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British and enemy civilian food-supplies
Unknown, 1918, Press cutting, Reproduction
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of 17
British and enemy civilian food-supplies
British and enemy civilian food-supplies
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Item no
32758
Title
A contrast indeed! British and enemy civilian food-supplies.
Description
From the Illustrated London News published 1918, March 9th, page 295. Drawn by W.B. Robinson. Additional title: The food situation in this country compared with that in Germany and Austria: Relative rations and supplies (or absence thereof) shown in diagram.
Artist / maker
Unknown
Date
1918
Size
39.6 x 26.7cm
Type
Press cutting
;
Reproduction
Location
Reference Library
A failure to anticipate and manage the strain war placed on the food supply meant that by 1916 Germany and Austria faced severe food shortages. Rations of coffee, tea, meat, sugar and butter were nearly impossible to obtain, even for those who could afford it, and stores of cocoa, eggs, and fruit were completely spent.
Bread, meat, milk, and sugar rations were available only by ticket, and at prices often double that of normal peace time. The poor suffered most; regularly unable to find a suitable substitute for butter, many of Germany's poor would line up outside the butcher's shop beginning the evening prior for a chance to buy fat. Even the men in Germany's army were subjected to food rationing; food parcels from home were prohibited in an effort to end civilian suffering and many soldiers survived on soup which sometimes included the odd bit of salt fish.
Read history as it happened with free access to the
Scotsman Digital Archive
.
You can search the entire 1914-19 archives of
the Illustrated London News
online.
Exhibitions with this item
ILN During WWI: Sacrifice and Support for the war
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Eating and drinking
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