Beer, Skittles, Cooties, and Guns
Scrapbook Memories of Joseph Broz, World War I Veteran
Introduction by Gene Carroll, MHM Volunteer, Exhibits and Research
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| Joseph Broz in training at Camp Leaside in Toronto. Photograph, 1917. Missouri History Museum. | |
President Woodrow Wilson declared war on Germany and its allies on April 6, 1917. A patriotic 18-year-old named Joseph G. Broz volunteered for induction into the Aviation Section of the Army Signal Corps at Jefferson Barracks in St. Louis on April 29, 1917. What distinguishes Broz from the other recruits is that he used a camera to document his experiences.
Whether Broz used a box camera or a folding camera is not known. Nor do we know if he kept a journal of his days in the war. But when he sat down in 1968 to compile a scrapbook, he produced pictures and wrote his observations, the highs and lows, the joys and sorrows, of a young man’s experiences in the war to end all wars. His army career took him from St. Louis to Texas, Canada, and New Jersey, then to England and France. He moved along the battlefields of France before returning to St. Louis. He traveled by truck, ship, French cattle car, and on foot. His early pictures were of the mud and tents in Texas, and the final ones were those he took on the USS Pueblo coming home.
Along the way, he encountered military leaders, a soldier and prolific poet named Tex Branshaw, military grave sites, heroes among his comrades, airplane crashes, and accidents, and they became subjects for his camera and thus part of his life story. These early experiences are what the young Joseph Broz brought to life with his camera, capturing the people, the places, and the machines, as well as the destruction and waste caused by the war.
Joseph Broz eventually returned to St. Louis after the war and eventually retired as vice president of Nordberg Manufacturing. He donated his war scrapbook to the Missouri History Museum in the 1980s.
Broz organized his scrapbook with meticulous detail. To preserve the integrity of his work, we are reproducing entire pages of the scrapbook without editing. Following are selections that include military and flight training with aero squadrons, crossing the English Channel, war heroes and fallen soldiers, adventures in Paris, and life as a soldier.
Click on the album pages below to enlarge










