Gary Mead
Author
Pub. Date
2000
Physical Desc
xv, 493 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Description
"As U.S. involvement continues to be a controversial factor in contemporary conflicts around the world, The Doughboys establishes the genesis of America's internationalist role in war and in peacetime held throughout most of the 20th century. Against the background of the entrenched isolationist sentiments of the early 1900s, The Doughboys examines how America overcame its reluctance to join what was seen as an Old World conflict and become involved...
Author
Description
More than three million American men, many of them volunteers, joined the AEF in the first twenty months of US involvement in the First World War.
Of these, over 50,000 were killed on European soil. These were the Doughboys, the young men recruited from the cities and farms of the United States, who traveled across the Atlantic to aid the allies in the trenches and on the battlefields. Without their courage and determination, the outcome of the war...