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This reminiscence was penned by a British woman who worked as a stenographer at the American embassy in London. She recalled much of what she saw from her chair in the typing pool on that hectic August day in 1914 when the First World War began:

“As I opened the front door to let myself out, a Foreign Office special messenger handed me a note, marked ‘Immediate’, addressed to the Ambassador….It was the official declaration:


“The Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs presents his compliments to the American Ambassador, and begs to inform his Excellency that a state of war exists between His Majesty’s Government and that of Germany.


Click here to read about the African-American soldiers who served in France.


KEY WORDS: US Embassy in London August August 1914,Memoir of American Embassy in London on the First Day of WW1,WW1 Diplomatic Memoir 1914,Irwin Laughlin US Embassy London August 1914,US Ambassador Walter Hines Page,History Article Regarding US Embassy in London August 1914,first day of ww1 in London,American Embassy under Ambassador Walter Hines Page

Read What the Stenographer Saw… (Atlantic Monthly, 1930) for Free
Read What the Stenographer Saw… (Atlantic Monthly, 1930) for Free