Places in the UK and Ireland that tell a story of World War One
A free buffet at Limerick Junction for soldiers on their way to the front lines.
Volunteers from the IRFU form D Company of the 7th Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers
Governey’s Boot Factory in Carlow town shod the feet of many British Army soldiers.
Workman, Clark and Company shipyard turned out two Monitor ships during the war.
The Irish Volunteers suggle guns and ammunition into Howth harbour.
The mass graves of the victims of the Lusitania
Story of the song "It's a Long Way to Tipperary".
In Oldcastle, Co. Meath, an internment camp was set up to house foreign nationals.
The Royal Hibernian Military School for children of soldiers serving in the British Army.
How the Belfast Municipal Technical Institute helped the war effort.
How the GPO was vital to wartime communication before becoming a symbol of revolution.
Fortune tellers are prosecuted for trying to make money from soldiers relatives.
Tony Devlin explores the story of Irish language speakers in World War One.
HMS Caroline is the only floating survivor of World War One. She is docked in Belfast.
St Malachy's Church in Belfast has a brass plaque commemorating World War One soldiers.
Belfast Boy Scouts bring in vital flax harvest during World War One.
In WW1 the Countess of Limerick sold shamrock on a grand scale to help the war effort.
Major General Sir Oliver Nugent and Lord Farnham's friendship in WW1
Bonamargy Friary is the resting place of sailors from HMS Viknor, a WW1 cruiser.
A large replica World War One trench is at Cavan County Museum in Ireland.
The Shane's Castle estate near Randalstown was once the site of a WW1 training camp.
An alternative to cotton wool, used in surgical dressings, was found in sphagnum moss.
How two Belfast newspapers reported the outbreak of World War One.
Harland and Wolff built dummy warships in World War One to confuse the German Navy.