The Bitter Harvest of War

Similar documents
3/8/2011. Most of the world wasn t surprised when the war broke out, but some countries were better prepared than others.

Vimy Ridge and Passchendaele. Birth of a Nation

The Second Battle of Ypres

World War One Definition of War/Countries Involved Background Information WWI 4 Causes of World War I (p. 275) Declaring War (p.

Exploring the Battle of the Somme A toolkit for students and teachers

3/29/2011. The battle of Vimy Ridge is one of the greatest battles in Canada s history.

The. Most Devastating War Battles

Canada and WW I. Canada s great patriot crusade

Recall y all Random 5. What are five random statements that you can make about the beginning of WWI?

like during World War I?

The War in Europe 5.2

The First World War. 1. Nationalism in Europe, a policy under which nations built up their armed forces, was a major cause of World War I.

ANTICIPATION GUIDE. Initial - Agree or Disagree. After - Agree or Disagree LOSER IN WAR. REASON STATEMENTS EVERYTHING ABOUT WAR IS BAD.

A Soldier of the Great War

World War I. Part 3 Over There

Canadians Fighting in Europe Most Canadian soldiers fought as part of the Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF), a part of the British Army.

Canadian troops rest in reserve trenches during the Battle of Mont Sorrel near Ypres, Belgium, in June DND/LAC/PA

Broken Promises: A History of Conscription in Canada Revised edition (Book Review) by J.L. Granatstein and J.M. Hitsman

Combatants in World War I quickly began to use total war tactics

Private Arnold Howard Broadley ( ).

Schlieffen Plan: Germany s military strategy in 1914 for attacking France through its unprotected Belgian border. Schlieffen Plan Part II (13:01)

In May 1945 it was the Russians who hoisted their flag over the ruins of the Reichstag building in Berlin.

A Soldier of the Great War Private John Draddy 41 st Battalion AIF

PRIVATE ARTHUR CAIRNS st Kings Own Scottish Borderers

The War of 1812 Gets Under Way

Unit 2 (Chapter 3): Canada and The First World War

DIEPPE - BASIC FACTS. Canadians in Battle - Dieppe

WORLD WAR II. Chapter 8

American Anthem. Modern American History. Chapter 8. The First World War Columbus statute in Rhode Island

Canada and Newfoundland entered into the war as they were colonies of Britain. Other colonies who joined were Australia and New Zealand.

Supporting the Front The Battle of Vimy Ridge April 1917

Slide 1. Slide 2. Slide 3. Form into NGT pairs and then fours to consider the above table:

In your spiral create 8 graphic organizers over the material provided. The graphic organizers may only have 3 spokes; therefore you will need to

How did the Second World War start?

SCHOLASTIC INC. SCHOLASTIC INC.

9/27/2017. With Snow on their Boots. The Russian Expeditionary Force (R.E.F.) on the Western Front:

The War in Europe and North Africa Ch 24-1

Then on Feb. 21, the German 5th Army, with 40 full-strength infantry divisions, each of 16,000 men, began the assault on Verdun, France.

If you re Germany, how can you attack France with a better plan?

World War I Quiz Air Warfare

Private Samuel Maurice Applin (Number , of the 42 nd Battalion (Royal Highlanders of Canada), Canadian Expeditionary Corps, is interred in La

5/27/2016 CHC2P I HUNT. 2 minutes

Timeline: Battles of the Second World War. SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance) BATTLE: THE INVASION OF POLAND

ELLESMERE PORT WAR MEMORIAL PROJECT

BELLWORK 3/28. What does a stalemate mean? a contest, dispute, competition, etc., in which neither side can gain an advantage or win

HSC Modern History Conflict in Europe Notes

World History since Wayne E. Sirmon HI 104 World History

Warm Up. What are the four long term causes of World War I? What is the immediate cause of World War I?

