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  2. Maconochie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maconochie

    A soldier named Calcutt claimed "the Maconochie's stew ration gave the troops flatulence of a particularly offensive nature." though we reckoned in the trenches the Maconochie tin of meat and veg was a banquet in its own way, but most of the contractors who fed us should have had their money stuffed into a couple of kit-bags round their necks ...

  3. Military rations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_rations

    In World War I, both Allied and Central Powers soldiers had relatively sufficient food supplies due to the static nature of trench warfare. British, French, Canadian, and ANZAC soldiers were regularly issued "dull" foods such as bully beef, biscuits, pudding, and Maconochie (tinned meat, potato, and vegetable stew), the latter of which was ...

  4. Trench rats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trench_rats

    Lice can also transmit disease and played a role in spreading trench fever amongst the soldiers. [7] Trench rats also gnawed on those who were wounded, sleeping or unable to protect themselves. In one instance, a British soldier recounted in an interview that one of his fellow countrymen had his forehead bitten while he had been asleep, with ...

  5. British military rations during the French and Indian War

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Military_Rations...

    During the French and Indian War, British military rations contained enough food energy to sustain the soldier in garrison but suffered from a lack of vitamins that could lead to nutritional deficiencies if not supplemented by the soldiers themselves through garden produce or purchase. During field conditions, the energy content tended to be ...

  6. Field ration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field_ration

    The contents of a Bundeswehr field ration from 1974. A typical field ration consists of: An entrée or main course, typically full meals consisting of preserved and nonperishable precooked meat, vegetables, legumes, grains, rice, or staple foods; dehydrated soup or broth may also be offered, often in the form of bouillon cubes

  7. Tommy cooker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tommy_cooker

    Anglo's Trench Fires Folding tin stove fuelled by solid fuel tablets and retailed under the name "Anglo's Trench Fires". Contained in a card box with the slogan "A boon for dugouts, tents and trenches" Tommy's Cooker One WWI soldier advised that an extra tin of fuel should be provisioned: "My Pack contained the following items. ...

  8. British soldiers in the eighteenth century - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_soldiers_in_the...

    A soldier would have to pay for food and forage beyond the supplied rations – and for any other extras such as beer – out of his wage. A loaf of bread usually cost around 5d, while a dragoon soldier, earning 1s 6d daily, would have paid 6d for a ration of forage consisting of 18 lb ( 8 kg ) of hay and one peck ( 16 dry pints ) of oats. [ 56 ]

  9. Christmas truce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_truce

    The 1997 song ‘Belleau Wood’ by Garth Brooks depicts soldiers leaving their trenches to sing carols together and braving the risk of being shot by their enemies to do so. The truce is dramatised in the 2005 French film Joyeux Noël (Merry Christmas), depicted through the eyes of French, British and German soldiers. [74]