Known as "The Great War,"
until the outbreak of World War II, World War I began
on 1 August 1914 and ended with armistice on 11 November
1918. The two warring sides were the Allies--comprised
of Russia, France, Great Britain, Italy, United States,
Japan, Romania, Belgium, Serbia, Greece, Portugal, and
Montenegro; and the Central Powers which included Germany,
Austria-Hungary, Turkey, and Bulgaria. During the course
of the war, Utahns were affected by the events in many
ways. Immigrants followed events in their warring homelands,
sent aide, volunteered to return to fight, and encouraged
other Utahns to sympathize with the side they favored.
Utah's economy prospered because of the war. New coal
mines were opened, metal and copper mining expanded,
smelters ran at or near full capacity, and farmers and
ranchers received more for their crops and animals than
any other time in recent decades.
After the United States entered the war on 6 April 1917,
many Utahns were directly affected as relatives and
friends joined the armed services or were drafted. Approximately
21,000 Utahns saw military service; of these, 665 died
and 864 were wounded. Of the 665 deaths, 219 were killed
on the battlefield or died from wounds received in action;
32 died of accidental causes; the remaining 414 died
from disease and illness. Of the 10 percent (2156) of
the Utahns who served were of foreign birth or were
members of U.S. ethnic or racial minorities. A number
of Utah women, including eighty registered nurses, served
during the war as nurses, ambulance drivers, clerical
and canteen workers.
In the summer of 1914, most Utahns were little concerned
with the rumblings of war in Europe. Most felt that
the fight had little to do with United States interests,
advocated a strict policy of neutrality, and insisted
that the United States not become embroiled in a European
conflict. There were exceptions, of course, primarily
among the Utah immigrant groups including the South
Slavs, Germans, Greeks, Italians whose homelands had
been caught up in the Great War. Utah German-Americans
openly demonstrated their sympathy for Germany, held
rallies, collected money for the German Red Cross, complained
of the virulent anti-German propaganda in most English-language
newspapers, and, in some cases returned to Germany to
fight.
As the war continued, and America's position as a neutral
became continually more difficult, especially with the
loss of 124 American lives when the passenger ship Lusitania
was sunk off the coast of Ireland in May 1915. After
the outcry against Germany over the sinking of the Lusitania,
Germany complied with American demands that ships carrying
neutral passengers and cargo be allowed to sail without
attack. By 1917, German strategists concluded that there
best hope for victory was to resume unrestricted submarine
warfare to keep essential war material from reaching
the French and English, launch an offensive along the
Western Front designed to end the nearly three years
of stalemate, and to seek a secret alliance with Mexico
which would restore to that nation the territory (including
Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, and California) lost to the
United States in 1848. Faced with these events, President
Woodrow Wilson saw no other option than to ask Congress
for a declaration of war against Germany, which was
passed on 6 April 1917.
Even before war was officially declared, Governor Simon
Bamberger issued a proclamation on 24 March 1917 calling
for Utahns to enlist in the Utah National Guard. Four
months after war was declared, the Utah National Guard
was drafted into Federal Service on 5 August 1917, sent
to California, and then on to Europe where Utahns saw
action along in the Argonne Forest, and at Chateau Thierry,
Champagne, Soissons, St. Mihiel, Verdun, and other locations
on the Western front.
World War I helped bring Utah into the mainstream of
American life as much as anything during the first two
decades of the twentieth century. As part of the national
war effort, Utahns planted "victory gardens,"
preserved food, volunteered for work in the beet fields
and on Utah's fruit farms, purchased Liberty Bonds,
gave "Four Minute patriotic speeches, collected
money for the Red Cross, used meat and sugar substitutes,
observed meatless days, knitted socks, afghans, and
shoulder wraps, wove rugs for soldiers' hospitals, made
posters, prohibited the teaching of the German language
in some schools, and cultivated patriotism at every
opportunity.
Utah's economy prospered as wartime demands for farm
and orchard produce, sugar, beef, coal, and copper placed
a demand on production far beyond peacetime conditions.
Fort Douglas was an important military facility during
the War. Thousands of recruits were trained at the fort
and a prison was set up at the fort to house 870 enemy
aliens, who had expressed pro-German sentiments or were
considered dangerous, and as well as draft resisters
from all states west of the Mississippi. An adjacent
but separate part of the prison housed 686 German naval
prisoners of war, who were sent to Utah after their
ships were seized by American forces in Guam and Hawaii.
Most Utah servicemen returned home early in 1919 to
cheering crowds, impressive parades, enthusiastic celebrations,
and generous parties even though the influenza epidemic
necessitated some precautions. Many joined the American
Legion as posts were established in most Utah cities
and towns. They were honored when the nation proclaimed
11 November as Armistice Day, a national holiday, and
were moved when "Memory Grove," located along
City Creek at the mouth of City Creek Canyon just north
of the downtown Salt Lake City, was dedicated on 27
June 1924, as a permanent memorial to the soldiers killed
during the war.
Like many other Americans, Utahns became disillusioned
with the formal peace treaty ending the war. They were
also divided over Woodrow Wilson's primary objective,
the establishment of the League of Nations. Heber J.
Grant, who became President of the LDS church in 1918,
was an advocate of the League of Nations while Reed
Smoot, an LDS apostle and Utah's senior senator in Washington
D.C. was an outspoken critic of the League. The war
was something that many seemed to never really understand,
a situation that hampered international cooperation
and understanding and led to increased tensions and
another war within a generation.
Allan Kent Powell