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World War I Centennial Commission Seeks ‘Tradition of Service’ Photos

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Even after 100 years, the world still feels the effects of what was known at the time as The Great War.

Doughboys of Company G, 137th Infantry Regiment, 35th Division pose in front of a barracks in France in 1918. The soldier in the front row – Pvt. John Frary – was killed in the Meuse-Argonne campaign. Photo courtesy of the National World War I Museum and Memorial
Doughboys of Company G, 137th Infantry Regiment, 35th Division pose in front of a barracks in France in 1918. The soldier in the front row – Pvt. John Frary – was killed in the Meuse-Argonne campaign. Photo courtesy of the National World War I Museum and Memorial
Doughboys of Company G, 137th Infantry Regiment, 35th Division pose in front of a barracks in France in 1918. The soldier in the front row – Pvt. John Frary – was killed in the Meuse-Argonne campaign. Photo courtesy of the National World War I Museum and Memorial
World War I
Doughboys of Company G, 137th Infantry Regiment, 35th Division pose in front of a barracks in France in 1918. The soldier in the front row – Pvt. John Frary – was killed in the Meuse-Argonne campaign. Photo courtesy of the National World War I Museum and Memorial
Photo By: Photo courtesy of the National World War I Museum and Memorial
VIRIN: 170301-O-ZZ999-1010

The current situation in the Middle East owes much to the divisions imposed on the region as a result of World War I. The U.S. civil rights effort grew out of the segregation and discrimination African-Americans were subjected to as they strove to serve their country in combat.

The war was a great cataclysm. Millions died, and many more millions served. The United States joined the “war to end all wars” on April 6, 1917.

Highlighting Tradition of Service

For many Americans, that date was also the beginning of a tradition of service, and the U.S. World War I Centennial Commission is looking to highlight those sacrifices.

“In my family, I had a grandfather who served in World War I, my father in World War II, an uncle in Korea, a brother in Vietnam, and I served during the Cold War,” said retired Navy Capt. Chris Christopher, the publisher for the commemoration commission. “We are connected to the World War I generation. It is not so long ago.”

The commission wants Americans to post pictures of their forbears who served during World War I on its website. The Stories of Service feature on the Family Ties portion of the site highlights the soldiers, Marines, sailors and airmen who served. Some are formal portraits. Others are clipped from larger pictures. Some are candid shots of service members horsing around, and some are pictures of service members who never came home.

Sailors of the 7th Battery of the Howitzer Regiment of the U.S. Coastal Artillery clean their gun during operations in France during World War I. Photo courtesy of the National World War I Museum and Memorial
Sailors of the 7th Battery of the Howitzer Regiment of the U.S. Coastal Artillery clean their gun during operations in France during World War I. Photo courtesy of the National World War I Museum and Memorial
Sailors of the 7th Battery of the Howitzer Regiment of the U.S. Coastal Artillery clean their gun during operations in France during World War I. Photo courtesy of the National World War I Museum and Memorial
Howitzer Regiment
Sailors of the 7th Battery of the Howitzer Regiment of the U.S. Coastal Artillery clean their gun during operations in France during World War I. Photo courtesy of the National World War I Museum and Memorial
Photo By: Photo courtesy of the National World War I Museum and Memorial
VIRIN: 170301-O-ZZ999-2727

There are visual connections as well. Most soldiers in the photos wear the campaign hat that only drill sergeants or drill instructors wear today. They carry 1903 Springfield rifles – still popular with hunters today.

Familiar Units

The units are familiar, also. Many active duty and National Guard divisions formed in response to World War I. The 1st, 3rd, 4th, 7th and 82nd Divisions formed in 1917 and still serve today. The 2nd Division – based now in South Korea – was half Army and half Marine Corps.

Some of the famous National Guard divisions of the war include the 26th Yankee Division from New England, the 28th Division from Pennsylvania, the 29th Division from Maryland and Virginia, the 77th Division from New York and the 42nd Division – the “Rainbow Division” -- from many East Coast states.

Christopher said the commission would like those serving today to celebrate their forebears who served to honor the tradition of service.

“I’d like to highlight that tradition,” he said. “I’d like them to load a photo of their great-grandfather serving, and I’d like them to send a photo of themselves serving today. Service members today are carrying on a great heritage, and it is a good way to honor those who came before us.”

(Follow Jim Garamone on Twitter: @GaramoneDoDNews)

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