2: “The Lamps Are Going Out”: Sir Edward Grey Recalls the British Declaration of War on Germany, August 3, 1914.
3: Events During the Early War, 1914–1915.
4: Submarine Warfare: Account of German Lieutenant Otto Weddigen, September 22, 1914.
5: Julian Grenfell on World War I, October 1914 and April 1915.
6: German Rear Admiral: Paul Schlieper on the Fall of Qingdao, November 7, 1914.
7: Two Accounts of the Christmas Day: Truce, December 24–25, 1914.
8: Havildar Sohan Singh’s: Testimony on the Singapore Mutiny, February 1915.
9: Mary Roberts Rinehart, “Night in the Trenches,” Saturday Evening Post, May 8, 1915.
10: Charles E. Lauriat Jr., Account of the Sinking of the Lusitania, May 7, 1915.
11: Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett, Letter to British Prime Minister Herbert Henry Asquith on Gallipoli, September 8, 1915.
12: Fighting at the Front.
13: Captain H. D. Trounce, Account of Mining and Countermining, November 1918.
14: Zeppelin Bombing Raids on Britain William Leefe Robinson, Combat Report, September 3, 1916, and Muriel Dayrell-Browning, Letter to Her Mother, September 4, 1916.
15: The Early Years of Military Aviation First Lieutenant Jack Morris Wright, Letter to His Mother, January 22, 1918.
16: Harold A. Littledale, “With the Tanks,” December 1918.
17: Recollections of Lieutenant Bob Hoffman, 111th U.S. Infantry, 28th Division, August 1918.
18: Frank W. Weed, Reports on Shell Shock in the U.S. Army, 1918.
19: U.S. Soldiers Describe the Effects of Gas, 1921.
20: Women and World War I.
21: Emmeline Pankhurst, Open Letter to Members of the Women’S Social and Political Union, August 12, 1914.