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  2. Effect of World War I on children in the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effect_of_World_War_I_on...

    This involvement changed the course of the war and directly affected children's daily life, education, and family structures in the United States. [6] The home front saw a systematic mobilization of the entire population and the entire economy to produce the soldiers, food supplies, munitions, and money needed to win the war.

  3. Childhood in war - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Childhood_in_war

    The Protestant Adult Education center in Thuringia, Germany (Evangelische Erwachsenenbildung Thüringen) created a contemporary witness project in which war children have also found recognition. As part of the project, a traveling exhibition by historian Iris Helbing shows drawings by Polish war children from 1946. [ 23 ]

  4. Impact of war on children - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impact_of_war_on_children

    The number of children in armed conflict zones are around 250 million. [1] They confront physical and mental harms from war experiences. "Armed conflict" is defined in two ways according to International Humanitarian Law: "1) international armed conflicts, opposing two or more States, 2) non-international armed conflicts, between governmental forces and nongovernmental armed groups, or between ...

  5. 1914–1918 Online - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1914–1918_Online

    1914–1918 Online: International Encyclopedia of the First World War is an international, English-language online encyclopedia of the First World War.Deemed the largest research network of its kind, it officially went online on 8 October 2014. [1]

  6. Belgian refugees in Britain during the First World War

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belgian_refugees_in...

    She also built The Beeches, to provide holidays for slum children. Throughout her life she campaigned for the education and welfare of women as a convinced but non-militant suffragist. [14] An active pacifist she was the first chair of the Peace and International Relations Committee of the National Council of Women, established in 1914.

  7. Effects of war - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effects_of_war

    The first is direct effects of killing off native biota, the second is indirect effects of depriving species of resources needed to survive or even their entire habitat. [52] For humans, the use of depleted uranium (DU) by the United States military during the Persian Gulf War drew claims that the deposited DU was the cause of a cancer cluster ...

  8. Wikipedia:Featured pictures/History/World War I - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Featured...

    Directory of featured pictures Animals · Artwork · Culture, entertainment, and lifestyle · Currency · Diagrams, drawings, and maps · Engineering and technology · Food and drink · Fungi · History · Natural phenomena · People · Photographic techniques, terms, and equipment · Places · Plants · Sciences · Space · Vehicles · Other ...

  9. Canary Girls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canary_Girls

    Since most working age men were joining the military to fight in the war, women were required to take on the factory jobs that were traditionally held by men. [2] By the end of the war, there were almost three million women working in factories, around a third of whom were employed in the manufacture of munitions.

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