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Archive recordings of the tunnellers who fought underground in WW1. They would dig tunnels under no-mans-land to detonate explosives under enemy positions. Show more Archive recordings of the ...
Archive recordings of the tunnellers who fought underground in WW1. They would dig tunnels under no-mans-land to detonate explosives under enemy positions. It was extremely dangerous work. During ...
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The underrated WW1 films that are ‘twins' - but one 'falls flat'Based on a true story, it depicts tunnellers on the front line in Belgium in 1917. Allied units burrowed under German lines and blew up strategic positions.
9: They were the first New Zealanders on the Western Front, arriving in France in the cold spring of 1916.
Waihī miners’ ties with WW1 French tunnellers commemorated in visit by French dignitaries ...
The horrors of the trenches are well-documented but less is known of the tunnellers, the men who fought in 3ft tunnels beneath the front line.
Efforts are being made to trace the descendants of a Swansea soldier whose story helped inspire a memorial to tunnellers killed in World War I. Thomas Collins was working 40ft under no man's land in ...
A memorial to the brave New Zealand tunnellers who built a vast underground city used by thousands of British troops during WW1 was unveiled last weekend in France.
The underrated WW1 films that are ‘twins’ – but one 'falls flat' The two movies are said to be similar but one is preferred by some over the other.
Squatting in the fetid darkness of a damp tunnel, Sapper William Hackett strained to listen to the faint thumps in the wet earth around him.
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