333,000 Australian troops were sent overseas during the First World War. There were 226,000 casualties.
Saturday, February 02, 2008
Statistic of the day
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
That whenever any form of Government becomes destructive of those ends,
it is the right of the People to alter or abolish it and to institute new Government.
333,000 Australian troops were sent overseas during the First World War. There were 226,000 casualties.
5 comments:
Australians like to tell you that they took proportionately more casualties than everyone else but it isn't true. Among the allies, it was the Serbs. Within the British Empire it was the Scots. (See Nial Ferguson's book on WWI.) Australian understanding of their own history is lamentably poor in my experience.
The source is American, but more on it later.
If you click through, it says "In memoriam of thoses, anzacs, turks, frenchs who lost their lives in Gallipoli." See who's missing?
Courtesy of Wikipedia
Gallipoli casualties
(compiled from various sources[attribution needed])
Died Wounded Total
Total Allies 44,072 97,037 141,113
UK 21,255 52,230 73,489France (est) 10,000 17,000 27,000Australia 7,594 20,000 27,594NZ 2,701 4,546 7,247India 1,358 3,421 4,779
Newfoundland 49 93 142
Ottoman Emp. 55,801 95,000 140,001
I've swapped the last two columns for the Ottoman figures because they were obviously the wrong way round in the table.
This source wasn't Australian, Dearieme. It was American, and from WWII.
Post a Comment