrible end on the battlefields of France.
Footsteps of the Fallen will be back in 2025!
Support the podcast
https://www.patreon.com/footstepsofthefallen
https://www.buymeacoffee.com/footstepsblog
4.9
2727 ratings
Send us a text
Welcome to the final episode of 2024!
One of the great misnomers of WW1 is that soldiers spent all their time in the trenches fighting. Fighting battles took up a tiny amount of soldiers' time, so what did soldiers do when not in the line?
In this episode, we look at life behind the lines, where soldiers had the opportunity to spend their pay on treats to make soldiering more bearable. Many soldiers indulged in the age-old vices of women and gambling; gambling was technically illegal, but thousands of francs were known to change hands through unscrupulous soldiers using loaded dice to stack odds firmly in their favour. We look at the ubiquitous concert parties, hear about the leave lottery endured by soldiers, and discover why being a competent "anchor-man" was a financially enviable position. We also hear the sad story of Basil Radford, "Gilbert the Filbert", one of Edwardian theatre's greatest dandies who met a terrible end on the battlefields of France.
Footsteps of the Fallen will be back in 2025!
Support the podcast
https://www.patreon.com/footstepsofthefallen
https://www.buymeacoffee.com/footstepsblog
3,977 Listeners
1,198 Listeners
4,631 Listeners
668 Listeners
10 Listeners
1,301 Listeners
82 Listeners
169 Listeners
5,211 Listeners
1,720 Listeners
2,594 Listeners
13 Listeners
319 Listeners
90 Listeners
58 Listeners