Spring Offensives in 1918:

Booklet Number 48 JOHN GIBSON. Flers after the battles of 1916

French and Indian War. The Seven Year War

Military Doctrines Infantry Doctrines

A Soldier of the Great War James Josey

The FirsT. World War. with imperial war museums. Sarah Webb. Uncorrected sample pages copyright of Hodder Education. Not for redistribution.

Chapter 20 Section 1 Mobilizing for War. Click on a hyperlink to view the corresponding slides.

Lieutenant Robert Ainslie Hamilton

European Theatre. Videos

WWI: Battlefields and Homefront

Initiatives in This exhibition is graciously supported by the Friends of the Canadian War Museum and Michael and Anne Gough.

Chapter 6 Canada at War

Prompt: Describe the effects of the new technology on warfare during WWI.

Spaniard The Lady From Hell!

Private Robert Pope (Regimental Number 2550) is buried in the Faubourg d Amiens Cemetery in Arras Grave reference IV. B. 22. His occupation prior to

Preparing for War. 300,000 women fought Worked for the Women s Army Corps (WAC) Drivers Clerks Mechanics Army and Navy Nurse Corps

Ch: 16-2: Japan s Pacific Campaign. Essential Question: What caused the United States to join WWII? Which was most significant, WHY?

Unit 1-5: Reading Guide. Canada and World War II

St. Mihiel Offensive: An Overview

A Soldier of the Great War Edward Benjamin Rake 7112

Ch. 9.4 The War of 1812

US History, Ms. Brown Website: dph7history.weebly.com

The Korean War Veteran

Beyond Breaking 4 th August 1982

American Strengths and Weaknesses

Warm Up. 1) Complete the War of 1812 webquest that is located in Google Classroom. 2) You have 30 minutes to complete this assignment

Place & Memory. Commemorating the Battle of the Somme and its Clandeboye connections

The Battle of Plattsburgh. hopes of achieving a significant victory in the two-year war between the United States and

The US Enters The Great War

Copies of the diaries for the period during which Pte Cowdell was killed are below. They give an almost hour by hour account.

EPISODE CLIP: ON 'TICK'

Explain why Japan decided to attack Pearl Harbor, and describe the attack itself.

The Royal Regiment of Canadian Artillery

6/1/2009. On the Battlefields

Study Guide THE HOME FRONT. Chapter 19, Section 2. How the Government Prepared. Name Date Class. For use with textbook pages

YEARS OF WAR. Chapters 6

HAWAII OPERATION ATTACK ON PEARL HARBOR

The First Years of World War II

Key Battles of WWII. How did the Allies win the war?

Innovation in Military Organizations Fall 2005

Timeline of Allied intervention in Russia between 1917 and 1920.

THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION

Verdun 9/27/2017. Hell on Earth. February December 1916

Private William Simpson Guild

Work Period: WW II European Front Notes Video Clip WW II Pacific Front Notes Video Clip. Closing: Quiz

A Guide to the Microfilm Edition of. The American Expeditionary Forces during World War I, Journals of Operations

Chapter 7.3 The War Expands

11/28/2016. St. Mihiel Salient / September First time the Americans fight as an Army

Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto Admiral Chester Nimitz

World Wars Comparison Chart

PPT: Supporting the War

The 11 th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry

Transcription:

The Bitter Harvest of War New Brunswick and the Conscription Crisis of 1917 Andrew Theobald Goose Lane Editions and The New Brunswick Military Heritage Project

