War and History are our specialty. Your glimpse into the past awaits you...


Search History & Wars

Home
History Facts
Wars
American Revolution
Civil War
Cold War
Iraqi Freedom

Korean War

Persian Gulf War / Desert Storm
Spanish-American War
Vietnam War
War of 1812
World War 1
World War 2

History
Aviation History
Ethnic
Fire Fighting
Nuclear Power
Presidential History
Railroad
U.S. Cities
World History

Money Savers
Bundle Packs - Gift Idea

Shopping Cart
Order Info
About Us
Privacy Policy
Email Us

Links
Link To Us

Site Map
* * * FREE WORLDWIDE SHIPPING * * *
 

War > World War 1 > Remembering World War 1

Remembering World War 1 (3-CD Set)Remembering World War 1 (3-CD Set)

The Complete History of World War 1 on this exclusive 2-CD Set! Over 3,000+ high resolution photos, propaganda posters, documentary films, maps, books & texts, newspapers, and audio from some of the most significant battles, events, and people of World War 1. Of these there are over 1,650+ wartime pictures, 1,100+ poster art images, and 50+ battle and campaign maps!


The photographs span from around the world including The United States, Great Britain, France, Germany, Russian, Austria-Hungary and more! Warship and Naval Photos, Battleships, The Lusitanian, Aircrafts and Planes, Tanks, Infantry and Troops, Aviator Photos, Battle Maps and Landmarks, Combat, Media Photography, Political Leaders, Generals, Weapons and Artillery, Famous Events, Preparations for Battle, Battle After-Effects, Assembly Plants, and tons more!


All pictures on the CDs are of extreme detail and named accordingly so you can easily find what you"re looking for! These vintage World War 1 images are a true work of art and the finest collection available in electronic form.


All pictures are fully printable from the CDs and are suitable for framing! They are all scans from the authentic originals and are of the highest quality. These CDs are a great visual reference and study guide for any historical buff or educational student alike.




Sample thumbnails taken from the collection. Click on image to view larger picture.







World War I Posters

The largest WW I Propaganda Posters Photograph Collection Ever Assembled! Over 1,100+ images in all! This collection spans from around the globe, covering propaganda and wartime posters from over 25 countries in all including the United States, Canada, Germany, Great Britain, France, and Australia. All pictures on the CD are of extreme detail and named accordingly so you can easily find what you"re looking for!


Sample thumbnails taken from the collection. Click on image to view larger picture.






50+ High-Resolution Battle and Campaign Maps from all parts of Europe and Asia during World War I. Categories include early German offenses, the Russo-Finnish War, the Russo-German War, various wars in North Africa and Italy, wars in Western Europe, Invasion of Japan, the Japanese Offensive, Early Allied Offensives, Allied Liberation of the Philippines, Aircraft Carrier Forces, Battles of Coral Sea, Battles of Midway, China, Burma, India, final operations of the war, and tons more!


Books and Texts on World War 1

  • A History of the Nations and Empires Involved and a Study of the Events Culminating in the Great Conflict

  • At Suvla Bay

  • Democracy by the Militia of Mercy

  • Fighting France from Dunkerque to Belport

  • Hira Singh - When India Came to Fight in Flanders

  • Now It Can Be Told

  • The French Twins

  • The Letters of Franklin K. Lane

  • The New Book of Martyrs

  • The Riddle of the Rhine - Chemical Strategy in Peace and War

  • The Sky Pilot in No Man"s Land

  • Chronology of World War I, 1914 - 1919

  • The US Army in World War One.

  • American Military History



18 Audio Files of World War 1

  • American and the War

  • American Rights

  • America"s Accomplishments

  • America"s Choice and Opportunity

  • At the Front

  • At Valley Forge

  • Democrats in the World War

  • From the Battlefield of France

  • Labor"s Service to Freedom

  • Loyalty

  • One Hundred Million Solders

  • The American Soldier

  • The Nation in Arms

  • The Navy is Ready

  • The Republic Must Awaken

  • The Third Liberty Loan

  • There is No Rank In Sacrifice

  • What Are We Fighting For?


World War 1 Films


World War 1 in motion pictures... The complete "America Goes Over " World War 1 Documentary Film on CD-Rom! Over 60 minutes of rare digitalized video originally produced in 1918 by the U.S. Army Signal Corps during the war. The film is broken up into 5 parts, each of which are described in detail below.



