Voyage Au Canada Dans Le Nord de l'Amerique Septentrionale. (Ed.18..) (Histoire)
by Bonnefons J C
Rolls of the Provincial (Loyalist) Corps, Canadian Command American Revolutionary Period (Dundurn Canadian Historical Document, #1)
by Mary Beacock Fryer and William A Smy
Arctic Front
by Ken Coates, Etc, P Whitney Lackenbauer, William R Morrion, and Greg Poelzer
Canadians and War Volume 2 (Canadians and War, #2)
by W a Leavey and Karen Hann
This is the story of 1st Canadian Radar Battery between 1944 and 1945. The account deals with the true beginnings of Counter-Mortar operations by the Army Operational Research Group and shows how their work helped the Allies rid Europe of the Axis powers.
The Maple Leaf Army in Britain (Gote House Militaria S.)
by Peter Longstaff-Tyrrell and Patricia Berry
Padres in No Man's Land (McGill-Queen's Studies in the History of Religion, #16) (McGill-Queen's Studies in the Hist of Re)
by Duff Crerar
Tracing the growth of the Canadian Chaplain Service from its chaotic and controversy-ridden early days to its maturation as an efficient field force, Duff Crerar highlights both the role of the Service on the battlefield and the personal experiences of the chaplains. Refuting the widely held view that chaplains serving overseas were cloistered from front-line realities, Crerar describes the padres' experiences in camps, hospitals, and on the battlefield. He examines how they maintained their fai...
Examines military culture from a theoretical and a practical point of view
Canada's role as world power and its sense of itself in the global landscape has been largely shaped and defined over the past 100 years by the changing policies and personalities in the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade (DFAIT). This engaging and provocative book brings together fifteen of the country's leading historians and political scientists to discuss a century of Canada's national interests and DFAIT's role in defining and pursuing them. Accomplished and influential...
"The Canadian government censored the news during World War II for two main reasons: to keep military and economic secrets out of enemy hands and to prevent civilian morale from breaking down. But in those tumultuous times... censors had a hard time keeping news events contained. Now, with freshly unsealed World War II press-censor files, many of the undocumented events that occurred in wartime Canada are finally revealed. [This book] investigates the realities of media censorship through the ex...
From the West Coast to the Western Front
by Mark Forsythe and Greg Dickson
They were the men who led our nation in war and peace. In world wars, they were the steady hands guiding our forces to victory; in peacekeeping, they helped to establish and preserve order. Over the years they have helped the Canadian Forces to become one of the proudest militaries in the world. Warrior Chiefs: Perspectives on Senior Canadian Military Leaders is the first book of a two-part series that examines the unique Canadian experience and outlook in regard to Generalship and the Art of th...
From Canada’s top war historian, a definitive medical history of the Great War, illuminating how the carnage of modern battle gave birth to revolutionary life-saving innovations. It brings to light shocking revelations of the ways the brutality of combat and the necessity of agonizing battlefield decisions led to unimaginable strain for men and women of medicine who fought to save the lives of soldiers. Medical care in almost all armies, and especially in the Canadian medical services, was soph...
Vies Transform?es ? R?cits de la Seconde Guerre Mondiale (La Collection Catalogue-Souvenir, #26)
by Tim Cook and Britt Braaten