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WW1 Centennial News 2-PART SPECIAL : Episode #38 - “In Sacrifice for Liberty and Peace” Part 2 - America Declares War.
This is another special feature presentation of the WW1 Centennial News Podcast.
Welcome to PART II of “In Sacrifice for Liberty and Peace”.
This two part special is an adaptation from a live staged event the Commission produced on the April 6, 2017 centennial of America’s entry into: “ war that changed the world”.
Edward Bilous as the artistic director, and Chris Christopher as the US WW1 Centennial Commission’s executive producer pulled together an amazing group of artists, historians musician, actors, and others for a live performance staged at the National WWI Museum and Memorial in Kansas City to an audience of over 3,000 attendees.
For this 2-part special we have excerpted key moments from the story that unfolds, the music that was performed and the readings from a cast of amazing actors, orators, musicians and other luminaries.
In Part 1 we examined the great debate in America about getting into the war, and today, in Part 2, we present how events overtook the debate and as America declared its entry into WW1.----more----
Talent CreditsThis podcast was adapted from the live event
In Sacrifice for Liberty and Peace:
Centennial Commemoration of the US entry into WWI
Credits for the live event include:
Edward Bilous
Artistic Director
John Rensenhouse
Narrator
Michelle DiBucci
Music Director
Sarah Outhwaite
Video Designer
Carlos Murillo
Script and Adaptation
Greg Kalember
Music Producer, Mix Engineer, Sound Design
Portia Kamons
Executive Artistic Producer
For Virtua Creative
Shelby Rose
Producer, Media and Special Events
For Virtua Creative
Dale Morehouse
Speaker
Carla Noack
Speaker
David Paul
Pre-Recorded Speaker
Janith English
Principal Chief of the Wyandot Nation of Kansas
Sergeant Debra Kay Mooney
Choctaw Nation
Col. Gerald York
Grandson of Sergeant Alvin C. York
Deborah York
Great-Granddaughter of Sergeant Alvin C. York
Noble Sissle Jr.
Son of Noble Sissle
Featuring Musical Performances by
1st Infantry Division Band
Michael Baden
John Brancy
Francesco Centano
Billy Cliff
Peter Dugan
Ramona Dunlap
Lisa Fisher
Samantha Gossard
Adam Holthus
Christopher T. McLaurin
Chrisi Poland
Aaron Redburn
Reuben Allen
Matt Rombaum
Alan Schwartz
Yang Thou
Charles Yang
Alla Wijnands
Bram Wijnands
Cast
(In Alphabetical Order)
Freddy Acevedo
Yetunde Felix-Ukwu
Jason Francescon
Khalif Gillett
Emilie Karas
Chelsea Kisner
Christopher Lyman
Marianne McKenzie
Victor Raider-Wexler
Artillery Master
Charles B. Wood
MEDIA CREDITSNational World War I Museum and Memorial: TheWorldWar.org
Library of Congress: LOC.gov
New York Public Library: DigitalCollections.nypl.org
National Archives: Archives.gov
National Historic Geographic Information System: NHGIS.org
State Library of New South Wales: SL.nsw.gov.au
Imperial War Museums: IWM.org.uk
National Museum of African American History and Culture: NMAAHC.si.edu
The Sergeant York Patriotic Foundation and the York Family: SgtYork.org
Australian War Memorial: AWM.gov.au
National Media Museum: NationalMediaMuseum.org.uk
Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library Archive: WoodrowWilson.org
Mathers Museum of World Culture: Mathers.indiana.edu
Front Page Courtesy of The New York Times Company
PODCAST
THEO MAYER
WW1 Centennial News is brought to you by the U.S. World War I Centennial Commission and the Pritzker Military Museum and Library. I’m Theo Mayer - the Chief Technologist for the Commission and your host. Before we get into the main part of the show - - Let me try to set it up:
[SOUND EFFECT - WAYBACK MACHINE]
We have gone back in time to January 1917.
