Many felt a combination of fear, anger and justification.
the probly felt the same as people do today. proud but scared also the wanted them to return home safe.
They would probably feel brave at first, but then frightened.
Women took over most of the jobs that men had.
A 1/3 were for the war. A1/3 were loyal to the king and a 1/3 were neutral. Some people today would like to think that everyone in the colonies picked up a gun and went to war. Not true and at the end of the war 53,000 loyalist left the colonies for Canada or other places. As with most things everyone had an opinion.
Most Asian cultures believe that war is only to be used when absolutely necessary
209,85 people went into world war one from the uk
Most Northerners were not Abolitionists, and there was no particular name for them. As the war went on, the anti-war Democrats were called Copperheads. These were pro-slavery.
Most jobs continued where possible, but the munitions industry went massive.
I think 18.
Not the Black people.
choose
THe German people didn't feel that they were responsible for the war, which started as a local dispute in the Balkans. The German people also didn't feel that they had lost the war because the fighting didn't really take place in Germany, to them they could have won the war if they had not surrendered when they did.