In the trenches during World War I, the captain typically slept in a designated area called the command post or a makeshift shelter within the trench system. These areas were often more protected and slightly elevated to avoid flooding and to provide some comfort. Captains sometimes had personal items or bedding to make their sleeping quarters more bearable, though conditions remained harsh and cramped. Overall, sleep was often interrupted due to the constant threat of enemy fire and the demands of leadership.
In trenches
Inside the trenches there is dugouts. They would sleep in there.
a hole you poo into and where they sleep
They used shovels and picks to dig out the trenches.
Mostly on the ground, if they were in the trenches. They would scrape "funk holes" in the side of the trenches as some protection from the elements and shrapnel or, if they were lucky there would be a dugout - an underground tunnel that would be safe against all but a direct hit from a shell.
In trenches
In the trenches.
where does a captain sleep on the ship
captain radio
Inside the trenches there is dugouts. They would sleep in there.
In trenches. They also use it as a defensive shield.
a hole you poo into and where they sleep
dugout?
at first they slept in lorries and later they started to sleep in the cold dirty floors of the trenches.
A hole in the wall of a trench soldiers sleep in them.
They used shovels and picks to dig out the trenches.
they slept in trenches with rats and other nasty animals