Late last year, in 1916, Woodrow Wilson ran for president under the slogan “He Kept us Out Of War” and “America First” and he won - by a slim margin. In Western Europe, Eastern Europe, the middle east and other areas around the world - All tied together by colonial imperialism - the war rages on!
NARRATOR
Not long after the election of 1916, events would unfold at a rapid pace, until the United States reached a tipping point where isolationism could no longer be an option.
January 19, 1917 – Arthur Zimmerman, Foreign Secretary of the German Empire, sent a telegram to German Ambassador to Mexico, proposing an alliance between Germany and Mexico in the event of US entry into the War.
ZIMMERMAN
"We intend to begin on the first of February unrestricted submarine warfare. We shall endeavor in
spite of this to keep the United States of America neutral. In the event of this not succeeding, we make Mexico a proposal of alliance... make war together, make peace together... and an understanding... that Mexico is to reconquer the lost territory in Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona.... You will inform the President of the above... as soon as the outbreak of war with the United States of America is certain...."
NARRATOR
The British Admiralty, which had cracked German diplomatic cipher systems, decoded the message
within hours. Seeking to influence the American government, the British provided the Americans a copy of the telegram. On the 28t h of February, President Wilson released the telegram to the press. The appearance of the news nationwide on March 1s t galvanized American support for entry into the war.
January 31, 1917, Robert Lansing, Secretary of State, received a note from the German Ambassador to the United States.
GERMAN AMBASSADOR
A new situation has... been created which forces Germany to new decisions.... England is using
her naval power for a criminal attempt to force Germany into submission by starvation. In brutal contempt of international law, the... powers led by England..., by ruthless pressure, compel neutral countries either to altogether forego every trade not agreeable to the Entente Powers, or to limit it according to their arbitrary decrees.
From February 1, 1917, sea traffic will be stopped with every available weapon and without further notice....
NARRATOR
This message from the German Ambassador directly contravened the German guarantee to Wilson that ended unrestricted submarine warfare following the sinking of the Lusitania in 1915. Coupled with the Zimmerman telegram, Germany’s renewed aggression decisively changed American attitudes about the war. On February 3, 1917, the United States formally ended diplomatic relations with Imperial Germany.
On February 25, 1917, the Cunard Line ship Laconia was struck by German Torpedoes. Floyd Gibbons, an American correspondent for the Chicago Tribune, was on board and lived to describe the scene:
FLOYD GIBBONS
At 10:30 p.m., there was a muffled noise. Five sharp blasts – the signal to abandon. We walked
hurriedly down the corridor ... to the lounge which was amidships. We moved fast but there was no crowding and no panic.
...we looked down the slanting side of the ship and noticed ... her water line ... was a number of feet above the waves. ... the lifeboats... rested against the side of the ship.... I could see that we were going to have difficulty in the descent to the water.
‘Lower away!’ someone gave the order and we started downward ... toward the seemingly hungry... swells. The stern of the boat was down; the bow up, leaving us at an angle of about 45 degrees....
The tiers of lights dimmed slowly from white to yellow, then to red, and nothing was left but the murky mourning of the night..... The ship sank rapidly at the stern until at last its nose stood straight in the air. Then it slid silently down and out of sight....
NARRATOR
Austin Y. Hoy, a Chicago machinery company executive working in London, cabled President
Woodrow Wilson after the sinking of the LACONIA:
AUSTIN HOY
My beloved mother and sister, passengers on the LACONIA, have been foully murdered.... I call
upon my government to preserve its citizens’ self-respect and save others of my countrymen from such deep grief as I now feel. I am of military age, able to fight. If my country can use me against these brutal assassins, I am at its call.
If it stultifies my manhood and my nation’s by remaining passive under outrage, I shall seek a man’s chance under another flag.