Part One


United States, British French, Italian Official War Films by Agreement with the Respective Governments. Then Men Move Forward. As the Hun Lines bend back, thousands of eager soldiers...fighting for the freedom of the world...pass on to join the fighting. When the mountain streams of Italy impede the progress of the troops, engineers shift pontoon bridges and the men move forward. On the snowy heights where all transportation is difficult, sure footed-dogs carry ammunition to the fighters. French and Americans, side by side, prepare to push on once more where the Germans are forced back across the Marne. And along the roads the heroes wounded in the fight move back...their only sorrow that they can fight no longer...and with their prisoners who are glad because they cannot. Moving forward they enter Longmont, taken back from the foe, its ruined Abby is mutely eloquent that they go on until the war is ended. And once again in Palestine the troops move on. Sweating and toiling here, British engineers construct a railway to carry them ahead. Across the sands the tractors creep, dragging great howitzers. Shining in the sun, Mosque and Minaret rise in a land free from the bondage of the Turk. A prisoner is questioned by his English captors. The retreating foe has committed the greatest crime of the desert...destroyed a well. As the British press forward here, prisoners and supplies of war are taken from the fleeing foe. The roads of France ring to the tread of the manhood of America marching now to join the battle that shall never end until the world is free. The Hun was ready to shell Paris with another super-cannon, when the onward press of Americans put him to flight leaving the encampment. Duration 13:02



Part Two

Official films of the Signal Corps of the US Army, taken under action and service conditions in France. The first officially released picture record of our part in the World War compiled by military experts. Every picture is genuine. Considering that these pictures were taken under fire with fatalities to cameramen the results are remarkable. "Freedom of the Seas" denied to American vessels forced us into the conflict. The following scenes, a U-boats own record, are from a captured film. The repeated sinking of American ships forced President Wilson, on April 2nd 1917, to ask congress to declare war. "We desire no conquest, we see no indemnities" Meanwhile the allies fought on through their forth year of war. A daring British raid returning through No-man"s Land with prisoners. Liquid fire. A fatal shot on a British column The courageous French fought back the invaders with the heroic battle-cry "They shall not pass" The Italians fought desperately in their mountain fastnesses. Meanwhile America strove to overcome her unpreparedness. Cantonments rose like magic. Guns! Ships! Men! Hog Island shipyard Hundreds of thousand volunteered, nearly three million were drafted. Secretary of War Newton D. Baker draws the first number. Theodore Roosevelt wishes he were one of them. Heroes in the making. What a whale of a difference a few months make! Our small force in France starts training. In Oct 1917 a few of our troops become aquatinted with the enemy in "quite" sectors. On March 21, 1918 launched against the British the first of a series of attacks to crush the Allies before the arrival of America in force. The French brought up men and guns to stop then ememy"s rapid advance. On April 9th an enemy offensive in Flanders forced the British to rush up reserves. The British met attach with counter-attack over shell-torn ground. With enormous losses the Allies were fighting with "their backs to the wall". The Allies appeal to America for men. Two million men crossed safely under our navy"s protection. How it was done. U-boat alarm on transport. Convoy destroyer firing at a U-boat. Y-gun throwing depth charges---which explode beneath the surface, disabling the U-boats. Protecting convoys with a smoke screen. From ship to "40 hommes 8 chevaux." At Cantigny and Chateau Thierry the enemy first realized that the Yanks were there. Distant shelling of Cantigny. Hurling himself at the French the enemy quickly pushed 35 miles to the Marne, with Paris his next goal. In the crisis Americans were rushed to halt the advance. Chateau Thierry and ruins of bridge immortalized by Americans. Our troops too Belleau woods from the best enemy division. The rapidly increasing American forces played an important part in stopping the last great enemy offensive. With Americans in the place of honor, the Allies assumed the offensive, and drove the enemy from the Marene salient. On July 18th our troops attacked before dawn, driving a deep wedge in the enemy line south of Soissons. Duration 15:40



Part Three

In their first battles overeager doughboys, forgetting their training, needlessly exposed themselves. Occasional shells fell as we entered the town. The smell of a field kitchen was a magnetic attraction. After weeks of victorious fighting, the enemy driven back to the Aisne, our troops were withdrawn. Policing up. And still they come. Behind the lines, and army labors to supply our troops at the fronts. 1500 miles of railway were built. An American city of warehouses at Gievres. Two million mouths to feed. Pershing"s steadfast purpose was an American army under American command. Orders for the first American Army. Concentrating for the firs all American operation. The St. Mihies Salient had for four years threatened the rear of Verdum. In the distance Montsec which dominated the American lines. On September 12th, the battle opened. Our artillery fired a million shells in four hours. Directing artillery fire. The computed range was corrected by observing the burst. Before dawn wire-cutting patrols had opened the way for our men. And the caissons go rolling along. The barrage rolls forward as our troops advance. The second line crossed the recently capture trenches. A dot-and-dash-hund captured in the dugout. Sherman oughta said something about K.P. The first French paper in four years. The king and queen of the Belgians review the American troops. Our planes swept the enemy from the sky. Our ace spots an enemy plane. The fight. "When a fella needs a friend," Our planes taking off to harass the enemy. Artillery observers had their ups and downs. Enemy plane attacks the sausage (balloon). Dropping to safety. But too late to save the balloon. Waiting for the zero hour. The first war to make night as hideous as day. A series of positions, prepared with Teutonic thoroughness, lay between the American and their objective. The inferno through which our troops had to pass. The advance was rapid through the open country. Duration 15.33



