KELSEYVILLE Calif. – Local officials will hold a meeting this week with Kelseyville residents to discuss fire mitigation.
The meeting will take place beginning at 6 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 14, at Riviera Elementary School, 10505 Fairway Drive.
One of the key lessons of the past four fire seasons, during which 60 percent of the landmass of Lake County has been burned by wildfire, is that disaster can strike anywhere, anytime.
Lake County is fortunate to have some of the most experienced, strongest and best coordinated disaster response teams in the state of California, but what can we do to stop fires before they start?
It is most productive to recognize the probability that the ongoing presence of brush and other fuels could eventually lead to wildfire, and do all that we can to reduce and mitigate the risk to our communities.
At the Wednesday meeting, representatives from Cal Fire, Kelseyville Fire Protection District, the Lake County Sheriff’s Office, county administration and the insurance industry will join Supervisor Rob Brown for a public forum to discuss options for fire mitigation, with an emphasis on four communities: Buckingham, Clear Lake Riviera, Riviera Heights and Riviera West.
The discussion will include proposal of a county service area zone of benefit, as enabled by California Government Code Section 25210, for the purpose of removing brush and other wildfire fuel sources from private property.
All county residents are welcome to attend, but this discussion will be most specifically relevant to the 5,000 property owners that comprise the communities of Buckingham and the Rivieras.
“District 5 residents are aware it has been my privilege to serve in coordination with our firefighters and other first responders during each of our eight wildfire events since 2015, to stand with county residents, and bring a bit of comfort to those displaced from their homes, to connect people with resources in their time of great need,” Brown said.
Brown said it’s an even greater opportunity to work with many of those same partner agencies to find ways to proactively protect our communities from disaster, to harden neighborhoods against the threat of fire.
For more information, Brown may be reached at 707-349-2628.
The first firefighters to arrive at the scene of a fire at the Bel Aire Apartments in Lakeport, Calif., on Sunday, November 11, 2018, found flames shooting out of the second story windows. Photo by Lakeport Police Officer Mark Steele. LAKEPORT, Calif. – Firefighters and police remained throughout the night Sunday and into early Monday at the scene of a fire that damaged one of the city of Lakeport’s oldest apartment buildings, displaced all of the tenants and sent two police officers to the hospital to be treated for smoke inhalation.
The fire at the Bel Aire Apartments at 1125 N. Main St. was first reported in the two-story apartment building at around 6:20 p.m. Sunday, as Lake County News has reported.
Video of the fire shot by veterinarian Chris Holmes showed flames shooting out of the windows on the south top story.
Arriving ahead of firefighters were Lakeport Police Officers Tyler Trouette and Mark Steele.
The two officers ran into the building to begin evacuating residents, despite not having any of the protective apparatus that firefighters have, said Lakeport Police Chief Brad Rasmussen.
“They’re not going to sit out here and let people burn up,” said Rasmussen, who noted his officers have increasingly found themselves responding to – and even helping put out – fires.
Rasmussen said the apartment building’s residents safely evacuated.
The two officers were later taken to Sutter Lakeside Hospital and treated for smoke inhalation. Rasmussen said both were cleared and are fine. They were to take the rest of the night off and return for their next shift.
A firefighter battles a blaze at the Bel Aire Apartments in Lakeport, Calif., on Sunday, November 11, 2018. Photo by Lakeport City Manager Margaret Silveira. Meanwhile, other officers, command staff and a police volunteer assisted with securing the scene and interviewing witnesses.
In addition to Lakeport Fire and Lakeport Police, Kelseyville Fire, Northshore Fire, Cal Fire, Red Cross, Pacific Gas and Electric and city of Lakeport staff were part of the response to the incident.
The fire had been reported by Lakeport Fire Chief Doug Hutchison as knocked down just after 7 p.m.
However, about an hour later, the fire reignited on the roof at the back center of the building, Rasmussen said.
The reignited portion of the fire appeared to have been put out before 9 p.m.
Hutchison explained that the fire ran the roof through two separate spaces. Firefighters thought they had the fire out in the roof initially but there was another roof space above where they had been working where the fire began to burn. That meant they had to get on top of the roof to get it under control.
