Item 54: Friedrich Meier diary, 18 August 1914-August 1915 - Page 53
Primary tabs
This page has already been transcribed. You can find new pages to transcribe here.
or
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Completed
Transcription
<p>[Page 53]</p><p>For breakfast we get meat with gravy and tea; for lunch we get vegetables (mostly turnip and other roots, occasionally pumpkin or cabbage) with meat and potatoes, plus soup or coffee, and in the evening there is tea. Each unit of 10 men has a daily allowance of 3 loaves of white bread, and every 8 days everybody gets a tin of jam (about 1½ oz). The food is quite tasty and abundant, but tea and coffee are pretty bad. The canteen has yielded a profit of 40,000 Mark in one year, which was spent on building barracks, plus a theatre and an electricity generator to illuminate the fence. The sanitary facilities are totally inadequate; there are just 8 water-taps and 6 shower heads for 2200 men, which</p>
Current Status:
Completed