NARRATOR
Events abroad also served to tip American opinion. The fall of the Russian Tsar's regime on March
15, 1917 resulted in a greater moral clarity for the Allied cause: the war was now a struggle of democratic nations against autocratic empires.
Despite the passions aroused by the Zimmerman telegram and the resumption of unrestricted submarine warfare, Wilson himself had no personal desire to bring the US into conflict in Europe. Wilson told a journalist off the record:
WILSON
If there is any alternative, for God’s sake, let’s take it!
NARRATOR
March 20. Wilson confers with his cabinet. They unanimously vote for War.
March 21. Wilson calls Congress into special session for April the 2n d .
On the evening of April the second, 1917, President Wilson addresses a joint session of Congress asking for a Declaration of War.
WILSON
“While we do these momentous things, let us make very clear to all the world what our motives
are. Our object, now as then, is to vindicate the principles of peace and justice as against selfish and autocratic power. Neutrality is no longer feasible or desirable where the peace of the world is involved and the freedom of its peoples, and the menace to that peace and freedom lies in the existence of autocratic governments. We have seen the last of neutrality. We are at the beginning of an age in which it will be insisted that the same standards of conduct and of responsibility for wrong done shall be observed among nations and their governments that are observed among the individual citizens of civilized states.”
NARRATOR
The Congress rose to its feet and applauded enthusiastically. Cheering crowds lined the streets as Wilson departed from the Capitol. As author Byron Farwell wrote:
FARWELL QUOTE
It was the greatest speech of Wilson’s life. At about 10:00, when the president had returned to the White House, he and his wife had dinner with friends, after which Wilson wandered into the empty cabinet room. His secretary, Joseph Tumulty, found him there: ‘Think what they were applauding,’ he said to Tumulty. ‘My message today was a message of death for our young men. How strange it seems to applaud that.’ He put his head down on the table in the Cabinet Room, and sobbed.’
NARRATOR
Still, in the face of aggression, there were voices of opposition. Arkansas Senator George Norris:
SENATOR NORRIS
Belligerency would benefit only the class of people who will be made prosperous should we become entangled in the present war, who have already made millions..., and who will make hundreds of millions more if we get into the war. To whom does the war bring prosperity? Not to the soldier. Not to the broken hearted widow. Not to the mother who weeps at the death of her brave boy.... I feel that we are about to put the dollar sign on the American Flag.”
NARRATOR
The Senate passed the War Resolution with only three Republicans and three Democrats opposed.
The House voted 373 for, with 50 opposed. Jeanette Rankin, the first woman to serve in Congress, and the lone female Representative, voted against the resolution.
The approved Declaration of War was sent to President Wilson on April 6, 1917. At 1pm that day he signed:
“Approved 6 April, 1917, Woodrow Wilson.”
DEBORAH YORK
As the country mobilized, we leave you with the voices of two soldiers:
PERSHING
Major General John J. Pershing to President Woodrow Wilson, April 10, 1917:
“Dear Mr. President:
As an officer of the army, may I not extend to you, as Commander-in-Chief of the armies, my sincere congratulations upon your soul-stirring patriotic address to Congress on April 2d. Your strong stand for the right will be an inspiration to humanity everywhere, but especially to the citizens of the Republic. It arouses in the breast of every soldier feelings of the deepest admiration for their leader.
I am exultant that my life has been spent as a soldier, in camp and field, that I may now the more worthily and more intelligently serve my country and you.
With great respect,
Your obedient servant, JOHN J. PERSHING
Major General, U.S. Army
DEBORAH YORK
And from the diary of Sergeant York serialized in Liberty magazine in 1927:
SERGEANT YORK
I had no time to bother much about a lot of foreigners quarrelling and killing each other over in
Europe. I just wanted to be left alone to live in peace and love. I wasn’t planning my life any other way. ... I figured that if some people in the Wolf River Valley were quarrelling... it wasn’t any of my business to go and interfere, and Europe was much further away.... I never dreamed we’d go over there to fight. So I didn’t pay much attention to it. I didn’t let it bother me until I received from the post office a little red card telling me to register for the draft. That’s how the war came to me, in the midst of all my peace and happiness and dreams, which I felt all along were too good to be true, and just couldn’t last.”
