yes, but you have a permit ;)
After the war the trenches went away as the land returned to its original uses, but I found a couple of them left that you can visit. One is Vieil Armand in Alsace, and the trenches were mostly carved in stone so they are well preserved. Also, World War 1 trenches in the Meuse have been restored to their original condition so that people can visit them. The German trenches there were built with concrete reinforcements, but the French trenches had filled in over the years and had to be dug out again.
Yes, Trench Foot just gets it's name from the numerous cases of it caused by the conditions in the trenches in world war 1. It is still something you can get today
Im pretty sure you can visit some places that still has tunnnels or underground houses that was apart of the underground railroad.
Yes the Great Wall of China Does still exist.
Yes you can visit the ruins and even go to the Volcano site
Yes Monticello is still around.You can visit it in Charlottesville, Virginia.
Yes it is still there, and and lots of tourist visit every year
yes, but you have a permit ;)
After the war the trenches went away as the land returned to its original uses, but I found a couple of them left that you can visit. One is Vieil Armand in Alsace, and the trenches were mostly carved in stone so they are well preserved. Also, World War 1 trenches in the Meuse have been restored to their original condition so that people can visit them. The German trenches there were built with concrete reinforcements, but the French trenches had filled in over the years and had to be dug out again.
Yes, Trench Foot just gets it's name from the numerous cases of it caused by the conditions in the trenches in world war 1. It is still something you can get today
Im pretty sure you can visit some places that still has tunnnels or underground houses that was apart of the underground railroad.
Yes the Great Wall of China Does still exist.
Trenches had been used during the US Civil War (1861-1865), and the Russian-Japanese War (1904-1905). However, WW1 (1914-1918) is the war most famous for "trench warfare."
Yes, you can visit the Berlin Wall today.
No. Trenches were used in wars as far back as history is recorded. Trenches were used in the Revolutionary war in the US. Some of these trenches can still be seen at the scene of some battlefields such as Gettysburg, Pennsylvania and Yorktown Virginia.
they stay in trenches and some day they feel like going back to their loved ones and then they die.the army live in trenches were there are rats