Welcome Back to School đźŤŽ

Note the first item in this newsletter from Canada’s History magazine.  It describes a five-part of various aspects of what Canada has historically been known for.  The first episode, which is available now, is focused on examining Canada as a peacekeeping nation – which we suspect may be of interest to some of our members.


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Canada's History

Canada in Focus

Introducing…Canada in Focus | This engaging five-part video series will take a long view of current Canadian topics by looking back through history, highlighting key events and turning points. Each video is accompanied by related support material, including teachers’ manuals and strategies, so viewers can engage with the content more deeply.

Don’t miss War & Peace, the first episode of the series, which asks: Is Canada really a “nation of peacekeepers?”

Finalists for the Governor General’s History Award for Excellence in Teaching

Canada’s History is pleased to announce this year’s shortlist for the 2022 Governor General’s History Awards for Excellence in Teaching. Congratulations to our eighteen finalists, who demonstrate many of the best practices in history education through their unique projects! Learn more

Teaching Highlights

In this podcast series, Canada’s History highlights the finalists for the 2022 Governor General’s History Award for Excellence in Teaching. Listen in as host Julia Richards interviews teachers shortlisted for this award about their projects and how they keep their students engaged in history. Learn more

Remembering the Children

Magazine and Educational MaterialsThis publication from the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation takes students to a variety of residential schools in different times and locations, opening a door into a past whose consequences are still felt today, while also celebrating the resilience and resurgence of First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples’ culture. Learn more

DisAbility

Sign up to receive your FREE class sets of our Kayak issue devoted to the historical treatment of people with disabilities and the origins of the support organizations on which Canadians have come to rely. Learn more

What’s the Story?

This free publication features the winning submissions from the national contest #OurStoriesOurVoices and is designed to inspire students to investigate and share the stories that matter to them. With project examples from students from across Canada, this publication will guide students through the process of undertaking a historical inquiry project — from sparking curiosity, designing a good inquiry question, and deciding how, where, and why to share their story.

Order now to receive your free digital copy — plus complementary educator materials. Students will also have the opportunity to connect and share their inspiration online.

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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You are receiving this email as a member or friend of Canada’s History. / Vous recevez ce courriel parce que vous ĂŞtes membre ou parce que vous appartenez Ă  la communautĂ© d’esprit de la SociĂ©tĂ© Histoire Canada.

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Your Marines’ Memorial Club & Hotel News for September 2022

An item from a fellow veterans organization in the Bay Area.


100 pictures of the 44th Legion National Youth Track and Field Championships: Part 1

An item from the folks at Legion Magazine.


Stephen J thorne

Stephen J. Thorne

100 pictures of the 44th Legion National Youth Track and Field Championships: Part 1

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

 

The Legion National Youth Track and Field Championships took place for the 44th time in August after a two-year, pandemic-imposed hiatus.

Six-hundred-and-ninety teenaged athletes participated over three days of events, including 255 Royal Canadian Legion-sponsored participants who more than held their own against elite club and independent competition from across the country. Among 52 clubs and unattached athletes, RCL teams swept the Top 3 positions in the medal count and placed five in the Top 10.

With Ontario and Newfoundland and Labrador not participating for another year due to COVID-related issues, British Columbia/Yukon led all comers with 20 gold and 43 medals overall, followed by Alberta-Northwest Territories (16/36) and Quebec (8/26). Manitoba/Northwest Ontario placed fifth in the team count with 10 medals; Nova Scotia/Nunavut was eighth with eight, half of them gold.

Legion-sponsored teams took 129 of 248 medals awarded at the championships, the only truly national competition for pre-university track-and-field athletes in the country.

 

 

READ MORE

5 Volume Collection

PA-056817

Remembering the first Canadian to die in the Second World War

STORY BY SHARON ADAMS

On Sept. 1, 1939, the passenger liner Athenia left Scotland bound for Montreal, two days before Britain declared war on Germany.

Athenia was carrying 1,418 passengers and crew, including 469 Canadians, mostly women and children, trying to get home before hostilities began. Among them was Hannah Baird of Verdun, Que., who went to Britain as a nanny, escorting two children travelling to join relatives, and took a job as a steward on Athenia to work her way back home.

But the Second World War began while Athenia was at sea. Britain declared war on Germany at 11 a.m. on Sept. 3. The Germans had stationed a score of U-boats around the British Isles and were ready to attack, which they did—just eight hours after war officially began

Athenia was the first British ship torpedoed by a U-boat in the conflict and Baird was the first Canadian civilian war casualty, seven days before the country entered the war.

 

READ MORE

Safe Step Walk In Tubs

We want to help you understand that your hearing health matters as much as other aspect of your wellbeing. We’re offering up to $1500 off the purchase of a pair of hearing aids for Legion members and their family. Start loving your ears today and book your free hearing consultation!

Will you toll the Bells of Peace in 2022 ?

An item from the organization formerly known as the World War One Centennial Commission, which may be of interest to members.


View as a webpage

Doughboy Foundation and Bells of Peace combined logos

Announcing Bells of Peace 2022


Bells of Peace 2022 header image

You have tolled the bells in the past.
Please join us again in 2022
to honor all those who served and sacrificed

Bells of Peace is a U.S. national “bell tolling” remembrance created in collaboration with the Society of the Honor Guard, Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (SHGTUS) in 2018 to commemorate the 100-year anniversary of the World War I Armistice.

The Doughboy Foundation has since promoted it as an annual remembrance of those who served in WWI and the11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month, when the guns fell silent, and bells tolled on the Western Front in 1918.

Uncle Sam wants you to toll the bells

Sign Up

Register your 2022 participation as an individual or as an organization and join the tens of thousands who have tolled the bells in the name of liberty and freedom.

When you sign up you can add your organization’s logo to the National Participants Wall (going back to 2018).

Bells of Peace Participation App

No bell? No Problem!

Download the Bells of Peace Participation App and get a countdown timer to 11/11 @11am local.

Select from various bell sounds that toll 21 times, 5 seconds apart from your smartphone at the right time. Get others in your group to do the same, all selecting different sounds with the phone clocks synchronizing the tolling.

If you don’t use social media, you can still share your plans and your event through the App using the phone to take pictures or make videos, and it will also be included on the National Participants Wall.

Join us at the WWI Memorial in Washington D.C. in person
or online at 10:30am Eastern

Bells of Peace tolling at the WWI Memorial in Washington, D.C.

The Doughboy Foundation will be hosting a Bells of Peace commemoration at the National WWI Memorial in Washington, D.C. starting at 10:30am Eastern on November 11, 2022.

General Barry McCaffrey

The ceremony will include a wreath dedication, remarks by special guest General Barry McCaffrey, the Bells of Peace tolling, and “Echoing Taps” by Taps For Veterans, when multiple buglers will play taps from different corners of the WWI Memorial.

If you are in DC, we invite you to join us live at the Memorial, located at Pennsylvania Avenue between 14th Street and 15th Street NW, across from the White House Visitor Center. If you are not local, tune in to our LIVE STREAM on the Doughboy Foundation YouTube channel at YouTube.Com/c/TheDoughboyFoundation or on the home page of Bells of Peace site.

Questions?

Get the overview on the About page or dig into the details on the Info and FAQs page.

Contact:
BellsOfPeace@doughboy.org