A remembrance of Victoria and the Canadian Army Medical Corps in the Great War

2008 ◽  
Vol 195 (5) ◽  
pp. 654-658
Author(s):  
Preston L. Carter
Author(s):  
Martha Hanna

An analysis of published and unpublished materials generated by the Canadian Army Medical Corps during the First World War demonstrates that Canadian doctors and nurses serving in France created a narrative of the Great War that was more optimistic in its message than the canonical war books written in the 1920s and 1930s and more internationalist in orientation than the dominant narrative of the war created in Canada after the war.


Author(s):  
Ian C. D. Moffat

The Great War was the world event that began the evolution of Canada from a self-governing British colony to a great independent country. However, one of Canada’s failings is its self-deprecation and modesty. Canada has produced a number of historic works documenting and analyzing Canada’s accomplishments and the individuals who made them happen. Although much was written by actual participants in the interwar years, the majority of the objective and analytical works have only slowly emerged after the Second World War when history became a respected academic discipline. This annotated bibliography gives a cross section of the Canadian Great War historiography with the majority of the work having been produced after 1980. The Canadian Army and the role of Canadians serving in the British Royal Flying Corps and Royal Naval Air Service have good coverage in Canadian monographs. The one area of study that has a dearth of work is on the Royal Canadian Navy since it had a very small role in the Great War and did not come into its own until after 1939. Nonetheless, there are a number of works included that show the Navy’s fledgling accomplishments between 1914 and 1918, as well as the efforts of the British Admiralty to restrict the Royal Canadian Navy’s actions in defense of its own area of operations. This bibliography also contains works on prisoners of war, the psychological effects of trench warfare on Canadians serving at the front, the internment of enemy aliens in Canada, and effects of the war on the home front, including one French work analyzing French Quebec’s changing attitude to World War I over the length of the 20th century.


Author(s):  
David J. Bettez

This chapter covers the response of Kentuckians when the Great War broke out in summer 1914. It details how some Kentuckians were initially caught in the war zone, while others chose to go there. The latter included correspondent Irvin Cobb, nurse Curry Breckinridge, and Alexander McClintock, a Lexingtonian who joined the Canadian army and received Britain’s second highest military award for valor. This chapter concludes with an overview of Kentucky at the outset of the war: a largely agricultural state marked by political strife and still affected by the Civil War during the first years of the twentieth century.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jay Winter ◽  
Antoine Prost
Keyword(s):  

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