It is estimated that about 200,000 Irishmen signed up to fight during the war, as well as numerous expatriates in Britain, the empire and the USA. 43 Irishwomen signed up for the Women's Land Army by late 1917. This represented one-thousandth of the total. [David Fitzpatrick in Roy Foster's The Oxford History of Ireland, p. 194, 195.].
Entrance to Laleu cemetery, where Hugh Murphy is buried.
Read my Irishman's Diary article in today's Irish Times newspaper about his story. Hugh Murphy's grave in Laleu cemetery is cared for by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. If you are looking for details of a grave of a family member who died during the war, you can find some really interesting details on their website. Follow this link to see information about Hugh Murphy's grave and nearby graveyards containing the graves of other soldiers.
Hugh Murphy's gravestone.
Living conditions at the front must have been very hard to bear for the soldiers. When Hugh Murphy's battalion made it to northern France from warm and sunny Aden (modern day Yemen) where they were based prior to the war, a very harsh winter had set in. Food was also an issue. By 1918, the British were sending 30 million kg of meat to the Western Front every month. Check out this page from the Imperial War Museum to see what soldiers ate at the front.
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