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About the Great War
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327 Tag Results for Army
Alfred Frank Mantle
"Everyone is now saying . . . that such indispensable men as Frank Mantle in a new land like Saskatchewan should not be permitted to enlist.”
Francis Clarence McGee
His accomplishment, then rarely seen at the highest level of hockey, heralded a new era. He averaged better than three goals a game.
Daniel Isaac Vernon Eaton
He had a promising career as an artillery officer, only to lose his life on the eve of Canada’s greatest military achievement of the Great War.
Augustine Emmanuel Lambert
The wear and tear of trench warfare had taken its toll and Lambert went out for two weeks with trench fever.
Talbot Mercer Papineau
His remarkable letters from the front are the Canadian voice of World War I, a reminder of all that was lost there.
Hedley John Goodyear
In his M.A. thesis, “Newfoundland and its political and commercial relation to Canada,” he argued that its future lay in a confederation with Canada.
Archibald Ernest Graham McKenzie
McKenzie was undoubtedly New Brunswick’s most distinguished soldier in World War I.
Reginald John Godfrey Bateman
War, he said, “is the one supreme, the only entirely adequate test of a nation’s spiritual quality."
Roderick Ogle Bell-Irving
Before the conflict would end, all of Henry Bell-Irving’s six sons were in the armed forces and two of his four daughters served as nurses.
Charles James Townshend Stewart
He has the vitality of Hercules but remains normal by undermining operations, such as fifty cigarettes a day and the output of a whiskey factory.
Results 311 - 320 of
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