Yes, Wilfred Owen was in the British Army in WW1. He served almost all through the war, being killed by enemy fire only a week from the Armistice. His realistic poetry of life and death in the trenches and the plight of soldiers in that war brought the horrors of war home. He ranked among the top poets of WW1 along with other heroes like Siegfried Sassoon and Rupert Brooke.
Wilfred Owen was a Tremondous fighter he loved poems and he was a brave soldier he was determined to fight for France and for England!
Wilfred Owen was a soldier in World War I. He served as a second lieutenant in the Manchester Regiment. Owen was known for his poignant poetry that captured the horrors of war.
Wilfred Owen was an English soldier and poet during WW1. His poem A New Heaven is about soldiers in France wondering about death.
Wilfred Owen wrote 'Terre' in 1917. He was a soldier in WWI, born in 1893 and killed in battle in 1918.
Wilfred Owen's birth name is Wilfred Edward Salter Owen.
Wilfred Owen was a soldier in the British Army during World War I. He held the rank of lieutenant in the Manchester Regiment. Owen is well known for his poetry that vividly depicted the horrors of war.
Wilfred Owen was born on March 18, 1893.
Wilfred Owen was a great poet and soldier. He was killed one week before the end of the First World War, 4th November 1918 at the Battle of Sambre. For his courage and leadership he was awarded the Military Cross,
Thomas Owen.
Disabled by Wilfred Owen was written in 1917
Wilfred Owen's father was named Tom Owen and his mother was named Susan Shaw Owen. They were both from England.
Wilfred Owen died on November 4, 1918 at the age of 25.