During the Second World War, the Canadian Army’s announcement of casualties to next–of–kin and the press often caused controversy. Even though the army tried to notify the family and public as quickly as possible, it could not always do so. Unofficial communications with the family, procedural failures, and more frequently press and censorship errors, cause occasional mistakes in casualty reporting. Moreover, the interests of Canada’s allies often prevented the timely publication of casualty names and figures, as in the aftermath of the Dieppe Raid, Sicily campaign and Normandy landings. These delays were often for alleged security reasons, sometimes with questionable justification. This led to widespread, albeit inaccurate, suspicion of po...
The toll of Canadian casualties in Afghanistan has been one of the more hotly debated problems in Ca...
This article explores the ways in which Canadian military authorities responded to suicide during th...
During the Second World War public memorialization and private bereavement complemented one another ...
In Normandy, Canadian infantry divisions suffered a higher rate of casualties than British divisions...
Between the end of the Second World War and the mid-1960s, the Canadian federal government made seve...
The Canadian government and military struggled to control its media framing of the war in Afghanista...
Canada’s soldiers in the Second World War did not receive the same acclaim from historians as the Ca...
Canada’s soldiers in the Second World War did not receive the same acclaim from historians as the Ca...
In April 2002, four Canadian soldiers were killed and eight wounded by “friendly fire ” when a U.S. ...
While the Canadian Corps earned a reputation as one of the finest fighting formations on the Western...
The Allied record in Normandy is irritating simply because we could have done better. The extensive ...
Official censorship of the news media by the Canadian governmenthas only occurred twice in the histo...
The toll of Canadian casualties in Afghanistan has been one of the more hotly debated problems in Ca...
The toll of Canadian casualties in Afghanistan has been one of the more hotly debated problems in Ca...
The toll of Canadian casualties in Afghanistan has been one of the more hotly debated problems in Ca...
The toll of Canadian casualties in Afghanistan has been one of the more hotly debated problems in Ca...
This article explores the ways in which Canadian military authorities responded to suicide during th...
During the Second World War public memorialization and private bereavement complemented one another ...
In Normandy, Canadian infantry divisions suffered a higher rate of casualties than British divisions...
Between the end of the Second World War and the mid-1960s, the Canadian federal government made seve...
The Canadian government and military struggled to control its media framing of the war in Afghanista...
Canada’s soldiers in the Second World War did not receive the same acclaim from historians as the Ca...
Canada’s soldiers in the Second World War did not receive the same acclaim from historians as the Ca...
In April 2002, four Canadian soldiers were killed and eight wounded by “friendly fire ” when a U.S. ...
While the Canadian Corps earned a reputation as one of the finest fighting formations on the Western...
The Allied record in Normandy is irritating simply because we could have done better. The extensive ...
Official censorship of the news media by the Canadian governmenthas only occurred twice in the histo...
The toll of Canadian casualties in Afghanistan has been one of the more hotly debated problems in Ca...
The toll of Canadian casualties in Afghanistan has been one of the more hotly debated problems in Ca...
The toll of Canadian casualties in Afghanistan has been one of the more hotly debated problems in Ca...
The toll of Canadian casualties in Afghanistan has been one of the more hotly debated problems in Ca...
This article explores the ways in which Canadian military authorities responded to suicide during th...
During the Second World War public memorialization and private bereavement complemented one another ...