This article uses an exceptional archival source, the register of deserters for the 165th (Acadian) Battalion, to study the little understood phenomenon of desertion during the recruitment and training of new units in Canada during the First World War. By 1916, national enrollment numbers were in stark decline, and yet this Acadian unit was able to attract nearly 900 recruits. However, approximately 200 of them deserted before the unit left for Europe. Employing techniques of longitudinal analysis with military records and national censuses, the article ident
The Great War was a formative event for men who came of age between 1914 and 1918. They believed the...
Review of Filling the Ranks: Manpower in the Canadian Expeditionary Force, 1914-1918 by Richard Holt
This study examines men who volunteered for active service during the Great War but were rejected as...
This article uses an exceptional archival source, the register of deserters for the 165th (Acadian) ...
This article examines psychological breakdown, combat stress and military justice through the 1945 g...
Because they have clearly demarcated beginnings and endings, wars tend to be studied in isolation. S...
This article examines the history of the Sea, Army, and Air Cadet programs during the Second World W...
An examination of the pension files of men having served in the 22nd Battalion (canadien-français), ...
This article tracks the Canadian Corps’ pursuit of the retreating German army in the last weeks of t...
This thesis explores three issues relating to the Canadian experience during the First World War, bu...
This article presents new evidence on the reintegration into the labour market of Québécois-Francoph...
Desertion was significant drain on the British Army’s slender manpower resources during the Napoleon...
Little has been written about Acadian volunteers to the Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF) during th...
My project explores war weariness in the First World War, especially regarding the Canadian Corps. T...
In Normandy, Canadian infantry divisions suffered a higher rate of casualties than British divisions...
The Great War was a formative event for men who came of age between 1914 and 1918. They believed the...
Review of Filling the Ranks: Manpower in the Canadian Expeditionary Force, 1914-1918 by Richard Holt
This study examines men who volunteered for active service during the Great War but were rejected as...
This article uses an exceptional archival source, the register of deserters for the 165th (Acadian) ...
This article examines psychological breakdown, combat stress and military justice through the 1945 g...
Because they have clearly demarcated beginnings and endings, wars tend to be studied in isolation. S...
This article examines the history of the Sea, Army, and Air Cadet programs during the Second World W...
An examination of the pension files of men having served in the 22nd Battalion (canadien-français), ...
This article tracks the Canadian Corps’ pursuit of the retreating German army in the last weeks of t...
This thesis explores three issues relating to the Canadian experience during the First World War, bu...
This article presents new evidence on the reintegration into the labour market of Québécois-Francoph...
Desertion was significant drain on the British Army’s slender manpower resources during the Napoleon...
Little has been written about Acadian volunteers to the Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF) during th...
My project explores war weariness in the First World War, especially regarding the Canadian Corps. T...
In Normandy, Canadian infantry divisions suffered a higher rate of casualties than British divisions...
The Great War was a formative event for men who came of age between 1914 and 1918. They believed the...
Review of Filling the Ranks: Manpower in the Canadian Expeditionary Force, 1914-1918 by Richard Holt
This study examines men who volunteered for active service during the Great War but were rejected as...