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The First World War
Most Canadians were proud to be part of the
British Empire. Over 7,000 volunteered to fight
in the South African War (1899–1902), popularly
known as the Boer War, and over 260 died. In
1900, Canadians took part in the battles of
Paardeberg (“Horse Mountain”) and Lillefontein,
victories that strengthened national pride in
Canada.
When Germany attacked Belgium and France in
1914 and Britain declared war, Ottawa formed the
Canadian Expeditionary Force (later the Canadian
Corps). More than 600,000 Canadians served in
the war, most of them volunteers, out of a total
population of eight million.
On the battlefield, the Canadians proved to be
tough, innovative soldiers. Canada shared in
the tragedy and triumph of the Western Front.
The Canadian Corps captured Vimy Ridge in
April 1917, with 10,000 killed or wounded,
securing the Canadians’ reputation for valour
as the “shock troops of the British Empire.” One
Canadian officer said: “It was Canada from the
Atlantic to the Pacific on parade ... In those few
minutes I witnessed the birth of a nation.” April 9
is celebrated as Vimy Day.
Regrettably, from 1914 to 1920, Ottawa interned
over 8,000 former Austro-Hungarian subjects,
mainly Ukrainian men, as “enemy aliens” in
24 labour camps across Canada, even though
Britain advised against the policy.
In 1918, under the command of General Sir Arthur
Currie, Canada’s greatest soldier, the Canadian
Corps advanced alongside the French and
British Empire troops in the last hundred days.
These included the victorious Battle of Amiens
on August 8, 1918–which the Germans called
“the black day of the German Army”–followed
by Arras, Canal du Nord, Cambrai and Mons.
With Germany and Austria’s surrender, the war
ended in the Armistice on November 11, 1918. In
total 60,000 Canadians were killed and 170,000
wounded. The war strengthened both national
and imperial pride, particularly in English
Canada.
(From Top to Bottom)
The Vimy Memorial in
France honours those
who served and died in
the Battle of Vimy Ridge
on April 9, 1917, the first
British victory of the First
World War
Agnes Macphail, a farmer
and teacher, became the
first woman MP in 1921
(From Left to Right)
Sergeant, Fort Garry Horse,
Canadian Expeditionary Force,
1916
Sir Arthur Currie, a reserve
officer, became Canada’s
greatest soldier
Maple leaf cap badge from
the First World War. Canada’s
soldiers began using the maple
leaf in the 1850s
Women get the vote
At the time of Confederation, the vote was
limited to property-owning adult white males.
This was common in most democratic countries
at the time. The effort by women to achieve the
right to vote is known as the women’s suffrage
movement. Its founder in Canada was Dr. Emily
Stowe, the first Canadian woman to practise
medicine in Canada. In 1916, Manitoba became
the first province to grant voting rights to women.
In 1917, thanks to the leadership of women such
as Dr. Stowe and other suffragettes, the federal
government of Sir Robert Borden gave women
the right to vote in federal elections — first to
nurses at the battle front, then to women who
were related to men in active wartime service.
In 1918, most Canadian female citizens aged 21
and over were granted the right to vote in federal
elections. In 1921 Agnes Macphail, a farmer and
teacher, became the first woman MP. Due to the
work of Thérèse Casgrain and others, Quebec
granted women the vote in 1940.
More than 3,000 nurses,
nicknamed “Bluebirds,”
served in the Royal
Canadian Army Medical
Corps, 2,500 of them
overseas
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