Doran Cart, a senior curator at the National World War I Museum and Memorial in Kansas City, Missouri, explains that since keeping in contact with other flanking units was essential for survival, each army had its own runners who were ready to set off with critical updates.
Runners were usually low-ranking non-commissioned officers, such as corporals, who were chosen for their fitness, stamina and ability to read maps, Cart explains. They also had to be tough and resourceful enough to find their destination in any sort of weather, and sufficiently lithe and agile to navigate obstacles. As they ventured beyond their unit’s position, they faced the risk of being shot or blown up before they got there, or on the way back.
Of all the jobs in the infantry, “the runner’s job was the hardest and most dangerous,” World War I veteran Lt. Allan L. Dexter observed in a 1931 newspaper article. “With a runner, it was merely a question of how long he would last before being wounded or killed.”
“It was a thankless job,” Cart says.
For most of the war, runners usually stayed within the extensive, multi-layered trench network along the front lines. “You didn’t get out on the open ground, because of snipers and machine gunners,” he says. They traveled what might seem like short distances, usually yards rather than miles as the crow flies. “Most trenches were zig-zag patterns,” Cart explains. “You could run a mile in a zig-zag trench, but you’d actually go only three hundred feet.”
In the late stages of the war, when the Allied forces were on the move, runners played the crucial role of maintaining communications between units that might be advancing at different speeds, according to Paul Grasmehr, a reference coordinator for the Pritzker Military Museum & Library in Chicago.
But traveling even over short distances was a difficult challenge because it was hard not to get bogged down in the ever-present mud at the front. “By 1917, after years of artillery bombardment, you had craters filled with water, a horrible moonscape,” Grasmehr says.