Monthly Archives: October 2020

Today marks the start of the Annual Poppy Campaign

Today marks the start of the Annual Poppy Campaign.

This Remembrance Day, we are proud supporters of all our veterans and first-responders who have given their lives for the Canada we enjoy today. This Poppy season will look different, but you can still find a poppy:

https://royalcanadianlegionus25.com/poppy-campaign/

#GetYourPoppy

Historical Fiction | Lennon and Ono in Canada | Our Latest Top Sellers

This is a newsletter from Canada’s History magazine and it is the “Veterans Week Learning Materials” that is the reason we are sharing this item.


“Show me a family of readers, and I will show you the people who move the world.” — Napoléon Bonaparte
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Canada's History Reading Den

Cover of Five Little Indians.Engaging novels

Many Canadian writers explore the country’s history through novels and other creative writing. In the first of a few reading lists this fall, we present a dozen recent examples of Canadian historical fiction.

Michelle Good’s Five Little Indians, which follows teenagers in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside after their release from a residential school, is a finalist for the Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize and was longlisted for the Scotiabank Giller Prize.

In Forest Green, Governor General’s Award-winning author Kate Pullinger reaches back to the effects of the Great Depression and the Second World War upon a young man from British Columbia’s Okanagan Valley. Meanwhile, in The Place, Gary Collins explores life and crime in an isolated outport on the northeast coast of Newfoundland beginning late in the nineteenth century.

Other recently published books include stories about an artist at a prairie mental asylumthe decline of a wealthy Montreal family, and a young Irish immigrant to Canada.

Explore the list of recent historical fiction here.

Veterans' Week Learning Materials #CanadaRemembers

Cover of John Lennon, Yoko Ono and the Year Canada Was Cool.In-bed reading

Recipients of the Reading Den are automatically entered to win one of three copies of John Lennon, Yoko Ono and the Year Canada Was Cool, by Greg Marquis, courtesy of James Lorimer & Company. The book uses the couple’s 1969 bed-in for peace at an upscale Montreal hotel to offer a unique portrayal of Canadian society in the late 1960s.

Top 10 Bestsellers

  1. Strangers in the House: A Prairie Story
  2. 21 Things You May Not Know About the Indian Act
  3. Iroquois in the West
  4. No Surrender: The Land Remains Indigenous
  5. Recipes for Victory: Great War Food
  6. The Wake: Deadly Legacy of a Newfoundland Tsunami
  7. Stories Were Not Told: First World War Internment Camps
  8. Seeking the Fabled City: Canadian Jewish Experience
  9. Gaawin Gindaaswin Ndaawsii / I Am Not a Number
  10. Psychiatry and the Legacies of Eugenics
Cover of the October-November 2020 issue of Canada's History.
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Cover of All 'Bout Canada

Book Giveaway Winners

Congratulations to:

  • Natalka P., Southampton, Ont.
  • Margaret L., North Vancouver, B.C.
  • Ron Hanlin, Georgetown, Ont.

Canada’s History Archive featuring The Beaver

Please note: Some items featured in our newsletters and social media will include links to the Canada’s History Archive. The Beaver magazine was founded, and for decades was published, during eras shaped by colonialism. Concepts such as racial, cultural, or gender equality were rarely, if ever, considered by the magazine or its contributors. In earlier issues, readers will find comments and terms now considered to be derogatory. Canada’s History Society cautions readers to explore the archive using historical thinking concepts — not only analyzing the content but asking questions of who shaped the content and why.
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Discover Your Local Heritage this Remembrance

An item from the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.


Welcome to the CWGC’s latest newsletter.

As we approach a Remembrance Sunday like no other, we want to encourage you to discover the World War heritage on your doorstep this autumn. The CWGC maintains cemeteries and memorials at over 23,000 locations in more than 150 countries around the world, so at a time when large events might be cancelled and travel might not be possible, we want you to take this time to learn more about your local history and rediscover war graves near you.
Across Great Britain, we commemorate over 300,000 servicemen and women who died during the World Wars. For almost all based here this means there are likely war graves nearby – perhaps in your local cemetery or churchyard. It’s time to rediscover and remember these individuals.

Using our brand new Our War Graves, Your History digital platform, we have provided you with the information to learn about Our Work Across Great Britain, find cemeteries and memorials near you and plan a visit with our interactive Explore Great Britain map, and find out what’s happening near you on our dedicated events page.

