The Christmas Truce – 1914

Armistice Day football match at Dale Barracks between German soldiers and Royal Welsh fusiliers    

by Carolyn Thomas        @HeartSisters

As World War I raged on in the trenches of Europe in 1914, Christmas Eve arrived cold and bleak. But German soldiers put up Christmas trees decorated with candles on the parapets of their trenches. Although their enemies, the British soldiers, could see the lights, it took them a few minutes to figure out where they were from. Could this be a trick?

British soldiers were ordered not to fire, but to watch closely. Instead of trickery, however, the British soldiers heard the Germans singing carols and celebrating. Here’s what one young soldier wrote home about this remarkable event:    

“Time and again during the course of that day, the Eve of Christmas, there were wafted towards us from the trenches opposite the sounds of singing and merry-making, and occasionally the guttural tones of a German were to be heard shouting out lustily, ‘A happy Christmas to you, Englishmen!’ Only too glad to show that the sentiments were reciprocated, back would go the response from a thick-set Clydesider, ‘Same to you, Fritz, but dinna o’er eat yourself wi’ they sausages!’

“They finished their carol and we thought that we ought to retaliate in some way, so we sang ‘The First Noël’ and when we finished that, they all began clapping; and then they struck up another favourite of theirs, ‘O Tannenbaum’.

“And so it went on. First the Germans would sing one of their carols, and then we would sing one of ours, until when we started up ‘O Come All Ye Faithful’ and the Germans immediately joined in singing the same hymn to the Latin words ‘Adeste Fidéles’. And I thought, well, this was really a most extraordinary thing – two nations both singing the same carol in the middle of a war.

In many separate instances up and down the front line, German soldiers began yelling over to their enemy, “Tommy, you come over and see us!”  Still cautious, the British soldiers would rally back, “No, you come here!”

In some parts of the line, representatives of each side would meet in the middle, in No Man’s Land.

“What a sight – little groups of Germans and British extending almost the length of our front! Out of the darkness, we could hear laughter and see lighted matches, a German lighting a Scotchman’s cigarette and vice versa, exchanging cigarettes and souvenirs. Where they couldn’t talk the language, they were making themselves understood by signs, and everyone seemed to be getting on nicely. Here we were laughing and chatting to men whom only a few hours before we were trying to kill!”

Some of those who went out to meet the enemy in the middle of No Man’s Land on Christmas Eve or on Christmas Day negotiated a truce:

“We won’t fire if you won’t fire.”

One reason that the Christmas truce was said to be negotiated was in order to bury the dead, many of whom had been there for several months. Along with the revelry that celebrated Christmas was the sad and sombre job of burying their fallen comrades. On Christmas day, British and German soldiers appeared on No Man’s Land and sorted through the bodies.

The soldiers talked, shared family pictures, exchanged items such as buttons for food. A remarkable example was a soccer game played in the middle of No Man’s Land between the Bedfordshire Regiment and German soldiers. A member of the Bedfordshire Regiment produced a ball and the large group of soldiers played until the ball was deflated when it hit a barbed wire entanglement.

The strange and unofficial truce lasted for several days. For decades this amazing show of Christmas cheer was thought to be the only wartime truce of its kind, but Scottish historian Professor Thomas Weber told an interviewer from the U.K.’s Telegraph that he had discovered “a surprising number” of references to truces well beyond 1914.  He mapped out a phenomenon that “wartime censors, commanding officers and a post-war generation battling with the meaning of the war did not want us to see”.

His research suggests that there could have been more than 100 truces on all fronts after 1914. One such example is a 1916 truce between German and Canadian troops at Vimy Ridge in northern France. The official version recorded by one regiment, Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry, stated that the Germans’ attempts to interact with them were roundly ignored.

But one Canadian soldier, Ronald MacKinnon of the Princess Pats, gave a different account in a letter home:

“I had quite a good Xmas considering I was in the front line. Xmas eve was pretty stiff, sentry-go up to the hips in mud of course. We had a truce on Xmas Day and our German friends were quite friendly. They came over to see us and we traded bully beef for cigars.”

“Nothing is worth more than this day.” – Goethe

Originally published here at Heart Sisters on December 24, 2009 – and reposted here every Christmas season since.

 

Happy Christmas, dear readers.  Wishing you good health in 2021.

NOTE FROM CAROLYN:  Thank you to all of who you have taken the time to let me know that you have read, purchased, borrowed or otherwise enjoyed my book A Woman’s Guide to Living with Heart Disease  (Johns Hopkins University Press). You can ask for this book at your local library or favourite bookshop, or order it online (paperback, hardcover or e-book) at Amazon or order it directly from Johns Hopkins University Press, where you can save 20% by using their code HTWN.

7 thoughts on “The Christmas Truce – 1914

  1. Thank you for sharing this. There has also been a song written about this event by John McCutcheon’s “Christmas in the Trenches.”

    Here is a link to a friend of mine who also recorded John’s song. It is so beautiful. I cry almost every time I hear it.

    The tragedy about war – as this song so clearly states is that those who are fighting the wars are often just pawns of those who are calling the “shots”.
    Enjoy.
    Lisa Marie

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hello Lisa Marie – thank so much for sending that link to your friend Sara Thomsen’s song. I love it, and what a wonderful voice she has!

      War is indeed all about tragedy, even as Sara sings: “at both ends of the rifle, we’re the same. . . ”

      Take care, and stay safe. . . . ♥

      Like

  2. Lovely! Coincidentally, I had just finished watching a clip from “A Christmas Truce” before reading this. Thank you for sending us this heart-warming story on this strangely small and isolated Christmas Day. Our Christmas may be small this year, but if those in the trenches found a way to rejoice through their circumstances, we surely can too!

    Wishing you a Very Merry Little Christmas, Carolyn, and many blessings for 2021!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you Coleyna – and a very merry Little Christmas wish to you as well! The beauty of this truce story, and as historians tell us, this truce was just one of many during that war! – is just as you say, finding a way to rejoice despite the horrors of combat. What most of us have gone through since springtime is not nearly as awful, and I hope by this time next year, we’ll be looking back on this pandemic with relief.
      Meanwhile, take care and stay safe. . . ♥

      Like

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