
The Great War had been raging in Europe since 1914. President Woodrow Wilson, following the will of the majority of Americans, had valiantly sought to keep the United States neutral. But Great Britain was a staunch ally of this country, and there was a desire to help but not to become embroiled in the bitter battles themselves. However, the German blockade and unrestricted submarine warfare (declared by the Germans in February of 1915) continued to erode America’s fragile neutrality. During that year, the Germans sank a U.S. flagged ship. Without warning, they torpedoed the liner Lusitania, killing 1,198 including 128 Americans. Before the end of the year, they sank an Italian liner, again without warning, killing 272 including 27 Americans. Public opinion began to turn against Germany. The Kaiser ordered a cessation of unrestricted submarine warfare, but in 1917, it resumed. The U.S. broke diplomatic relations with Germany. Following the sinking of another American ship, on April 2, 1917, and the appearance of the Zimmerman telegram (in which the German government purportedly tried to get Mexico on its side with the promise of regaining territory lost to the U.S. in the past), Wilson reluctantly asked Congress to declare war “to make the world safe for democracy.” Congress did so on April 6.
The American Army numbering about 100,000 (with another 112,000 National Guardsmen) was not ready for combat, and when the first 14,000 troops arrived in Europe, they were initially placed under Allied command. But the involvement of this country bolstered the Allied cause, and the bloody stalemate of nearly 4 years began to turn against the Germans. American troops, under the leadership of General John J. “Black Jack” Pershing, soon proved themselves on the battlefield, well supported by their country’s massive manufacturing might.
Finally, on November 11, 1918, an armistice was declared and the war was over. By then, more than two million American soldiers had served in Western Europe. Fifty thousand of them would never return home.
Rhode Island had already begun to feel the effect of the conflict in Europe even before America entered the war. In March of 1917, military guards manned all the state’s principal bridges. Four divisions of Naval Reserves had left for training in Boston. Activities at the state’s coast defense forts and at the Navy base at Newport intensified. A full year prior, in 1916, Providence was the scene of a massive Preparedness Day parade with more than 54,000 people marching through the capitol city. Even cut short by rain, the parade outdid one held earlier in Boston that drew only 38,000. The Ocean State was ever patriotic.
War fever even infected the local news media. In 1915, the then editor of the Providence Journal, John Rathom, began to publish outrageous stories suggesting German sabotage (the source of his information later turned out to be a British propaganda effort). Rathom went so far as to say that his newspaper’s own sources were unearthing sabotage plans. Eventually, the U.S. Justice Department cracked down and called a halt to Rathom’s fanciful reports.
The state’s factories were also gearing up for war. Well known as a manufacturing hub, Rhode Island began turning out everything from uniforms to horseshoes, small warships, aircraft, rubber products, and bayonets. By June of 1917, just 2 months after war was declared, more than 53,000 patriotic Rhode Islanders had enlisted in the military with more to come. War bond sales skyrocketed and volunteers enrolled in the Red Cross and the state militia for homeland duty. Victory gardens appeared everywhere and supplemented an anticipated national food
shortage.
Gertrude Bray of Providence had gone overseas as a YMCA volunteer to support the troops. She left her factory job in Pawtucket to serve as a canteen worker in France. According to one news story, Bray and two other YMCA workers were cited for bravery during the Battle of St. Mihiel in September of 1918, when they cooked 10,000 donuts a day while the fighting went on close to their encampment. Women were chaperoned when they went to the front lines, which Bray did, to deliver food to the troops. At one point her chaperone, a Mr. Haley, told a reporter that “nothing raised the morale of the men to see that one of their own girls wasn’t afraid to come to their position.” Haley then hustled the girls back to their camp since an artillery barrage was expected momentarily.

Among the young men who enthusiastically responded to the call to service was a Brown University student, Wheaton Vaughn. He exchanged letters with one of his professors, H.E. Walters, and they have been preserved in the Brown Library. In one dated February 15, 1918, he enclosed a picture and told his teacher that he expected to be at the front shortly. “I’ll do my best to send some part of the Kaiser back to you for use in the (biology) lab,” he quipped. On June 16, he apologized for a delay in writing as “I have been so busy tending to such business as dodging shells and putting on gas masks… We have been lucky so far that’s all, I guess, but probably someday we will get ours, but here”s hoping.” Vaughn went on to tell his professor that so far only one man in his unit had been killed and another slightly wounded. Sadly, Vaughn’s own luck ran out. He died of wounds on November 18, 1918, two hours after the armistice was signed. The Armistice had actually been announced at 5:00 am Paris time, but military commanders on both sides, at a loss as to exactly when to cease firing, continued to fight until the “eleventh hour.” More men on both sides died needlessly in those 6 hours.
And so, the war officially ended at 11:00 am, Paris time, on the eleventh day of the eleventh month. It was 3:00 am in Providence, and church bells rang and whistles began to blow. Students from the schools on the East Side gathered and marched down College Hill to join the cheering crowds in Exchange Place (now Kennedy Plaza). Bunting-bedecked automobiles sped through downtown. Brown’s military and naval units joined civilians in celebrating. Brown Professor Walters, in notes preserved in the University Library, recalled that “Westminster was no longer a one-way street. It was an every which way….I remember finding myself downtown with a cowbell in the midst of the downtown mob…all insane.” The celebrations continued. The war was over!
The troops would make their way home in the coming months. But 612 Rhode Islanders would not. Their sacrifices would be honored as years passed by town memorials, at VFW and American Legion posts bearing their names, and in stories handed down through the generations.

In Providence, a handsome memorial honors those lost in the war. The monument was moved in 1984 from its original location during the city’s Renaissance. It was reassembled and installed in 1996 in Memorial Park at College and South Main Streets. It includes the words, “By this memorial, the City of Providence commemorates the loyal courage and fidelity of all her citizens who served in the World War whose high example still summons us to love and serve our country.”
Sadly, the “war to end all wars” was not. Almost as soon as the guns fell silent in Europe, the seeds of a new conflict were sown. Just 21 years later, in September of 1939, war broke out again. Armistice Day, of course, is now known as Veterans Day. It is a time to pause and remember those who responded to the call, not just in World War I, but in all wars. Our mission as Varnum Continentals is keep the flame of patriotism brightly lit and to ensure that future generations remember the sacrifices of those who have passed before us to preserve and protect our treasured freedoms.