Guest Rick Research Posted March 15, 2007 Posted March 15, 2007 4th Company Bavarian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 12, 22 July 1915 in the Vosges:Officers just want to have fun: Infantry Regiment 53, early summer 1915
Guest Rick Research Posted March 15, 2007 Posted March 15, 2007 Someone has to MAKE it (shockingly high casualties in the Hops Fermentation Units!!!)before anybody else can drink it. Party! Party! Party down at the wagoneers' depot!
Guest Rick Research Posted March 15, 2007 Posted March 15, 2007 Beer before the war (after lights out in the barracks of Bavarian J?ger Battalion 1, 10 May 1910)Beer after the war: an implausibly dually occupied local oompah band, 1919
Riley1965 Posted March 15, 2007 Posted March 15, 2007 Rick, GREAT pics!!! It's making me thirsty I just love these period photos...Please keep 'em coming!!! Doc
Guest Rick Research Posted March 15, 2007 Posted March 15, 2007 Cigarettes are OK if being consumed WITH beer! Behind the barrackss of the Infantry Life Regiment in Munich, 9 February 1915: the origin of the now forgotten advice corollary: "...and do not DRINK yellow snow."
Jef Posted March 15, 2007 Posted March 15, 2007 Nice photographs, Rick. German soldiers were not the only ones who appreciated a glass of beer. This pic came from a familyalbum of a Belgian WWI nurse. Hope these drinking Belgian soldiers match your thread.Jef
IrishGunner Posted September 23, 2013 Posted September 23, 2013 (edited) Always worthwhile re-newing a "Rick" thread...especially one about beer. Cheers to the Master. We miss ya... Edited September 23, 2013 by IrishGunner
IrishGunner Posted September 23, 2013 Posted September 23, 2013 More beer drinkers...from Sachsen FAR 12.
E Williams Posted September 23, 2013 Posted September 23, 2013 4th Company Bavarian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 12, 22 July 1915 in the Vosges:Beer_bar...2_220715.jpg Officers just want to have fun: Infantry Regiment 53, early summer 1915IR_53_of...ks_photo.jpg Those two soldiers in front have two 'flippies" and we use to bring cases back from Grafenwohr. That was the only place that still sold them.
IrishGunner Posted September 23, 2013 Posted September 23, 2013 Those two soldiers in front have two 'flippies" and we use to bring cases back from Grafenwohr. That was the only place that still sold them. Haven't heard "flippies" in a long time, G.I. My favorite was always Flensburger from the north. A lot of small breweries still use the flip top bottle.
E Williams Posted September 23, 2013 Posted September 23, 2013 Haven't heard "flippies" in a long time, G.I. My favorite was always Flensburger from the north. A lot of small breweries still use the flip top bottle. Couldn't get them around Hanau, but we sure drank Graf dry and we carried more cases back that our trucks and tracks were more full going home than going to Graf. The guns went and returned by rail.
E Williams Posted September 25, 2013 Posted September 25, 2013 Weapon of the future... That reminds me of cases and cases of beer coming in on a pallet hanging from underneath a Chinook at our FWD firebase in Nam. One thing we had plenty of was beer, not so much potable water but beer we had plenty of.
spolei Posted September 26, 2013 Posted September 26, 2013 Hello, here two pictures from my relative. The champagne and cognac will probably ended up in the bellies of the officers.
E Williams Posted September 27, 2013 Posted September 27, 2013 Hello, here two pictures from my relative. The champagne and cognac will probably ended up in the bellies of the officers. Damn!!! You guys are bringing back memories. The picture on the left reminds me on the Sundry boxes we got occasionally filled with cigarettes, chocolate (we called them John Wayne bars) only John Wayne could eat them, writing material, toiletries; etc etc . I do believe the german soldier ate better than the other armies during the Great War, especially if you were on the Western Front.
Oiva Posted October 12, 2013 Posted October 12, 2013 I agree, we had lots of beer in rusting cans, but the water supplied by the Engineers was slightly green and Kool-Aid killed the taste. But of course, I am referring to the R.V.N. Regards, Oiva
Stuka f Posted October 13, 2013 Posted October 13, 2013 My "ritual crippled" Reservistenkrug! Belonged to a einjährige freiwilliger of the Chevaulegers-Regiment ,,Kaiser Nikolaus von Rußland” Nürnberg. Dated 98-99.
Stuka f Posted October 27, 2013 Posted October 27, 2013 Tell me about it !! My family had a brewery for many years, before WWII . Cupper , horses and carriages were confiscated by the Germans during WWII.Leaving them out of buisiness.
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