A Lakeport Fire ladder truck was used to access the north side of the building’s top story. Throughout the night, after the fire was out, firefighters scaled the ladder to get on top of the building to continue overhaul and mop up.
Firefighters with flashlights inspected the top stories of the building and continued to make sure that the fire was out, using hoses to shoot water through the interior roof spaces, which resulted in small fountains of water shooting out the back of the roof.
While only the top south story appeared to be gutted, Hutchison said there was likely water damage and other fire-related damage throughout the rest of the building.
Firefighters worked late into the night at the scene of a fire at the Bel Aire Apartments in Lakeport, Calif., on Sunday, November 11, 2018. Photo by Elizabeth Larson/Lake County News.
Hutchison said there were about eight to 10 apartments in the building, all of which were evacuated until further notice, with power to the building shut off.
Hutchison didn’t have a number available for how many people had been displaced.
Red Cross responded to provide temporary housing assistance. Those residents who have been affected by the fire and are in need of assistance can call the Red Cross at 707-832-5482.
Hutchison said his agency had not received any reports of code issues with the building, and under fire code are only allowed to inspect common areas in apartment buildings, not the apartments themselves.
He said the fire’s cause is under investigation.
Along with city fire and police, city officials also were on scene, including City Manager Margaret Silveira and Building Official Tom Carlton. They made outreach to the building’s owner, who lives in Sebastopol, and police were planning to monitor the building while it was being boarded up overnight.
Carlton and other city officials didn’t have information as to the age of the apartment building, which has an Art Deco-type exterior, but reader Don Lange said he believed the building – originally the Kuppinger apartments – were built in the late 1930s or the early 1940s.
Firefighters survey the fire damage at the Bel Aire Apartments in Lakeport, Calif., on Sunday, November 11, 2018. Photo by Elizabeth Larson/Lake County News. “Sometime between 1958 and 1960 when I was on the fire department as a volunteer there was a fire in the opposite wing upper front unit where there was one person who perished,” Lange posted on Lake County News’ Facebook page.
Hutchison terminated incident command just before 11:45 p.m., leaving one engine on scene throughout the night for fire watch.
While firefighters remained at the scene, several blocks of N. Main Street, 11th Street and Clearlake Avenue had been blocked off with detours in place.
The Lakeport Police Department said late Sunday night that street closures were to remain in effect until sometime after daylight on Monday in the area of N. Forbes Street between Clearlake Avenue and Main Street, as well as Main Street between 11th Street and Clearlake Avenue.
Police said businesses will be allowed to open, however parking on Main Street will not be permitted in the closed area. Guests of the Skylark Shores motel across from the apartments will need to use the Clearlake Avenue entrance.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – A Lakeport apartment building has been significantly damaged due to a Sunday evening fire.
The fire at the Bel Aire Apartments, located at 1125 N. Main St., was first reported at about 6:20 p.m. Sunday, according to radio reports.
Dispatch reported receiving multiple calls about the fire in the older two-story building.
Local veterinarian Chris Holmes captured video of the fire, shown above, before firefighters arrived and just as police officers were getting to the scene. The video’s audio includes some profanity.
The video shows officers knocking on doors to evacuate residents, with flames coming from the windows on the southern side of the second story.
Radio reports indicated that Lakeport Fire, Kelseyville Fire, Northshore Fire and Cal Fire responded to the fire. Pacific Gas and Electric also was requested.
Just after 7 p.m., Lakeport Fire Chief Doug Hutchison reported from the scene that the fire had been knocked down but firefighters were still actively working, with at least another two hours on the incident anticipated.
But about an hour later, the fire reignited and was actively burning on the roof at the back of the building, according to Lakeport Police Chief Brad Rasmussen.
Due to the fire, the Lakeport Police Department said the following streets will be closed for several hours Sunday night: N. Main Street between 11th Street and Clearlake Avenue, 11th Street between N. Forbes Street and Main Street, and Clearlake Avenue between N. Forbes Street and Main Street.
