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Canada & WW 1, 1914 - 1918 War on the Home Front

Canada & WW 1, 1914 - 1918

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Canada & WW 1, 1914 - 1918. War on the Home Front. Support for the War Effort. People on the home front were encouraged to meke sacrifices to ensure victory in Europe Victory Gardens ate less meat, sugar, butter, bread so soldiers would have enough - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Canada & WW 1, 1914 - 1918

Canada & WW 1, 1914 - 1918War on the Home Front

Page 2: Canada & WW 1, 1914 - 1918

Support for the War Effort

People on the home front were encouraged to make sacrifices to ensure victory in EuropeVictory Gardensate less meat, sugar, butter, bread so soldiers would have enoughPrairie students dismissed early to bring in harvests

Page 3: Canada & WW 1, 1914 - 1918

Terror on the Home Front

Halifax Explosion Dec. 6, 1917 2000 people killed, thousands more injured and homelessMont Blanc (French munitions ship) collided with the Belgian ship Imo

Blast felt 320 km awayOne of the worst disasters in Canadian history

Page 4: Canada & WW 1, 1914 - 1918

Enemy Aliens1914 – 500,000 German, Austrian & Hungarian people living in CanadaGovernment used War Measures Act to hold over 8597 enemy aliens in labour campsMajority were UkrainiansBerlin changed to Kitchener

Page 5: Canada & WW 1, 1914 - 1918

The Changing Role of Gov’t

Hoarding by some business people led to profiteeringGovernment encouraged honour rationing (e.g. Meatless Mondays)Victory Bonds needed to pay for cost of war ($1 million per day)

Page 6: Canada & WW 1, 1914 - 1918

New Roles for WomenMen at war women worked in factories & on farmsSuffragists – voting rights for womenWartime Elections Act – women who had male family in war could vote in 1917 electionDominion Elections Act 1920 – all women could vote

Page 7: Canada & WW 1, 1914 - 1918

ConscriptionConscription Crisis 1917 – men dying more than enlisting so shortage of soldiers English support / French DO NOT support conscripting men Military Service Bill – men 20-45 yrs old had to join armed forces, but not pacifistsPM Borden won election of 1917 riots in Quebec

Page 8: Canada & WW 1, 1914 - 1918

End of World War 1November 11, 1918 Germany surrendered after no supplies left to fight Canada 60,661 dead / 173,000 wounded out of 8 million Peace Treaty of Versailles – unfairly blames Germany for the war must pay for damages League of Nations uselessCanada more independent of Britain