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Almost twenty years after World War I came to a close, Americans collectively wondered as they began to think about all the empty chairs assembled around so many family dinner tables, “Do the French care at all that we sacrificed so much? Do they still remember that we were there?” In response to this question, an American veteran who remained in France, submitted the attached article to “The American Legion Monthly” and answered those questions with a resounding “Yes”:

“…I can assure you that the real France, the France of a thousand and one villages in which we were billeted; the France of Lorraine peasants, of Picardy craftsmen, of Burgundy winegrowers – remembers, with gratitude, the A.E.F. and its contribution to the Allied victory.”

The article is accompanied by eight photographs of assembled Frenchmen decorating American grave sites.


Click here to read about the foreign-born soldiers who served in the American Army of the First World War.


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Read American W.W. I  Cemeteries and  French Gratitude (American Legion Monthly, 1936) for Free