Additional details will be posted as they become available.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Lakeport City Council has approved the purchase of several new vehicles for the Lakeport Police Department’s fleet.
The main item of business on the council’s agenda for Tuesday, Nov. 6, was the proposed purchase by Police Chief Brad Rasmussen of four new fully outfitted 2019 Dodge Charger patrol vehicles.
The city has been gradually upgrading its police vehicles. The four new Chargers would replace aging Crown Victorias, Rasmussen said.
Matt Mazzei Chevrolet and Precision Wireless, both of Lakeport, were the low vendors for the vehicles and the equipment upgrades, respectively. Rasmussen said both asked for the 10-percent local vendor preference the city offers.
Watch Guard is a sole source provider for mobile audio video units required for each vehicle, Rasmussen said. He said the purchase only includes two MAV units, as they can reuse two of the MAVs in the current vehicles for several more years.
He said the total purchase package for the four vehicles is about $163,000, well below the $180,000 budgeted for the cars in the current fiscal year budget.
Councilman Kenny Parlet lauded staff for keeping the purchases local. “I think this is a great move,” and an investment in local business, he said.
Councilman George Spurr pointed out that, originally, the city was only going to get two new police vehicles per year. However, due to savings in past years – based on the hard work of staff to stay within budget – they can now afford all four.
Councilwoman Stacey Mattina moved to approve the purchase, which the council approved 5-0.
During the half-hour meeting the council also will approved having City Manager Margaret Silveira execute a professional services agreement with Foster Morrison Consulting for the development of the hazard mitigation plan.
The Nov. 6 meeting also featured the Lakeport Main Street Association presenting several awards to local businesses.
The awards included Business of the Quarter for the year’s second quarter, O'Meara Brothers in Lakeport; Taste of Lake County People's Choice Favorite Restaurant, Mis Chelas Mexican restaurant in Upper Lake; Taste of Lake County People's Choice Favorite Beverage, Kelseyville Brewery; and Business of the Quarter for the third quarter, Gaslight Grill in Lakeport.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – Community members gathered on Sunday morning in Lakeport to commemorate the sacrifice and service of the nation’s veterans.
Lake County’s annual Veterans Day celebration was once again held at Konocti Vista Casino.
The day also marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I.
During the ceremony, the county’s annual “Friend of the Veteran” Award was presented to Habitat for Humanity, while the “Veteran of the Year” Award was presented to Darrel Bittle, the founder of the new county veterans museum.
The Military Funeral Honors Team provided honors including the presentation of the service flags and a gun salute.
The Clear Lake High School Jazz Band also performed again this year, with Clear Lake High School Senior Trinity Ingersoll playing “Taps.”
KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – Main Street Kelseyville will once again be transformed into a Christmas wonderland on Friday, Dec. 7, when the Kelseyville Business Association hosts the 28th Annual “Christmas in the Country.”
At 5:30 p.m. festivities begin with the annual Holiday Merchant Open House when local businesses will open their doors and offer lots of complimentary holiday treats to sample and provide an opportunity to start your holiday shopping.
“We are so excited to help make Kelseyville the place to be for the holiday season. We are ready to welcome visitors with holiday cheer and provide shoppers with their first stop for their holiday shopping” said A+H General Store co-owner Sabrina Andrus.
At 6:30 p.m. the crowd favorite Parade of Lights begins on Main Street with tractors and holiday floats all elaborately decorated with holiday lights.
“Every year I can’t wait to see all the beautiful horses and tractors all dressed-up in Christmas lights,” said Kelseyville Middle School student, Elliott Mayo.
Parade entries are still available; entry forms can be found at the the KBA Web site, www.visitkelseyville.com.
Don’t miss Santa Claus at 7 p.m. when he makes his annual pre-Christmas Kelseyville appearance at Westamerica Bank. He will be listening to Christmas wishes of any and all Lake County children. Photos will be taken by Santa’s Helpers.
New this season, you will have the chance to take home a professionally decorated Christmas tree. Merchant windows will display Christmas trees decorated by different local artists who are members of the Rural Arts Initiative. Trees will be available through a silent auction that will take place the night of the parade.
