The Christmas Truce in World War I
This year the last surviving soldier of World War I died in Australia. GUNTHER SIMMERMACHER looks at the first Christmas of World War I, when soldiers on the front decided that, just once, peace and good will should rule on the battlefield.
Only a few hours earlier they were trying to kill each other. Now they were exchanging biscuits, tobacco, whisky, souvenirs, stories and good will.
The unofficial Christmas truce of 1914, just over four months after hostilities commenced in the First World War, was a spontaneous outbreak of peace, entirely uncoordinated, and spread quickly across large sections of the front lines of Belgium and parts of France.

The front page of The Daily Mirror of January 5, 1915 with a photo of British and German soldiers during the spontaneous, unofficial 1914 Christmas truce.
Nobody is quite sure where exactly it began, though Ypres in Belgium, where a cross commemorates the occasion, is often mentioned. Most commonly the initiative came from the German side of the trenches.
Even in this brutal war, there often were short periods of secession of hostilities, normally at breakfast time. At other times, the warring sides would agree to stop shooting to allow soldiers to collect the rotting corpses and body parts of their comrades in No Man’s Land, the area of the front lines which separated the two hostile positions. In the course of that grisly job, soldiers would often interact.
At Christmas, German front soldiers tended to put up in their trenches small tabletop Christmas trees, decorated with lit candles. It is the German custom to celebrate Christmas on the evening of December 24. That first Christmas of the Great War was no exception. German soldiers were singing Christmas carols, some of which, such as “Silent Night”, were familiar to their British counterparts. Taken aback by this curious and non-martial behaviour, British officers ordered that no shots were to be fired, but that the situation be monitored.
Next, British soldiers responded with carols of their own. This would be followed by exchanges of seasonal greetings across the trenches. In some positions, German soldiers (and even officers) invited their enemies to come over to their side for a visit. Having ascertained the sincerity of the Germans’ purpose, they would cautiously accept the invitation, and on occasion even reciprocate. Graham Williams of the Fifth London Rifle Brigade recalled: “First the Germans would sing one of their carols and then we would sing one of ours, until when we started up ‘O Come, All Ye Faithful’, the Germans immediately joined in singing the same hymn to the Latin words Adeste Fideles. And I thought, well, this is really a most extraordinary thing two nations both singing the same carol in the middle of a war.
In at least one position, English and German soldiers engaged in a game of football – though historians believe that this might have taken in place in 1915. Word is that the Germans beat the Bedfordshire regiment 3-2. It is uncertain whether it was this match or another which had to be abandoned when the ball struck a barbed wire and deflated.
Cynicism wasn’t absent entirely. British soldiers took advantage of visiting the German trenches to scrutinise them for weaknesses in the enemy’s defences, with a view to exploiting these when hostilities would resume (presumably the Germans did the same).
‘Not an atom of hate’
Bruce Bairnsfather, a war cartoonist who observed the Christmas truce first hand, wrote soon after the event :”There was not an atom of hate that day, and yet, on our side, not for a moment was the will to war and the will to beat them relaxed. It was just like the interval between rounds in a friendly boxing match.” He was not impressed with the Germans he met, calling them “unimaginative products of perverted culture”. Arthur Conan Doyle, creator of Sherlock Holmes, took a more romantic view of the truce, calling it “one human episode amid all the atrocities which have stained the memory of the war”.
A German soldier, in a letter home, summed up what likely was a widespread sentiment: “It was a day of peace in war. It is only a pity that it was not a decisive peace.” If it had been decisive, the youth of several countries might have been spared the horrors of the Somme, Verdun, Passchendaele or Arras.
In some areas the truce lasted only until midnight on Christmas Day, in others up to New Year’s Eve. In some positions, zealous snipers or immoderately ambitious junior officers would periodically interrupt the ceasefire. These, however, were isolated incidents.
One chronicle from the Messines Ridge, by British soldier Henry Williamson, records that a Saxon soldier warned him that the Germans would resume fire on New Years’ Eve. But even then, the German assured, they would “aim high, well above our heads. Would we, even so, please keep under cover, lest regrettable accidents occur.”
Captain Charles Stockwell recalled the gentlemanly conclusion to the truce at his position on December 26: “At 8:30, I fired three shots into the air and put up a flag with “Merry Christmas” on it on the parapet. [The German] put up a sheet with “Thank You” on it, and the German captain appeared on the parapet. We both bowed and saluted and got down into our respective trenches, and he fired two shots into the air, and the war was on again.”
French not impressed
The truce was not popular in France. In positions where Germans fought French troops, the likelihood of a ceasefire was remote. After all, the Germans were the invaders. Indeed, the French populace even resented the British soldiers for ceasing fire. Soldier Frank Richards recalled in his memoirs that French women spat at British troops when they heard “how we spent Christmas Day”.
One Austrian soldier of the 16th Bavarian regiment expressed his disgust as well. “Such things should not happen in wartime,” exclaimed Corporal Adolf Hitler. “Have you Germans no sense of honour left at all?”
Temporary ceasefires had not been uncommon in previous wars. The Boer War, just a decade and a half previously, had even presaged the famous World War I football match with an encounter of its own. The scale of the 1914 truce, however, far exceeded the localised respites of previous wars.
Official reaction to the truce was mostly predictable. Especially the French and British governments and high commands were not amused. Sir John French, the British commander-in-chief, ordered that “any recurrence of such conduct” be prevented, and called “the local commanders to strict account, which resulted in a good deal of trouble”.
News of the Christmas truce must have pleased Pope Benedict XV, who had called for a temporary ceasefire over Christmas: “that the guns may fall silent at least upon the night the angels sang”. While the German government was open to the idea, the Allies insisted that the war had to go on, Christmas or not.
After the improbable outbreak of Christmas peace, the enemies soon resumed their senseless slaughter of one another. Subsequently enemy soldiers would sporadically meet under ceasefire conditions on the battlefield (usually to clear it of the dead), and even hold joint prayer services.
Isolated incidents of later Christmas truces apart, the rest of the conflict would not see a repetition of “Tommy” and “Fritz” sharing the good will of Christmas amid the madness of war.
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