Americans in a Splintering Europe: Refugees, Missionaries and Journalists in World War I

Americans in a Splintering Europe: Refugees, Missionaries and Journalists in World War I

by Mark Strecker (Author), Mark Strecker (Author)

Synopsis

World War I started in August 1914, but the United States did not enter it until April 6, 1917. The outbreak causes thousands of American civilians to become refugees desperate to get away from the warzone. American journalists, on the other hand, rushed to Europe to cover the fighting, many of them quite eccentric. Richard Harding Davis, for example, had a fear of women and carried a passport with a photo of him wearing a faux military uniform that nearly got him shot by the Germans as a spy.

In the Ottoman Empire and Persia (Iran), American missionaries lived in isolated areas with little infrastructure, the very places from which the Ottomans began deporting the Empire's Armenians east to the desert where those not outright massacred were expected to die of thirst and hunger. In Van, Doctor Clarence D. Ussher did what he could to aid the city's Armenians under siege by the Ottoman army, though in the end he and other U.S. citizens had to flee for their lives. American missionaries in the city of Urmia faced a similar crisis when the Ottomans forced the Russians out of the area.

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More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 132
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: McFarland
Published: 30 Nov 2018

ISBN 10: 147667602X
ISBN 13: 9781476676029

Author Bio
Researcher Mark Strecker writes about current and historical events on his website, Mark Strecker's Historical Perspective (markstrecker.com). He lives in Norwalk, Ohio.