To make sure everyone has enough to eat, food options have been greatly expanded with a number of new offerings including Pogo’s pizza-by-the-slice, John’s Market’s barbecue, chili and chowder at Kelseyville Presbyterian Church, cookies and cocoa at the Methodist Church and Mexican food at St. Peter’s Catholic Church. All established eateries will be open for the evening.
Come out and start your Christmas season in Kelseyville on Friday, Dec. 7.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Lakeport Police Department said that an apartment building that was damaged in a Sunday night fire remains closed to residents.
The Bel Aire Apartments at 1125 N. Main St. caught fire on Sunday evening, as Lake County News has reported.
Police said that the apartment complex remains closed.
Police and fire investigators were on scene most of the day investigating the cause of the fire. So far, they’ve not reported on a finding.
Additionally, the complex has significant damage and is being posted against occupancy. The police department said it did not yet know when residents may be able to return.
Any apartment complex residents who have not yet contacted Red Cross are asked to call them for any needed assistance at 707-832-5482. Anyone having questions for the city of Lakeport can call City Hall at 707-263-5615 after 8 a.m. Tuesday.
Anyone found attempting to enter the property is subject to arrest for violations of the California Penal code or Lakeport Municipal Code.
City of Lakeport staff are in communication with Red Cross and the property owner and will advise residents of any changes.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Lakeport Economic Development Advisory Committee will hold its last meeting of the year this week.
The committee, or LEDAC, will meet from 7:30 to 9 a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 14, at Lakeport City Hall, 225 Park St.
The meeting is open to the public.
City staff has been working on a revision of the R-5 Zoning District to incorporate elements highlighted in the Lakeport Lakefront Revitalization Plan and is requesting a review by LEDAC.
In order to ensure tourist accommodations continue to be the prime use along the shoreline of Clear Lake, the Lakeport Lakefront Revitalization Plan, adopted in 2017, recommended that the city consider amending the resort/high density residential zoning district to eliminate residential uses as a stand-alone use and prioritize resort commercial uses.
There also will be a continued discussion of the Lakeport Economic Development Strategic Plan 2017-2022, including implementation, business walk and survey, doing business and economic development pages on the city Web site.
There also will be an update from city staff on projects as well as citizen’s input.
Following this week’s meeting, LEDAC will next meet on Jan. 9.
There are four terms expiring at the end of December for members appointed to LEDAC by the Lakeport City Council. Applications are available on the city Web site. Nov. 19 is the deadline for applications to be submitted to Deputy City Clerk Hilary Britton. Members do not need to be residents of Lakeport.
LEDAC advocates for a strong and positive Lakeport business community and acts as a conduit between the city and the community for communicating the goals, activities and progress of Lakeport’s economic and business programs.
Members are Chair Wilda Shock and Vice Chair Denise Combs, Candy De Los Santos, Bill Eaton, Melissa Fulton, Pam Harpster, Judith Kanavle, Andy Lucas, Dan Peterson and Panette Talia. City staff who are members include City Manager Margaret Silveira and Community Development Director Kevin Ingram.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The National Weather Service has placed Lake and many other Northern California counties under another red flag warning as dangerous fire weather conditions continue.
The red flag warning means that critical fire weather conditions – driven by a combination of strong winds, low relative humidity and warm temperatures – will occur through 7 a.m. Monday.
Forecasters said another round of dry and gusty north to east winds will develop over interior Northern California tonight into early Monday, which raises concerns for conditions on existing fires and new starts.
The area covered by the red flag warning includes Butte County, where the 105,000-acre Camp fire continues to burn. The fire, at 20-percent containment, has so far destroyed more than 6,700 structures and claimed 23 lives, authorities said Saturday night.
The National Weather Service forecast warns of sustained north to east winds increasing to 20 to 30 miles per hour with gusts 40 to 50 miles per hour into Sunday over portions of the west slope of the northern Sierra, northern mountains and Coast Range.
There also are expected to be northerly winds of 15 to 25 miles per hour with gusts of 25 to 35 miles per hour in the Sacramento Valley, mainly west of Interstate 5, and into Solano County tonight and Sunday morning.