THEO MAYER
In the meantime, the popular music of the time begins to address the American soldier, his image and his place in the world.
IF HE CAN FIGHT LIKE HE CAN LOVE, GOOD NIGHT, GERMANY!
If he can fight like he can love,
Oh what a soldier boy he’ll be!
If he’s just have as good in the trench As he was in the park or on a bench,
Then ev’ry Hun had better run
And find a great big linden tree
I know he’ll be a hero ‘over there’ ‘Cause he’s a bear in any Morris chair And if he fights like he can love
Why, then it’s goodnight, Germany!
Verse 2
Ev’ry single day all the papers say, Mary’s beau is, oh, so brave
With his little gun, chasing ev’ry Hun He has taught them to behave
Little Mary proudly shakes her head,
And says, “Do you remember what I said?”
Chorus
If he can fight like he can love,
Oh what a soldier boy he’ll be!
If he’s just have as good in the trench As he was in the park or on a bench, Then ev’ry Hun had better run
And find a great big linden tree
I know he’ll be a hero ‘over there’ ‘Cause he’s a bear in any Morris chair And if he fights like he can love
Why, then it’s goodnight, Germany!
ANNOUNCER
I Have A Rendezvous With Death (POEM: No Music or Sound)
I have a rendezvous with Death
At some disputed barricade,
When Spring comes back with rustling shade And apple-blossoms fill the air—
I have a rendezvous with Death
When Spring brings back blue days and fair.
It may be he shall take my hand
And lead me into his dark land
And close my eyes and quench my breath— It may be I shall pass him still.
I have a rendezvous with Death
On some scarred slope of battered hill, When Spring comes round again this year And the first meadow-flowers appear.
God knows ‘twere better to be deep Pillowed in silk and scented down, Where love throbs out in blissful sleep, Pulse nigh to pulse, and breath to breath, Where hushed awakenings are dear...
But I’ve a rendezvous with Death
At midnight in some flaming town, When Spring trips north again this year, And I to my pledged word am true,
I shall not fail that rendezvous.
THEO MAYER
And so America goes to war and takes her place on the world stage. Nothing would be same again as the country heads into the most rapid and profound transformation of her young existence.
World War 1 Centennial news is here to tell you the story - We will explore WW1 Centennial News THEN - what was happening 100 years ago this week. And we will explore WW1 Centennial News NOW - what is happening today with the centennial commemoration of the war that changed the world.
And so it begins
[MUSIC]
That was Part 2 of our special feature presentation of “In Sacrifice for Liberty and Peace” our 2-part special of America’s reluctant entry into World War 1.
The US World War One Centennial Commission was created by Congress to honor, commemorate and educate about WW1.
Our programs are to--
inspire a national conversation and awareness about WW1;
Our podcast and these specials are a part of that endeavor
We are bringing the lessons of the 100 years ago into today's classrooms;
We are helping to restore WW1 memorials in communities of all sizes across our country;
and of course we are building America’s National WW1 Memorial in Washington DC.
If you like the work we are doing, please support it with a tax deductible donation at ww1cc.org/donate - all lower case
Or if you are on your smartphone text the word: WW1 to 41444. that's the letters ww the number 1 texted to 41444. Any amount is appreciated.
We want to thank commission’s founding sponsor the Pritzker Military Museum and Library for their support.
The podcast can be found on our website at ww1cc.org/cn
on iTunes and google play ww1 Centennial News.
Our twitter and instagram handles are both @ww1cc and we are on facebook @ww1centennial.
Thanks for listening to this special presentation of WW1 Centennial News…
A full list of the many talented people who contributed to this production is in the podcast notes.
[OVER THERE]
So long.
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