Category Archives: Canada’s History

#LestWeForget

An item from the magazine Canada’s History that may be of interest to members.


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Canada's History

Mills of the Gods

In 1965, a Canadian woman’s groundbreaking documentary was among the first to reveal the horrifying reality of the Vietnam War. Read more

BY THE NUMBERS

Boer War

125 years ago, a thousand volunteers with the Royal Canadian Regiment travelled to South Africa by ship to join Imperial British forces engaged in the South African War (Boer War). Read more

PODCAST

Behind Barbed Wire:
A German POW in Canada

Exploring the memoirs of a captured German sailor. Listen now

Help keep Canada’s stories strong (and free)We hope you’ll help us continue to share fascinating stories about Canada’s past.

We highlight our nation’s diverse past by telling stories that illuminate the people, places, and events that unite us as Canadians, and by making those stories accessible to everyone through our free online content.

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VIDEO

Canada in Focus:
War and Peace

Is Canada really a “nation of peacekeepers?” Watch now

End of the
Second World War

2020 was the seventy-fifth anniversary of the end of the Second World War. For Remembrance Day we curated a collection of our online articles, audio, images and video about that era. Read more

The War to End All War

November 2018 marked the one hundredth anniversary of the end of the First World War. A century later, the conflict continues to affect us — even if we don’t fully realize it. This is our collection from the past ten years of articles, audio, images and video about the Great War. Read more

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You are receiving this email as a member or friend of Canada’s History. / Vous recevez ce courriel parce que vous êtes membre ou parce que vous appartenez à la communauté d’esprit de la Société Histoire Canada.
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Canada

A Nationwide Salute – Mark 100 years of RCAF Service

An item from Canada’s History magazine


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A Century of Service: Honouring 100 Years of the Royal Canadian Air Force

This year marks the 100th anniversary of the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF), flying higher, faster, and further, and bringing us ever closer to the stars.

Behind every enduring institution are the people at the heart of it, and the RCAF is no different. Beyond the aircraft, technology, and equipment is a diverse workforce who care deeply about serving their nation and ensuring the safety and security of their own country, as well as those that need it most.

Since 1924, RCAF personnel have consistently brought their expertise, knowledge, courage, commitment, and passion to the organization. From its humble beginnings conducting civil-oriented operations, to becoming the fourth largest Allied air force during the Second World War, to being a pillar of peacekeeping and humanitarian operations, and now leading national space power support, the RCAF has continued to evolve.

As we mark its centennial anniversary, we remember the contributions and achievements of its members over the past 100 years, and honour those who served, and continue to serve, today.

A tribute to the service the RCAF has brought to Canada and the world, the RCAF Centennial $2 coin honours the history and heritage of Canada’s Air Force, spanning 100 years of missions, machinery, milestones, and the personnel who make it all possible.

Learn more about the RCAF’s soaring legacy and the $2 commemorative circulation coin in its honour.

LEARN MORE
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© 2024 Canada’s History Society, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email as a member or friend of Canada’s History. / Vous recevez ce courriel parce que vous êtes membre ou parce que vous appartenez à la communauté d’esprit de la Société Histoire Canada.

Our mailing address is:

Canada’s History Society

Main Floor Bryce Hall, 515 Portage Avenue

Winnipeg, Manitoba R3B 2E9

Canada

Remembrance and reflection

Another item from Canada’s History magazine with a focus on remembrance that may be of interest to members.


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Canada's History
Explore the resources below as you and your students remember and reflect on the complexity of war this November and beyond.
Historical Thinking

‘Bomb Girls’: Defense Industries Limited and the Home Front

This lesson has students use documents, images, and interviews to gather data about the historical experiences of the ‘Bomb Girls’ and their workplace environment at Defence Industries Limited. Learn more

War and Peace in the Classroom

CANADA IN FOCUSIn this guide, educators share how they teach war and peace in the classroom, including advice, online resources, books, and lesson plans. Learn more

| Kayak: Canada’s History Magazine for Kids

Flying and Spying: The Life of Kam Len Douglas Sam

HISTORY BITSThrough exploring the life of Kam Len Douglas Sam, students will discover why Sam was the most decorated and highest-ranked Chinese Canadian in history. Learn more

At Home and Away

Explore the Kayak issues “Remembering the Great War,” “Great Canadian Women,” and “Canada and the Second World War” for stories about some of the many ways Canadians have been touched by war.

Museum Connections

Canada in the Korean War

STORIES BEHIND THE HISTORYIn this podcast episode, Canadian War Museum post-1945 historian Andrew Burtch and Canadian Armed Forces Chief of the Defence Staff General Wayne Eyre discuss Canada’s role in Korea, during the war and beyond. Listen now

Lee-Enfield Rifle

50 MUSEUM MARVELSAfter losing his cherished rifle, nicknamed “Rosalie,” during a gas attack in June 1918, Henri-Paul Lecorre discovered it thirty-eight years later in an exhibition of military artifacts in Lachute, Quebec. Learn more

War Games, CANADIAN WAR MUSEUM | In an age when tech can game out gazillions of options in a split second, it’s arresting to take in very real, often very analog, military simulations. Learn more

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© 2023 Canada’s History Society, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email as a member or friend of Canada’s History. / Vous recevez ce courriel parce que vous êtes membre ou parce que vous appartenez à la communauté d’esprit de la Société Histoire Canada.

Our mailing address is:

Canada’s History Society

Main Floor Bryce Hall, 515 Portage Avenue

Winnipeg, Manitoba R3B 2E9

Canada

RCAF Centenary | Stories from the Backwoods | 🐈‍⬛ Spookiness

Members should note the item at the top about the anniversary of the RCAF.


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Canada's History Reading Den

Flights of inspiration

Next year marks the centenary of the Royal Canadian Air Force, which was officially born on April 1, 1924. The forthcoming December 2023-January 2024 issue of Canada’s History magazine will include an excerpt from Pathway to the Stars: 100 Years of the Royal Canadian Air Force, by retired RCAF Lieutenant General Michael Hood and Canadian business leader Tom Jenkins, who has a decades-long involvement with the RCAF.

The authors note that early in the First World War the Canadian Aviation Corps was an “absurdly small unit, made up of two officers and one mechanic” that purchased a single airplane and never saw battle. But developments in the wake of the war, including the growing recognition of the importance of aviation for diverse civilian and military purposes, led to the formation of the RCAF.

Pathway to the Stars includes one hundred stories that together mark the centenary. Our excerpt includes sections about First World War ace William Barker, the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan of the Second World War, and the Canadian-built Lancaster bomber that carried the largest airborne payloads during that latter conflict.

Double your impact - celebrate Giving Tuesday by November 28, 2023 with Canada's National History Society!

A life in stories

Recipients of the Reading Den are automatically entered to win one of three copies of Paper Trails: From the Backwoods to the Front Page, by Roy MacGregor, courtesy of Random House Canada. During his decades working for many of the country’s leading publications, MacGregor has remained connected to Canada’s land and history while sharing stories from its farthest reaches.

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Image: Scary illustration of Chenu, as mentioned in the podcast Mi'kmaw Myths and Canadian Lore.

10 Spooky and spine-tingling stories

  1. The Basques: Telling the tale
  2. Bodysnatching in the 19th century
  3. Bringing La Corriveau to life
  4. Haunted history
  5. Canada’s X-Files isle
  6. Glorious ghost town
  7. Mikmaw myths & Canadian lore
  8. Otherworldly archives
  9. Sorcery in New France
  10. Unsinkable ghost ship

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 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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© 2023 Canada’s History Society, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email as a member or friend of Canada’s History. / Vous recevez ce courriel parce que vous êtes membre ou parce que vous appartenez à la communauté d’esprit de la Société Histoire Canada.

Our mailing address is:

Canada’s History Society

Main Floor Bryce Hall, 515 Portage Avenue

Winnipeg, Manitoba R3B 2E9

Canada

70 Years Since the Korean War Armistice

Today is the anniversary of the signing of the armistice to bring an end to the conflict during the Korean War.  Note this item from Canada’s History magazine on the topic.


Canada's History
Podcast: Canada in the
Korean War
Seventy years after the 1953 armistice, Canadian War Museum historian Andrew Burtch and Chief of the Defence Staff General Wayne Eyre discuss Canada’s involvement on the Korean Peninsula, from wartime to the present day. Listen now

[Stuff deleted]

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 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.
Did you get this newsletter from a friend? Sign up for your own and you’ll be eligible to win a FREE book!
We have five uniquely curated newsletters, including ones for teachers and in French. Sign Up Now
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© 2023 Canada’s History Society, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email as a member or friend of Canada’s History. / Vous recevez ce courriel parce que vous êtes membre ou parce que vous appartenez à la communauté d’esprit de la Société Histoire Canada.
Our mailing address is:

Canada’s History Society

Main Floor Bryce Hall, 515 Portage Avenue

Winnipeg, Manitoba R3B 2E9

Canada