In Lake County, winds are forecast to peak on Sunday night, with the highest wind speeds – into the low 20s – forecast in the south county and in the northern area of the county within the Mendocino National Forest.
The winds are forecast to decrease Sunday afternoon into Monday.
Adding to the fire weather conditions is very low humidity – as low as 5 to 10 percent – with poor overnight recoveries of less than 20 to 30 percent in many areas. Forecasters said those humidity levels will be slow to recover even after the winds abate.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. on Monday announced that the White House has approved California's request for a presidential major disaster declaration, submitted Sunday, to bolster the ongoing emergency response and help residents recover from devastating fires burning in Butte, Los Angeles and Ventura counties.
“We have a real challenge here, threatening our whole way of life,” said Gov. Brown alongside the state’s top emergency management officials yesterday at the State Operations Center. “It is a time of sadness, but also one to reflect on where we are and resolve to pull together and do everything we can to help those in need.”
A presidential major disaster declaration helps people in the impacted counties through eligibility for support including crisis counseling, housing and unemployment assistance and legal services.
It also provides public assistance to help state, tribal and local governments with ongoing emergency response and recovery, including the repair and replacement of disaster-damaged facilities and infrastructure, including roads, bridges and utilities.
The declaration includes hazard mitigation, which helps state and local governments reduce the risks and impacts of future disasters.
On Sunday, Gov. Brown joined leaders of the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services, Cal Fire, California Highway Patrol and California National Guard at the State Operations Center in Mather to provide an update on the ongoing firefighting efforts.
Major fires burning in Northern and Southern California have claimed lives and caused extensive damage to residences and infrastructure.
The Camp fire in Butte County, which as of Monday night had burned 117,000 acres, claimed dozens of lives and decimated the town of Paradise, is already the most destructive fire in modern California history.
The Hill and Woolsey fires in Southern California have burned more than 98,000 acres. More than 8,000 firefighters are working the front lines of wildfires statewide.
A state of emergency has been declared in Los Angeles, Ventura and Butte counties due to multiple fires and late last week, California secured direct federal assistance to further support the impacted communities – within 24 hours of making the request.
The Governor’s Office of Emergency Services has activated the State Operations Center to its highest level and is coordinating with other local, state and federal emergency response officials to address emergency management needs.
Residents and business owners who sustained losses in the designated areas can begin applying for assistance tomorrow by registering online at http://www.DisasterAssistance.gov or by calling 1-800-621-FEMA (3362) or 1-800-462-7585 (TTY) for the hearing and speech impaired.
The toll-free telephone numbers will operate from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. (local time) seven days a week until further notice.
More information on the FEMA disaster declaration process can be found here.
Distracted driving is a problem across all age groups.
The California Highway Patrol will address the challenges of distracted adult drivers, who are often role models for younger drivers, with the aid of a year-long grant.
The Adult Distracted Driving, or ADD, program started Oct. 1. It combines education and enforcement.
Each year, thousands of people are killed by distracted drivers and thousands more are injured. A change of driving habits can help stop distracted driving. The statewide ADD program has been launched in partnership with the California Office of Traffic Safety.
Drivers perceive that distracted driving is an increasing problem, ahead of traffic congestion, aggressive drivers, drugs, and drunk driving, a study from the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety revealed.
Many adults also report using their cell phones illegally while driving, but do change their behavior in response to education or receiving a citation, the AAA Foundation has found.
With the ADD grant, the CHP will complete a minimum of 60 distracted driving enforcement operations and at least 480 traffic safety presentations statewide by the end of September 2019.
“Your phone should not be your focus when you are driving. Your safety and the well-being of those around you are more important,” CHP Commissioner Warren Stanley said. “Nothing on your phone is worth endangering a life when you drive.”
Many distractions interfere with safe driving, but cell phones remain the top distraction. Using a cell phone, especially texting or emailing, is the most dangerous.
Other distractions include eating, grooming, talking to passengers, operating a navigation system, and adjusting the radio.
Driving requires undivided attention. The ADD grant will help drivers understand how distracted driving in any form puts everyone on the road at risk.
