a German soldier's experience of August 1914
August 1914 was a month to remember for 20 year old Herbert Sulzbach in Frankfurt. On 2 August, Germany mobilised for war and there was 'magnificent enthusiasm and a superb mood'.
His brother-in-law, a medical officer, reported for service on 3 August. Sulzbach himself volunteered with the local artillery and reported for duty on the 8th – with many of his school friends. One of his girl friends gave him a lucky penny. There was 'much enthusiasm and tears'.
An eleven o'clock curfew for the town surprised him and he was sad, but patriotic, when their much-loved Adler car was requisitioned and sent to the Front at Metz.
Sulzbach's brother, Ernst, was in London and needed time to return home. A welcome telegram from Hamburg brought news from him, and he arrived in Frankfurt on 9 August.
The following day Sulzbach was fitted with his uniform and had his photo taken with his girl friend. He felt strange as he walked around town, since he couldn't even salute.
Three weeks later he was excited about his departure for the Front. On the evening of his farewell, 29 August, news arrived that his brother-in-law's ship had been sunk and his sister's husband was dead. She could barely face her brother to wish him goodbye.
In another August, many years later, Sulzbach stood in the half-destroyed centre of Frankfurt and told a companion how he had once walked around town unable to salute. He also described how a horse – on which sat a young Lieutenant - had come through, leading the forage wagons. He knew the name of the Lieutenant, Fränzchen Trier.
A few minutes later Sulzbach and his companion were in a restaurant. He was fascinated by an older man and asked the waiter if he knew the man's name. 'Yes, that's Cavalry Captain Trier'.
This was 1950. Thirty six years and two World Wars had since passed.
(the picture shows leafy Friedrichstrasse in Frankfurt where Sulzbach lived in 1914)









