65 research outputs found

    The Militia Gunners

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    \u3cem\u3eRich Relations: The American Occupation of Britain, 1942–1945\u3c/em\u3e by David Reynolds [Review]

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    Review of David Reynolds, Rich Relations: The American Occupation of Britain, 1942-1945. New York and Toronto: Random House, 1995

    Researching Guy Simonds

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    Review of Dominick Graham, The Price of Command: A Biography of General Guy Simonds. Toronto: Stoddart, 1993

    Successful Command Lieutenant-General Robert Moncel on Wartime Leaders

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    Promotion Struck Him as Mysterious Major-General A. Bruce Matthews Interviewed

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    Granatstein on Montgomery

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    Review of Stephen Brooks, ed. Montgomery and the Eighth Army: A Selection from the Diaries, Correspondence and Other Papers of Field Marshal the Viscount Montgomery of Alamein, August 1942 to December 1943. London: The Army Records Society, 1991

    The American Influence on the Canadian Military, 1939–1963

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    On Armistice Day in 1927, officials of the Canadian and United States governments dedicated a monument at Arlington Cemetery near Washington to commemorate the service of those Americans who had fought with Canadian forces before their country became a belligerent in the Great War. The occasion, stage-managed by Vincent Massey, Canada’s first Minister to the United States, was a glittering ceremony featuring permanent force infantry of the Royal Canadian Regiment and the Royal 22nd Regiment in their British-pattern scarlet tunics, as well as the pipes and drums of the 48th Highlanders, a well-known kilted Toronto militia regiment. Everyone was on their best bahviour, and the occasion was a great success, even the review of the infantry at the White House by the taciturn, if not comatose, President Calvin Coolidge

    The CIA on Canadian Defence Policy

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    At the request of the Pentagon, in the spring of 1985 the Central Intelligence Agency prepared an assessment of Canadian defence policy. Brian Mulroney’s Progressive Conservatives had formed the government in the election of 4 September 1984 and, in the CIA’s view, the new administration was likely to be more interested in defence than the Liberals. Even so, the assessment observed that “Canadians generally think little about defense and when they do, reject outright the idea of giving defense priority over maintaining the social welfare system.

    Canadian History Text Books and the Wars

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