Letters Of A Chasseur À Pied

Nonfiction, History, Military, World War I, Germany, British
Cover of the book Letters Of A Chasseur À Pied by Sergeant Robert Pellissier, Lucknow Books
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Sergeant Robert Pellissier ISBN: 9781782893035
Publisher: Lucknow Books Publication: August 15, 2014
Imprint: Lucknow Books Language: English
Author: Sergeant Robert Pellissier
ISBN: 9781782893035
Publisher: Lucknow Books
Publication: August 15, 2014
Imprint: Lucknow Books
Language: English

The amazing story of a French American teacher who left his life at Stanford college to volunteer for the French Army, in the elite chasseurs-à-pied, during the First World War.
Although born in France Robert Pellissier in 1882, he moved to America in 1882 to live with his sister. A gifted scholar of ardent professionalism, he studied at Harvard and taught at Williston College and Stanford. However when war broke out in Europe his morals would not allow him to sit idly by whilst France was invaded and European civilisation was under assault. He wrote home obsessively, to his parents, his fiancée and his colleagues describing with great passion the fight for justice that he had embarked on. Filling with wry humour, contemporary political commentary, and most often an sense of the insanity of war. For example, with bitter irony, he quotes the idiocy of an the outdated war manual he had been given in one of his letters-’Any disengaged body of troops should right away march to the firing line’- a death sentence in the trenches!
In late 1914 he was posted to the inhospitable mountainous region in the north of France the Vosges, after an abortive offensive earlier the year the French only held the rocky outcrops out of all of the Alsace region. But Pellissier and his comrades would cling on to their foothold tenaciously for national honour; he was wounded and invalided out of the frontline in 1915. He was promoted to become an sergeant in 1916, he returned to the front in time to be engaged in the brutal fighting during the battle of Hartmannweilerskopf where he and his men fought on for 53 days without relief, which could not be effected due to the heavy German bombardment. It was during the battle of the Somme in 1916 that Sergeant Pellissier eventually met his end, at least on the soil of his beloved France.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The amazing story of a French American teacher who left his life at Stanford college to volunteer for the French Army, in the elite chasseurs-à-pied, during the First World War.
Although born in France Robert Pellissier in 1882, he moved to America in 1882 to live with his sister. A gifted scholar of ardent professionalism, he studied at Harvard and taught at Williston College and Stanford. However when war broke out in Europe his morals would not allow him to sit idly by whilst France was invaded and European civilisation was under assault. He wrote home obsessively, to his parents, his fiancée and his colleagues describing with great passion the fight for justice that he had embarked on. Filling with wry humour, contemporary political commentary, and most often an sense of the insanity of war. For example, with bitter irony, he quotes the idiocy of an the outdated war manual he had been given in one of his letters-’Any disengaged body of troops should right away march to the firing line’- a death sentence in the trenches!
In late 1914 he was posted to the inhospitable mountainous region in the north of France the Vosges, after an abortive offensive earlier the year the French only held the rocky outcrops out of all of the Alsace region. But Pellissier and his comrades would cling on to their foothold tenaciously for national honour; he was wounded and invalided out of the frontline in 1915. He was promoted to become an sergeant in 1916, he returned to the front in time to be engaged in the brutal fighting during the battle of Hartmannweilerskopf where he and his men fought on for 53 days without relief, which could not be effected due to the heavy German bombardment. It was during the battle of the Somme in 1916 that Sergeant Pellissier eventually met his end, at least on the soil of his beloved France.

More books from Lucknow Books

Cover of the book Reasons To Improve: The Evolution Of The US Tank From 1945-1991 by Sergeant Robert Pellissier
Cover of the book Analysis Of German Operation Art Failures, The Battle Of Britain, 1940 by Sergeant Robert Pellissier
Cover of the book Field Marshal William J. Slim: The Great General and the Breaking of the Glass Ceiling by Sergeant Robert Pellissier
Cover of the book From Private To Field-Marshal by Sergeant Robert Pellissier
Cover of the book A Soldier Unafraid - Letters From The Trenches On The Alsatian Front by Sergeant Robert Pellissier
Cover of the book A Student In Arms Vol. I by Sergeant Robert Pellissier
Cover of the book A Poet Of The Air; Letters Of Jack Morris Wright by Sergeant Robert Pellissier
Cover of the book The Spider Web, The Romance Of A Flying-Boat War Flight [Illustrated Edition] by Sergeant Robert Pellissier
Cover of the book The Captain Wears A Cross by Sergeant Robert Pellissier
Cover of the book Kriegie by Sergeant Robert Pellissier
Cover of the book "Ladies From Hell," by Sergeant Robert Pellissier
Cover of the book History Of The Attempt On Hitler’s Life (20 Jul 1944) by Sergeant Robert Pellissier
Cover of the book Danger Forward: The Story of the First Division in World War II by Sergeant Robert Pellissier
Cover of the book Wartime Mission in Spain, 1942-1945 by Sergeant Robert Pellissier
Cover of the book From Peenemünde To Canaveral by Sergeant Robert Pellissier
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy