WW1 August 1914 to November 1918.

  • Canada at War

    Canada at War
    When Britain went to war on 4 August, all colonies and dominions of the British Empire, like Canada and Newfoundland, were automatically at war
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    WW1 August 1914 to November 1918.

  • War Measures Act

    Canada passed the War Measures Act in order to provide the government with new and intrusive powers to prosecute the war. These powers included censorship, the right to detain and arrest Canadians, and the right to take control over any property.
  • Trenches

    First trenches of the western front were built
  • Battle of Ypres

    First Battle of Ypres - British lost a vast number of troops
  • War on Turkey

    France and Britain declared war on Turkey
  • Battle of Second Ypres

    In Canada’s first major battle, the outnumbered Canadian Division faced the first use of chlorine gas as a battlefield agent. A third of the force, or 6,000 soldiers, were killed, wounded, or captured, but the Canadians kept the Germans from breaking through.
  • Gallipoli

    Battle for Gallipoli was started
  • Beaumont Hamel

    he Newfoundland Regiment went into battle at Beaumont Hamel as part of a general British offensive on 1 July 1916. Due to error and miscalculation, the Regiment attacked through uncut barbed wire against heavy machine-gun fire. Within 30 minutes, 324 of its 801 soldiers were dead or missing, and another 386 were wounded.
  • Tank use

    First use of tanks in the Battle of the Somme
  • Battle of the Somme

    Battle of the Somme ended as inconclusive but great losses on both sides
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    Battle of Vimy Ridge

    Canadians successfully attacked the German-held strongpoint of Vimy Ridge. The thoroughly planned and executed victory has become a post-war symbol for Canadian identity and independence.
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    The battles

    Battle of Passchendaele also known as the Third Battle of Ypres
  • Wartime Elections Act

    In preparation for an election mainly on the issue of conscription (mandatory military service) the government changed the election rules. Some Canadian women were able to vote for the first time, while other Canadians lost their right to vote in sweeping changes to enfranchisement.
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    Battle of Passchendaele

    This battle is remembered for its brutal fighting and horrible weather conditions. Canadian forces, serving under a Canadian commander, captured their objective, but suffered 16,000 killed or wounded.
  • Federal Election

    The 1917 debate on conscription, mandatory military service for men, was one of the fiercest and most divisive in Canadian political history. French-Canadians, as well as many farmers, unionized workers, non-British immigrants, and other Canadians, generally opposed the measure. English-speaking Canadians, as well as British immigrants, the families of soldiers, and older Canadians generally supported it. The pro-conscription side won the election. Conscription polarized provinces, ethnic and li
  • Woodrow Wilson

    Woodrow Wilson outlines his Fourteen Points
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    The Hundred Days

    Canadians played a key role in the series of battles that formed the Hundred Days campaign. With the infantry and artillery working in a combined arms system, along with tactical airpower, machine-guns, mortars, chemical weapons, and armoured vehicles, the German armies were driven back and defeated.
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    Ypres

    Fifth Battle of Ypres
  • Armistice

    The war ended at 11 a.m. on this day. More than nine million service personnel and an estimated 20 million civilians were killed in the war.