Americans in Flanders Fields

1914-1919

  • museum café
  • book launch

About

American involvement in Belgium during the First World War was diverse and extensive. Before the United States' official participation in April 1917, thousands of Americans were already active on or behind the front lines of occupied and unoccupied Belgium, be it as journalists, diplomats, aid workers, nurses, surgeons or soldiers in one of the Allied armies. In 1918, four US divisions passed through Flanders. Some of their casualties were given a final resting place in Waregem after the war, but an even larger number were repatriated to the United States or to a country of origin. In

Americans in Flanders Fields
1914-1919

the In Flanders Fields Museum's new List of Names essay brings together for the first time all American casualties in a historical analysis. Here, Pieter Trogh and Dominiek Dendooven American cover extensively the non-military presence in Belgium between 1914-1917; the US military presence in Belgium; the casualties, their origins and their remembrance; and the lasting legacies of US-Belgian relations through the prism of the First World War.

Neil Brand and Dr Michael Hammond will perform some songs from their programme 'Blues in the Trenches' before and after the lecture. The songs will be historically contextualised.

After the lecture you can visit the exhibition "Americans in Flanders Fields". Afterwards, the museum will offer you a drink and you can buy the new publication.

practical

- Thursday 28 march
- 7pm
- IFFM museum café 

register

AmericansIFF