Part Four

The enemy"s artillery on our flanks in the Argonne and on the heights east of the Meuse shelled every point our troops had to past. "37"s" were used effectively against machine guns in the open. But in the Argonne forest enemy machine gun nest delayed our progress. A nest on the edge of the wood is flanked by our gunners A few grenades, a rush and the way is clear. The hill of Montfaucon had been stubbornly contested. In three days our army had smashed through the first two defense systems. The report of the C in C at this point in the Meuse Argonne battle. "The battle was prosecuted with an aggression and heroic spirit of courage and fortitude which demanded eventual success dispite all obstacles." Fritz and his faithful friend. Dainty corn willy for the men in the lines. Guests of Uncle Sam. And another one falls for us. Back from the lines for a well earned rest. Decorations. The soft side of "Black Jack." A lion for a mascot. Issuing liquid rations. K. of C. welfare. Wild Wild Women! Supplies had to be brought up before further advances could be made. Road-building material. "Days of Shovelry." Clearing the road for the artillery. Worn out divisions had to be relieved by fresh troops. Dugouts along the road. On October 4th we renewed the attack against the now strongly reinforced enemy. Throughout October, our troops, under constant shell and machine gun fire, fought the enemy"s best divisions. Crossing the Meuse to drive the enemy from the height east of the river. Our artillery under shell fire. Our guns can be seen near the top of the slope. Three weeks of desperate fighting broke the enemy"s resistance. He covered his retreat by artillery fire on every captured village. Pressing on, the American army reached its objective. In many liberated towns, inhabitants had clung to the spot through long years of war. Our main objective the railway near Sedan. Duration 17.05



Part Five

The Allied victory was complete when on November 11the the order came to cease firing. The Allied commanders. "Finney La Guerre." Duration :41




World War 1 Military Newspapers


This collection consists of 71 8-page issues of super high-resolution "Stars & Stripes" newspapers from February 8th, 1918 to June 13th, 1919 originally published by the United States Army. Every wartime issue ever released is included. The newspapers contain literally thousands of interesting articles, ads, and illustrations covering a broad range of topics. These newspapers represent the entire history of the American Expeditionary Force (AEF) during World War I.

Every one of these newspapers has the rich detail and high resolution that you would hope to get in a collection of this magnitude. These digital newspapers are large enough and detailed enough and designed to be read (and understood) by one and all!


When The Stars and Stripes began publication, American forces were dispersed throughout the Western Front, often mixed at the unit level with British, French, and Italian forces. The newspaper"s mission was to provide these scattered troops with a sense of unity and an understanding of their part in the overall war effort.


The eight-page weekly featured news from home, sports news, poetry, and cartoons, with a staff that included journalists Alexander Woollcott, Harold Ross, and Grantland Rice. Printing the paper on presses borrowed from Paris newspaper plants, the staff used a network of trains, automobiles, and a motorcycle to deliver the news to the doughboys (as the American soldiers were called). At the peak of its production, The Stars and Stripes had a circulation of 526,000 readers.

Note: The newspapers are several megabytes each on the CD. They can be magnified to the smallest detail anywhere on each newspaper edition with the easy-to-use viewing software that is included. Just point and click to zoom in and out!


The software used (full version included on the CD) for viewing this collection was developed by the U.S. Government for viewing satellite images and fingerprints. It is capable of showing details at any magnification.



This is the most complete collection on World War 1 that exists today!
If it was a part of World War 1 it is on this exclusive 3-CD Set!



100% money back guarantee!

This is a true collector"s piece and a work of art. No other product comes close to the quality of the Remembering World War 1 (3-CD Set).

The price will go up as our inventory is minimized, and they are moving quick! Secure your copy before it is too late and own a genuine piece of history today!

We are so confident that you will love this 3-CD Set that we offer a No Questions Asked, 30 Day, 100% Money-Back Guarantee if you are not completely satisfied. Examine it, try it, use it for a full 30 days without risk. Just send it back to us and we will promptly refund your investment including shipping costs!


Windows logo Windows 95/98/2000/NT/ME/XP compatible.

* * * FREE WORLDWIDE SHIPPING * * *

Sales Price $17.48


 

 

 

 

History & War will be happy to answer all your questions about various history and war topics. You can email us at info@historyandwars.com. History and War offers online support and daily updated history and war facts about World War 2 , Vietnam, and many others on our History Facts Blog.

We are available 24 hours a day to answer questions about our World War 2 , Vietnam War, Gulf War and many other CDs and DVDs that you'll find on our website. If you are a history buff, you have come to the right place...History and War will be happy to serve you.

All of our products come with a 30 day money back guarantee...so what do you have to lose?

Thank you for visiting History & War , and please bookmark History & War! We hope you enjoy your CD-Roms and DVDs.

Home | American Revolution | Civil War | Cold War | Iraqi Freedom | Korean War | Persian Gulf War | Desert Storm | Spanish-American War | Vietnam War | War of 1812 | World War 1 | World War 2 | Aviation History | Ethnic | Fire Fighting | Nuclear Power | Presidential History | Railroad | U.S. Cities | World History | Bundle Packs - Gift Idea | Site Map