Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Last Soldier to Die in World War I
Episode Date: July 18, 2021At the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month of 1918, the Great War came to an end. In the preceding four years and four months, the world saw the greatest bloodletting history up un...til that point. Even after the announcement of the armistice, the war continued for several hours. During that time, soldiers still died. One, in particular, died at the very last minute of the war. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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At the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of 1918, the Great War, the War to End All Wars, came to an end.
In the preceding four and a half years and four months, the world saw the greatest bloodletting in history up until that point.
Even after the announcement of the Armistice, the war continued for several hours.
During that brief window, thousands of soldiers died.
One in particular died in the very last minute of the war.
Learn more about Sergeant Henry Gunther, the last soldier to date.
die in World War I on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may
have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
This episode is sponsored by Audible.com.
My audiobook recommendation today is The Guns of August by Barbara Tuckman.
In this Pulitzer Prize winning classic, historian Barbara Tuckman brings to life the people and events that led up to World War I.
This was the last gasp of the gilded age of kings and kaisers and czars, of pointed or plumed hats, colored uniforms,
and all the pomp and romance that went along with war.
How quickly it all changed and how horrible it became.
Tuckman masterfully portrays this transition from the 19th to 20th century,
focusing on the turning point of the year 1914,
the month leading up to the war and the first month of the war.
With fine attention to detail, she reveals how and why the war started
and why it could have been stopped but wasn't,
managing to make the story utterly suspenseful,
even when we already know the outcome.
You can get a free one-month trial to Audible and two free audiobooks
by going to audibletrial.com slash everything everywhere,
or by clicking on the link in the show notes.
By November 1918, both sides in World War I were exhausted and spent.
On September 29th, the Bulgarian signed an armistice with the Allies.
On October 30th, the Ottoman Empire had surrendered.
And on November 3rd, the Austrian-Hungarian Empire had signed their own armistice.
Germany was the last remaining central power facing the Allies.
With all other opponents vanquished, everything could now be aimed at Germany.
The Americans, who were relatively fresh, had only been in the war for about.
a year, and provided needed relief in men, equipment, and funding for the British and the French.
While the front lines had mostly been a stalemate, at least on the Western Front, for the duration of the war,
the Allies were amassing for a new offensive. The Germans, having been economically and socially
weakened from years of war, suffering from the Spanish flu pandemic of that year, and now alone,
was at its end. For over a month, the Germans had seen the writing on the wall. On September 29th,
the day that Bulgaria surrendered, the German High Command notified Kaiser Wilhelm that the situation
was hopeless. On November 3rd, a mutiny of sailors in the German port city of Kiel led to a
revolution that quickly swept through the German government. On November 8th, a train consisting
of five cars crossed from Germany into France to begin negotiations. On November 9th, the revolution
that began in Kiel resulted in the abdication of the Kaiser. On November 10th, the German negotiators
in France were informed of the abdication and were given instructions to agree to whatever terms
would end the conflict. At 5.45 in the morning, on November 11th, the armistice was signed
agreeing that all conflict would end at 11 a.m. That left five hours and 15 minutes between
when the cessation of hostilities was agreed upon and when fighting was supposed to stop. If this
had happened today, almost all parties involved would be notified almost instantly. However,
communication in 1918 wasn't as sophisticated. The announcement was made publicly at 9 a.m. in Paris
and at 10.20 a.m. in London. Most of the frontline forces had received the notification
and had ceased fighting the moment they received the news, but not all of them. Believe it or not,
many artillery units kept firing after they received the news because they didn't want to have to
deal with leftover inventory. In the event that the armistice should fall apart, many allied officers
didn't want to let up, least they give up ground.
They wanted to push the fighting as close as possible to the appointed time at 11 a.m., but not
violated.
And this was especially true of the American forces.
Just to give you an idea, the last shell fired by the U.S. Navy's long railway guns was
shot at 10, 57, and 30 seconds a.m.
It was timed such that the last shell would land just behind enemy lines before the clock struck
11. The last British soldier to die was George Edwin Ellison of the 5th Royal Irish Lancers
at 9.30 a.m. He was on a scouting assignment. The last French soldier to die was
Augustine Trebuchan, who was shot as he was running to tell his comrades that hot soup was to be
served after the shooting stopped. He died at 1045. However, the very last soldier who was believed
to have died in the First World War was an American named Henry Gunther. Gunther was a reluctant
soldier. Unlike other members of the American Expeditionary Force, he was drafted. He didn't enlist.
He was from Baltimore, Maryland, and was placed in the 313th Infantry Regiment, which was nicknamed
Baltimore's own. He was promoted to a supply sergeant and was responsible for the distribution of
clothing to other soldiers. However, he wrote a letter back home telling one of his friends how
miserable conditions were, and that he should do whatever he could to avoid being drafted.
Gunther was an ethnic German, and many were concerned that Germany.
German Americans during World War I had suspicious loyalties.
Gunther's letter didn't help that perception.
The military censors read the letter and demoted him back to private.
To make matters worse, after his demotion, his fiancé broke off their engagement.
On the morning of November 11, Henry and his unit were outside the French village of Chomont d'Ivant d'Ambilet,
when they encountered two German machine gun units.
As they were pinned down, both the Americans and Germans knew that the fighting would very soon be over.
A messenger was even sent to the Americans at 1044, telling them to cease combat in 16 minutes.
The Americans were pinned down, but all they had to do was nothing.
If they could just keep their heads down until 11 a.m., they could get up and shake hands with the Germans if they wanted.
As the clock ticked down, with one minute left to go, Henry Gunther stood up and charged the German position.
No one knew what he was doing.
The Americans were shouting at him to come back, and the Germans were shouting at him to go back.
After several attempts to get him to turn back, not knowing what he was going to do, the Germans fired, killing Gunther instantly.
The time of death for Henry Gunther was at 10.59 a.m., less than one minute before the armistice took effect.
The next day, General John Pershing, the commander of American forces, announced in his daily order that Henry Gunther was the last American killed in combat.
He was posthumously restored to the rank of sergeant and was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross.
His body was returned to Baltimore in 1923, where it was interred.
There was a great deal of controversy surrounding the last day of the war.
There were over 11,000 casualties, including 2,700 deaths on the war's last day.
That's as many people who died in the World Trade Center on September 11th.
In France, there was such shame about the last day of the war that many of the graves of French soldiers,
who died were backdated to November 10th.
An inquiry into the last day of the war
found that French field marshal Fosh
was actually the one who refused
an immediate ceasefire, which the Germans suggested.
As for Henry Gunther,
the biggest mystery was
why he did what he did.
There was no possible military objectives to be gained.
There are two theories
that have been proposed to explain his actions.
The first is that he committed suicide
by enemy fire.
If he had waited a minute longer,
it wouldn't have been possible.
He was ashamed of his demotion and depressed from losing his fiancé.
The other theory is that this was his last chance at redemption.
He saw this as a last-ditch effort to make a name for himself and to restore the honor he lost in his demotion.
We'll never know why Henry Gunther did what he did, but perhaps his ending was best summed up by the 1970 movie Patton.
In one of the last lines of the film, General George S. Patton says,
quote, there's only one proper way for a professional soldier to die,
from the last bullet of the last battle of the last war.
The associate producer of Everything Everywhere daily is Thor Thompson.
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