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Duckboards

From The Great War On This Day
Soldiers of an Australian 4th Division field artillery brigade on a duckboard track passing through Chateau Wood, near Hooge in the Ypres salient, 29 October 1917.

Duckboards are the slatted timber paths, or walkways, laid down in the trenches and camps etc., at the front. They bear a resemblance to the sloping boards leading up to duck houses at the edge of a pond, hence the name. Their purpose was to aid movement across muddy, flooded and battle-torn land.[1]

References / notes

  1. Edward Fraser and John Gibbons (1925). Soldier and Sailor Words and Phrases. Routledge, London p.83.
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