American Decades
"Over the Top": By an American Soldier Who Went
Memoir
By: Arthur Guy Empey
Date: 1917
Source: Empey, Arthur Guy. "Over the Top": By an American Soldier Who Went. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. 1917, 187–189.
About the Author: In May 1915, Arthur Guy Empey was in his office in Jersey City, New Jersey, when he read that a German U-boat had sunk the British passenger liner Lusitania, killing 1,198 people, including 128 Americans. Empey decided that because President Woodrow Wilson had not declared war on Germany, he would not enlist in the U.S. Army. Instead, he traveled to London, which was under attack by German zeppelins, and enlisted in the British army.
Introduction
In August 1914, the uneasy peace of Europe was shattered. Once the Belgians refused to grant the Germans unopposed passage through their territory, the Germans implemented the Schlieffen Plan. First devised in 1905, the plan...
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1910's Government and Politics Primary Sources
- "The New Nationalism"
- "Henry Cabot Lodge: Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine"
- "Votes for Women"
- The Yosemite
- "Composition and Characteristics of the Population for Wards of Cities of 50,000 or More: Lawrence"
- "Woodrow Wilson: The Tampico Affair"
- Family Limitation
- The Zimmermann Telegram
- Woodrow Wilson's Declaration of War Message
- "Opposition to Wilson's War Message"
- "Over the Top": By an American Soldier Who Went
- "Henry Cabot Lodge Speaks Out Against the League of Nations, Washington, D.C., August 12, 1919"
- "Statement by Emma Goldman at the Federal Hearing in Re Deportation"
- Volstead Act of 1919
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
