Until 1917 America remained neutral, but many of her citizens did not. Over 100 of them joined the 10000 strong French Foreign Legion in 1914 some of the 32000 foreign volunteers who joined the French and British including 1000 Germans opposed to their own countrys aims.
In the ranks of the Legionnaires Fighting with the British on the Somme was the Havard graduate and poet Alan Seegar who wrote one of the best known poems.
I have a rendezvous with Death on some scarred slope or battered hill, when spring comes round again this year and the first meadow flowers appear.
Death kept that rendezvous. Seegar dies in a shell hole on the Somme on July 4th 1916.
Hundreds of American volunteers found a role whenever they could. Dillwyn Parish Starr from Philadelphia served as an ambulance driver with the French before transferring to armoured cars at Gallipoli. At 32 as a lieutenant in the British Guards regiment he was killed on the Western Front in September 1916. On November 23rd 1917 a plane was shot down over Bourlon Wood during the battle of Cambrai. The pilot was an American Lieutenant A. Griggs serving with an Australian Squadron that formed part of the Britains Royal Flying Corps. When Winston Churchill on a visit to the Ypres salient in 1918 came across Henry Butters from San Francisco who was a second Lieutenant with the royal artillary he asked him how he had managed to be enlisted. Buttere replied candidly ” I just lied to them and said I was British born”