Copyright 2008 by Andrew Theobald. All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced or used in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher or a licence from the Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency (Access Copyright). To contact Access Copyright, visit www.accesscopyright.ca or call 1-800-893-5777. Edited by Barry Norris. Front cover illustration courtesy of New Brunswick Museum, 1988.67.17. Back cover illustration: Bushman and Sawmill Hands Wanted, Canadian War Museum, 19900055-003. Cover and interior page design by Julie Scriver. Printed in Canada on 100% PCW paper. 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication Theobald, Andrew, 1978- The bitter harvest of war: New Brunswick and the Conscription Crisis of 1917 / Andrew Theobald. (New Brunswick military heritage series; 11) Co-published by: New Brunswick Military Heritage Project. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-86492-511-4 1. Conscription Crisis, 1917. 2. World War, 1914-1918 New Brunswick. 3. New Brunswick History 1867-1918. 4. New Brunswick Ethnic relations History. I. New Brunswick Military Heritage Project II. Title. III. Series. FC2473.9.C6T44 2008 971.5 103 C2008-900511-2 Goose Lane Editions acknowledges the financial support of the Canada Council for the Arts, the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP), and the New Brunswick Department of Wellness, Culture and Sport for its publishing activities. Goose Lane Editions Suite 330, 500 Beaverbrook Court Fredericton, New Brunswick CANADA E3B 5X4 www.gooselane.com New Brunswick Military Heritage Project The Brigadier Milton F. Gregg, VC, Centre for the Study of War and Society University of New Brunswick PO Box 4400 Fredericton, New Brunswick Canada E3B 5A3 www.unb.ca/nbmhp

Introduction In the early morning gloom of Easter Monday, April 9, 1917, men of the 26th (New Brunswick) Battalion of the Canadian Corps surged out of their trenches and stumbled forward over shell-torn ground. The deafening roar of artillery and clatter of machine-gun fire surrounded them, but they were not alone. To their left and right along eight kilometres of front, 100,000 other Canadian soldiers thousands more New Brunswickers among them moved in unison. Among them were men who had fought their way through the gas of Ypres and the dreary battles of Festubert and Givenchy in 1915, the defensive victory at Mont Sorrel and the slaughter of the Somme in 1916. Weighed down by their heavy packs and weapons, and surprised by the snow in the crisp dawn air, the Canadians had every confidence that this battle would go much better. Above them lay Vimy Ridge and its imposing network of German tunnels and interlocking defensive positions, which had defied the best efforts of the French and British armies for two years. If the New Brunswickers advancing on that fateful day had been at home they might have been enjoying a morning s walk in the woods where the snow would hardly have been a surprise fishing for smelts or preparing for church. Instead, they were spearheading the most important Canadian victory of the First World War. Many years later, Gregory Clark, who had served as a lieutenant with 9

the 4th Canadian Mounted Rifles at Vimy, recalled with pride the victory on that cold April Monday: As far as I could see, south, north along the miles of the ridge, there were the Canadians. And I experienced my first full sense of nationhood. New Brunswickers shared in this pride. The 26th Battalion, part of the 5th Infantry Brigade of the 2nd Canadian Division, were in the first wave. On their part of the front and that of the 1st Canadian Division to the south, the ridge was little more than a gentle rise across a long flat crest, which then dropped away suddenly. In the 26th Battalion s sector, it was only two kilometres to the edge of the escarpment, with the village of Vimy just below. The New Brunswickers task, along with four other battalions on the 2nd Division front, was to overrun the German front line and push forward to a depth of fifteen hundred metres. In the horrific trench combat of the First World War, these distances seemed much greater. The 26th Battalion, and the rest of the 5th Brigade, accomplished their task in under two hours, consolidating on the Black Line where the second wave passed through, over the escarpment and deep into the German positions. All along the line that day the attack succeeded beyond expectation, as the Canadian Corps drove the Germans off the most impregnable position on the Western Front. It proved to be Canada s defining moment and the place, historians say, Canada came of age as a nation. But the cost was horrendous. In just three days of bitter fighting, 11,000 Canadians became casualties, with nearly 4,000 dead: another butcher s bill to add to the nearly 30,000 Canadians already killed in the war. New Brunswick s only infantry battalion lost two hundred men at Vimy, and for weeks afterwards local newspapers were full of the lists of the dead, the wounded and those who had simply disappeared. The New Brunswickers were as proud of their central role in the victory as any of their comrades, but where would the reinforcements needed to replace the thousands of casualties come from? The Battle of Vimy Ridge perfectly encapsulates the paradox of the First World War: both a great Canadian triumph and a costly victory in a brutal war that fractured the basic fabric of the country. For Vimy was fought by an all-volunteer force, but losses on that scale could no 10 The Bitter Harvest of War