Funding for this program was provided by a grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
My mother invariably bought and wore an artificial red poppy on Veterans Day. I learned much later the poppy signified the blood and sacrifice of those who died on Flanders Field, a Belgian battle site that was the subject of the war’s most famous poem.
With the 100th anniversary of the end of the First World War on Nov. 11, 2018, as a scholar who has spent my career studying war in 20th century America, I am struck by the degree to which World War I has faded from popular memory.
Few Americans can name a single battle from this conflict. Heroes such as “Ace of Aces” fighter pilot Eddie Rickenbacker and “the greatest civilian soldier of the war,” Alvin York are no longer household names.
The fact that World War I is the forgotten war for Americans serves as a cautionary tale that some important memories can fade despite sustained efforts to foster them.
On Nov. 11, 1921, the official first unknown soldier is buried in this tomb in Arlington National Cemetery.U.S. Army
Memorials proliferated
World War I broke out in Europe in 1914, eventually pitting Germany, the Austro-Hungarian empire, the Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria against Belgium, France and its empire, Great Britain and its Empire, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Russia, Serbia, Romania, Italy, Japan, China, Portugal and a number of smaller nations.
The United States’ entry into the war ensured the European balance of war and avoided German dominance on the continent. The victory achieved on Nov. 11, 1918 at 11:00 a.m. would be commemorated by Americans as the “war to end all wars.”
In its aftermath, the war was publicly acknowledged in a variety of ways. The generation that went to war in 1917 transmitted its memory through the thousands of memorials they built, the Memorial Day holiday, and in their memoirs of war as a glorious endeavor.
Under the auspices of the American Battle Monuments Commission, they established overseas national cemeteries for the war’s dead and erected monuments in France and the United Kingdom.
And in Paris in 1919, American veterans of World War I founded the American Legion, which is still the nation’s largest veterans organization.
Flanders Field American Cemetery and Memorial, in Waregem, Belgium, where 411 American soldiers who died in WWI are buried.Library of Congress
Bitter debates
What has been lost along with the memory of the war is the memory of the bitter debates that engulfed the United States in the decades after the war, the 1920s and 1930s. When researching my dissertation and first book, Remembering War the American Way, I was stunned by how virtually every aspect of commemorating the war engendered debate during the interwar period.
During my eighth grade class trip to Arlington National Cemetery to visit the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in 1974, I remember how impressed we were at the spit and polish of the ceremony marking the changing of the guard. In fact, the origins of this ceremony and even the need for a guard in the first place stems from complaints of the American Legion in the 1920s that tourists were picnicking on the unfinished tomb and, even worse, that juvenile delinquents were playing games on them.
Memorials and division
Those who build memorials are often implicitly aiming to accomplish something other than memorializing.
In the case of World War I, the memorials were intended to heal and mask regional, ethnic and ideological divisions. For instance, the Unknown Soldier was hailed as an everyman because he could be rich and poor, native born or foreign born, a city dweller or a farmer.
The paradox of these efforts to forge memories in stone, marble, and copper is that memorials are often overshadowed by the controversies they are intended to heal.
Although memorials to World War I proclaimed that Americans had fought a “war to end all wars,” the post-war world remained perilous. Many elements contributed to the growing danger: A return of American isolationism, the war debt owed to the U.S. by European allies, the crushing of “Prussian militarism” that led to the birth of communist Russia and the fascism that took hold of Italy in the early 1920s.
Memorials sought to display the unity of all Americans, but the terrible legacy of World War I was the fear it engendered. During the war, German Americans were persecuted by vigilantes because of their ancestry. Despite the patriotic service of scores of new Americans from southern and eastern Europe, the U.S. Congress passed legislation restricting immigration of what were deemed undesirable immigrants from these regions.
Why have Americans forgotten World War I?
Perhaps the answer is that World War II reshaped the memory of the First World War. The fact that another world war broke out in less than a generation discredited the notion that World War I was a “war to end all wars.” As World War I faded into oblivion, it became easier to simply forget all the deep divisions engendered by this war for the more comforting narrative of World War II as the “good war”.