The tools we are creating through this campaign are available for anyone to use, anywhere in the world, and we look forward to expanding our activities into new areas soon. While the Our War Graves, Your History digital resource does not currently include our sites in Northern Ireland or the rest of the world, you can use our Find Cemeteries and Memorials search to discover our sites of remembrance near you, and use #ShareYourTribute to share your visit on social media.

Five Fascinating Facts to get you started
There is so much to explore, learn and discover. To get you started, here are five fascinating facts about our work in Great Britain. Click on the images below to learn more.

War Graves Near You

We commemorate 300,000 service personnel at more than 12,000 locations across Great Britain. During both world wars, if a service person died in Great Britain, their family could choose where they would be laid to rest. Many preferred to have their loved one buried locally so they could visit regularly. Today, this means there is a good chance you might find war graves in a cemetery or churchyard near you.

Design by Competition

Our cemeteries and memorials are masterpieces of artistic and architectural design, but not all were created by architects employed by the Commission. After the Second World War, we ran a competition asking ex-service personnel to submit their deigns for the Liverpool, Lowestoft and Lee-On-Solent Naval Memorials. The winning designs were selected from hundreds of entries.

Far From Home

During both world wars, soldiers, sailors and airmen came from across the Commonwealth to fight. The graves of service personnel of Australian, Indian, Canadian, South African and New Zealand forces can be found across Great Britain, often near camps where they were based or close to hospitals established to care for them. Although they are far from home, the CWGC ensures they are not forgotten.

Former Foes

You might be surprised to learn that there are thousands of German service personnel buried across Great Britain. Many died of illness as prisoners of war, others were shot down from aircraft overhead, and some were recovered from British beaches, their bodies washed ashore after their ships went down.  Their graves are the responsibility of the Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge, or German Peoples’ War Graves Association, and we work in partnership with them to maintain the graves of German personnel across Great Britain.

On the Front Line

Our staff care for war graves and memorials across Great Britain, and their work is vital to ensuring that the fallen are never forgotten. For Chris Hawes, our Regional Manager for the East and East Central Regions, one of the outstanding moments of his 30-year career with us was meeting the elderly son of an Australian soldier in Scotton Cemetery. Chris had cared for the graves here for many years, and was able to accompany the gentleman who had travelled from Australia specially to visit the grave of his father for the first time.

Learn More about our work in Great Britain
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Copyright © 2020 Commonwealth War Graves Commission, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
2 Marlow Road, Maidenhead, Berkshire, SL6 7DX

www.cwgc.org

Official Canadian Portrait of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II

A new official Canadian portrait of Her Majesty The Queen is now available. The photograph was taken last year at Windsor Castle in the UK.

Her Majesty is wearing her Canadian insignia, as Sovereign of the Order of Canada and the Order of Military Merit. Created in 1967 by Her Majesty, the Order of Canada is our country’s highest civilian honour. The Order of Military Merit recognizes distinctive merit and exceptional service displayed by the men and women of the Canadian Armed Forces.

To view and download, visit https://www.canada.ca/en/canadian-heritage/services/royal-portraits/order-download-portraits.html

The National Remembrance Day Ceremony – Facebook Live

The 2020 National Remembrance Day Ceremony in Ottawa looks a little different this year. For the first time, spectators are discouraged from attending the service and encouraged to watch from home. Tune in to pay your respects on Facebook Live beginning at 7:45 am PST/10:45 am EST.

The two minutes of silence will be held at 8:00 am PST/11:00 am EST.

We Will Remember Them.

2020 National Remembrance Day Ceremony Overview: https://www.legion.ca/remembrance/remembrance-day/the-national-ceremony

la Cérémonie nationale du jour du Souvenir à Ottawa est un peu différente cette année. Pour la première fois, les spectateurs sont découragés d’assister au service et encouragés à regarder de chez eux. Connectez-vous pour présenter vos respects sur Facebook en direct à partir de 7 h 45 HNO/10 h 45 HNE.

Les deux minutes de silence auront lieu à 8 h 00 HNO/11 h 00 HNE.

Nous nous souviendrons d’eux.Cérémonie nationale du Souvenir 2020 – Un aperçu : https://www.legion.ca/fr/souvenir/jour-du-souvenir/participation-a-la-ceremonie-nationale

Join / Rejoindre : https://www.facebook.com/events/382710382890676/