longer be sustained by voluntary enlistment. In searching desperately for those badly needed reinforcements, Canadians decided in 1917 to adopt compulsory military service. This action led to political skullduggery, racist propaganda, battles in the streets and desperate searches to round up equally desperate deserters. Such was the cost of victory in the First World War, a wound to both Canada and New Brunswick so jagged that its scar is still visible today. Conscription did not come until late in the protracted and bloody conflict that contemporaries called the Great War. When the war began in August 1914, Canadians unequivocally declared their support for Great Britain, France and the other Allied nations in the struggle against the German-led Central Powers. This patriotic response resulted in the prompt raising of a contingent of soldiers for service in a war that most thought would be over by Christmas. Events soon demonstrated, however, that no one had any idea how long the war would last or how many casualties it would inflict. Importantly, most Canadians supported the war in principle it was a bad thing that Germany had invaded its neighbours and they understood that Canada was involved because it was a member of the British Empire. But Europe was distant, and some key components of the Canadian people especially Quebec s French speakers, who had little empathy for either the anglais of Britain or the godless republicans of France had little interest in the conflict. A booming wartime economy also allowed farmers, fishermen and labourers to benefit from supporting the overseas effort. Nevertheless, a tremendous surge of volunteer enlistment in 1914 and 1915 created a Canadian army virtually from scratch, and the First Contingent, 30,000 men of the 1st Canadian Division, sailed for Europe on October 3, 1914. In April 1915, they fought their initial significant action, doggedly holding the line against the first major gas attack in the history of warfare at the Second Battle of Ypres, Belgium, and suffering 6,000 casualties in the process. Second Ypres proved a grim foreshadow of even grimmer days ahead. The 2nd Canadian Division, including the 26th Battalion, entered the fray in September 1915. Its baptism of fire, also at Ypres, came in the dismal Battle of St. Eloi Craters in April 1916 Introduction 11

Pipes and Drums Band of the 236th Battalion in Saint John. New Brunswick raised nine infantry battalions for overseas service; eight of them, like the 236th (New Brunswick Kilties) Battalion, also known as Sir Sam s Own in honour of the minister of militia and defence, were broken up to provide reinforcements for the front. CFB Gagetown Military Museum and in the defeat of the German attack at Mont Sorrel in the early summer. The Canadians then moved south, into France again, and suffered especially heavily in the latter stages of the Somme battle. There, on September 15, 1916, the 2nd Division attacked toward the little village of Courcelette, with the 5th Brigade s 22nd (French Canadian) Battalion, 24th (Victoria Rifles of Canada) Battalion, 25th (Nova Scotia Rifles) Battalion and the 26th Battalion supported again for the first time in the history of warfare by a new invention called the tank. Weeks of intense fighting over the open, rolling countryside around Courcelette followed. When it ground to a halt in November after an attack by 12 The Bitter Harvest of War

the newly arrived 4th Canadian Division on yet another blasted line of enemy trenches it had cost Canada 24,000 casualties. Volunteers still came forward in smaller numbers in 1916 to replace those who had been killed and to fill new units: there were now five Canadian divisions totalling 100,000 men. By the April 1917 victory at Vimy Ridge, however, Canadians though prosperous from the increased economic activity the war had spurred were weary, and the prolonged fighting, high casualties and growing division over the country s role in the war brought an end to large-scale voluntary enlistment. Following Conservative prime minister Sir Robert Borden s visit to the Western Front in early 1917, Parliament decided that conscription was necessary to maintain Canada s prominent role in the fighting. That role became more prominent just as the Allied situation became more perilous. In March, Russia, fighting virtually single-handedly against the Germans and their allies on the Eastern and Turkish Fronts, descended into rebellion. Although Alexander Kerensky s new socialist Introduction 13