Places in Wales that tell a story of World War One
A perfectly legal way to get out of going back to fight: become a recruiting sergeant.
Tank Julian parked on Monnow Bridge as a part of the War Savings Campaign in 1918
Alexandra Dock, Newport :The Belgia, the first German Ship to be captured in Britain
The Castle that became a WW1 hospital and trench-warfare training ground
Weapons of war; as dangerous for those who made them as for those on the receiving end.
In November 1914 Cardiff effectively came under martial law
World War One Commonwealth War Graves in Bodelwyddan, North Wales.
Ebbw Vale Steel Iron and Coal Company – A WW1 Power-House.
Edwin Dyett Executed for Desertion
Wales’ most intrepid airman
Major Martin Everett introduces us to The Regimental Museum in Brecon
Goodwick, the centre of an operation to help rid the Irish Sea of the U-Boat menace.
Concern that respectable young girls of Swansea were being led astray.
Jack Williams, former Colliery Blacksmith became Wales’ greatest war hero all time
Peter Barton retraces the final steps of Wrexham miner, Sapper William Arthur Lloyd
Agnes remembers her time as a Land Girl in 1914 at Green Farm, Cardiff.
The enduring loss of families separated forever by World War One
How Cambrian Mills weaved homespun grey cloth for a distinctly Welsh Army uniform
The WW1 song worth whole battalions for its morale-boosting power
Establishing the Women’s Institute in Anglesey, and the movement’s role in the war effort
Ty'n y Lon Rhydyfelin Aberystwyth home of Belgian artist Valerius de Saedeleer during WW1
Wrexham man's remarkable family history of his great grandfather in WW1