Germany's Fighting Machine / Her Army, her Navy, her Air-ships and Why She Arrayed Them Against the Allied Powers of Europe |
PART I PART II PART III APPENDIX
Transcriber's notes - There is only one footnote: it has been placed at the end of Part II.
- The spelling and hyphenation are as found in the original text.
- There is one spelling mistake that deserves mention. Although “dreadnaught” is an accepted spelling of "dreadnought” when used to mean “fearless”, Henderson's use of it to denote a certain type of warship is incorrect. Warships of this type were called dreadnoughts after H.M.S. Dreadnought, the first example of its type.
- The table of contents was not part of the original text.
- There are 87 illustrations in this book. These illustrations, with a link to each of them, are listed in the Appendix. This Appendix was not in the original text.
- The captions of all the illustrations have been left as they appear in the book. Six of them, however, contain a numbered link to a note in the Appendix that explains why and how the caption should be changed.
GERMANY’S FIGHTING MACHINE Kaiser Wilhelm II Kaiser Wilhelm II. GERMANY’S FIGHTING MACHINE Her Army, Her Navy, Her Air-ships, and Why She Arrayed Them Against the Allied Powers of Europe By ERNEST F. HENDERSON Author of Short History of Germany History of Germany in the Middle Ages BlÜcher, Etc., Etc. WITH MANY ILLUSTRATIONS INDIANAPOLIS THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY PUBLISHERS COPYRIGHT 1914 THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY CHARLES FRANCIS PRESS, NEW YORK GERMANY’S FIGHTING MACHINE TABLE OF CONTENTS GERMANY’S FIGHTING MACHINE
|
|