The historiography of the First World War has produced no recent comprehensive study of the Canadian artillery, despite its importance on the battlefield. This article seeks to explain how Canadian artillery evolved on the Somme. The central conclusions of this article are that the Canadian artillery’s performance during the battle was mixed, and that a number of technological, tactical, and organizational changes, not all of them Canadian, in the Canadian Corps that we recognize from the artillery of 1917-1918 were developed during, or as a result of, the Somme
On August 4, 1914 Canada found itself at war. While Canada had nearly complete control of its domest...
This article explores the Canadian tunnelling companies’ military mining organisation and accomplish...
The Anzac myth enshrines a popular history of Australian superiority on the battlefields of the Grea...
Increased infantry combat power in comparison with the Somme was one of the critical factors in the ...
Increased infantry combat power in comparison with the Somme was one of the critical factors in the ...
This article examines the operational research conducted by the counter-battery staff office (CBO) i...
The fighting on the Western Front during the First World War was characterized by the mass use of ar...
Although the Canadian Corps did not participate directly in the German Spring Offensives that began ...
The fighting on the Western Front during the First World War was characterized by the mass use of ar...
Expansion of the British Army through Lord Kitchener’s New Armies has dominated the historiography o...
Of Canada’s long military history, Vimy is the one battle that most Canadians will know. Some will b...
This paper focuses on the unique ability of the British 18th Division to attain all of its allocated...
The emergence of static warfare on the Western Front in late 1914, encouraged the reinvention of dev...
The article explores the early mistakes (as seen by the participants at Loos and later at Flers Cour...
This lantern slide, “World War I Heavy Artillery,” is a heavily damaged image that appears to show t...
On August 4, 1914 Canada found itself at war. While Canada had nearly complete control of its domest...
This article explores the Canadian tunnelling companies’ military mining organisation and accomplish...
The Anzac myth enshrines a popular history of Australian superiority on the battlefields of the Grea...
Increased infantry combat power in comparison with the Somme was one of the critical factors in the ...
Increased infantry combat power in comparison with the Somme was one of the critical factors in the ...
This article examines the operational research conducted by the counter-battery staff office (CBO) i...
The fighting on the Western Front during the First World War was characterized by the mass use of ar...
Although the Canadian Corps did not participate directly in the German Spring Offensives that began ...
The fighting on the Western Front during the First World War was characterized by the mass use of ar...
Expansion of the British Army through Lord Kitchener’s New Armies has dominated the historiography o...
Of Canada’s long military history, Vimy is the one battle that most Canadians will know. Some will b...
This paper focuses on the unique ability of the British 18th Division to attain all of its allocated...
The emergence of static warfare on the Western Front in late 1914, encouraged the reinvention of dev...
The article explores the early mistakes (as seen by the participants at Loos and later at Flers Cour...
This lantern slide, “World War I Heavy Artillery,” is a heavily damaged image that appears to show t...
On August 4, 1914 Canada found itself at war. While Canada had nearly complete control of its domest...
This article explores the Canadian tunnelling companies’ military mining organisation and accomplish...
The Anzac myth enshrines a popular history of Australian superiority on the battlefields of the Grea...