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- | :: The strength of the Royal Flying Corps itself went from just 1,200 at the start of the war in August 1914 to more than 144,000 by the early months of 1918;<br><br><br><br><br>THE GREAT WAR IN NUMBERS<br>By Press Association <br><br><br><br>:: These figures include those who died from injuries up to the end of 1920, while the number of wounds received by soldiers from August 4 1914, to December 31 1920, was more than 2.09 million;<br><br><br><br>:: Daily rations issued to troops in France at the beginning of the war included 1.25lbs of bread, | + | :: The strength of the Royal Flying Corps itself went from just 1,200 at the start of the war in August 1914 to more than 144,000 by the early months of 1918;<br><br><br><br><br>THE GREAT WAR IN NUMBERS<br>By Press Association <br><br><br><br>:: These figures include those who died from injuries up to the end of 1920, while the number of wounds received by soldiers from August 4 1914, to December 31 1920, was more than 2.09 million;<br><br><br><br>:: Daily rations issued to troops in France at the beginning of the war included 1.25lbs of bread, four ounces of bacon, three ounces of cheese and three ounces of sugar;<br><br><br><br>:: From the start of the war to the end of March 1919, a total of 3,080 death sentences were passed on British and Empire troops and other camp followers for offences such as desertion and mutiny, but only 346 were actually carried out;<br><br><br><br>:: As of August 31 1917, more than 591,000 horses were being used in the various theatres of war as well as more than 213,000 mules, more than 47,000 camels, 11,040 oxen and 6,810 donkeys;<br><br><br><br>: : The terrible toll the war took on the armed forces is starkly illustrated by the fact that total British and British Empire deaths reached more than 908,000;<br><br><br><br>:: [http://www.heraklionescorts.com/umraniye-escort ümraniye escort] A bombardment of the east coast of England by the German navy on December 16 1914 killed 127 civilians, including 39 children, in Hartlepool, Scarborough and Whitby, with 567 suffering injuries;<br><br><br><br>:: According to a telegram sent from Petrograd (now St Petersburg) to Copenhagen on December 20 1918, Russian losses amounted to 1.7 million dead, with nearly five million wounded or disabled and 2.5 million taken prisoner;<br><br><br><br>:: In the first six months of 1918 more than 4.5 million items, including over one million blankets and 500,000 greatcoats and leather jerkins, were cleaned and repaired;<br><br><br><br>:: Supply of hay for the horses came not just from the UK but also from Algiers, the south of France and Egypt, with nearly 2.7 million tons being shipped to France from August 9 1914 to May 1 1920;<br><br><br><br>:: His was one of 578 VCs awarded during the period August 1914 to May 1920 as part of more than 229,000 honours conferred on British forces in the field as well as 15,399 conferred on British forces for services in connection with the war;<br><br><br><br>:: In July 1916 alone - the first month of the First Battle of the Somme - there were 38,734 deaths among the British Expeditionary Force in France, with total casualties (deaths, wounded, missing, prisoners) reaching 187,372;<br><br><br><br>:: The average daily expenditure of the war [https://www.b2bmarketing.net/en-gb/search/site/reached reached] £7.45 million in the period April 1 to May 5 1917, and was still costing an average of more than £6.47 million a day in the period November 10 1918 (the day before the Armistice) to March 31 1919;<br><br><br><br>:: From August 9 1914 to November 10 1918, a total of more than 5.25 million tons of ammunition were shipped to France as well as nearly four million tons of coal;<br><br><br><br>:: The number of aerial photographs taken by the Royal Flying Corps grew from around 25,000 in 1916 to more than 2.24 million in the first 10 months of 1918;<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>e-mail <br><br><br><br><br>Meticulous monthly records were kept on every aspect of the First World War and later published, providing details not just of the fighting but the huge logistical effort involved in supplying food and equipment to millions of men in the field. |