Canada’s soldiers in the Second World War did not receive the same acclaim from historians as the Canadian Corps in the Great War. Some of the blame for this rests on official historian C.P. Stacey, but some also rests on the loss of leadership material to the Royal Canadian Navy and Royal Canadian Air Force and on General Harry Crerar who was less of a commander than Sir Arthur Currie. But much also lies with historians who did not look beyond the Normandy fighting to the superb performance of the Canadians in the last nine months of the war
During the Second World War, the Canadian Army’s announcement of casualties to next–of–kin and the p...
Review of Canadians on the Somme, 1916: The Neglected Campaign by William F. Stewart
Review of Terry Copp, The Brigade: The Fifth Canadian Infantry Brigade, 1939-1945. Stoney Creek, ON:...
Canada’s soldiers in the Second World War did not receive the same acclaim from historians as the Ca...
There is a curious paradox about the Canadian Corps that is summed up in this quotation from Canadia...
The Allied record in Normandy is irritating simply because we could have done better. The extensive ...
In 1915, the Canadian Corps was little more than a rabble of enthusiastic amateurs. Yet by 1917-18, ...
In 1915, the Canadian Corps was little more than a rabble of enthusiastic amateurs. Yet by 1917-18, ...
Recent Canadian military history has not been kind to the men who led Canada’s Army in the Second Wo...
Few people did as much to shape Canada’s Second World War effort, and no single person did as much t...
In Normandy, Canadian infantry divisions suffered a higher rate of casualties than British divisions...
Major-General J.M. “Rocky” Rockingham wrote this letter to Colonel C.P. Stacey shortly after the app...
There is a curious paradox about the Canadian Corps that is summed up in this quotation from Canadia...
Review of The Empire on the Western Front: The British 62nd and Canadian 4th Divisions in Battle by ...
There is relatively little Canadian military history which looks specifically at the questions and t...
During the Second World War, the Canadian Army’s announcement of casualties to next–of–kin and the p...
Review of Canadians on the Somme, 1916: The Neglected Campaign by William F. Stewart
Review of Terry Copp, The Brigade: The Fifth Canadian Infantry Brigade, 1939-1945. Stoney Creek, ON:...
Canada’s soldiers in the Second World War did not receive the same acclaim from historians as the Ca...
There is a curious paradox about the Canadian Corps that is summed up in this quotation from Canadia...
The Allied record in Normandy is irritating simply because we could have done better. The extensive ...
In 1915, the Canadian Corps was little more than a rabble of enthusiastic amateurs. Yet by 1917-18, ...
In 1915, the Canadian Corps was little more than a rabble of enthusiastic amateurs. Yet by 1917-18, ...
Recent Canadian military history has not been kind to the men who led Canada’s Army in the Second Wo...
Few people did as much to shape Canada’s Second World War effort, and no single person did as much t...
In Normandy, Canadian infantry divisions suffered a higher rate of casualties than British divisions...
Major-General J.M. “Rocky” Rockingham wrote this letter to Colonel C.P. Stacey shortly after the app...
There is a curious paradox about the Canadian Corps that is summed up in this quotation from Canadia...
Review of The Empire on the Western Front: The British 62nd and Canadian 4th Divisions in Battle by ...
There is relatively little Canadian military history which looks specifically at the questions and t...
During the Second World War, the Canadian Army’s announcement of casualties to next–of–kin and the p...
Review of Canadians on the Somme, 1916: The Neglected Campaign by William F. Stewart
Review of Terry Copp, The Brigade: The Fifth Canadian Infantry Brigade, 1939-1945. Stoney Creek, ON:...