Canadian Corps
Encyclopedia : C : CA : CAN : Canadian Corps
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The soldiers, two-thirds of whom were British-born, were mostly volunteers, as conscription wasn’t implemented until the end of the war. (See Conscription Crisis of 1917. ) Ultimately, only 24,132 conscripts made it to France before 11 November 1918.
Although the Corps was within and under the command of the British Army, there was considerable pressure among Canadian leaders, especially following the Battle of the Somme, that the Corps fight as a single unit rather than piecemealing the Divisions throught the whole Army. Originally commanded by Lieutenant General Sir E.A.H. Alderson until 1916, command was then passed on to Lieutenant General Sir Julian Byng, later, Lord Byng of Vimy and Governor-General of Canada. When Byng was promoted to a higher command during the summer of 1917, he was succeeded by the commander of the 1st Division, General Sir Arthur W. Currie, giving the Corps its first Canadian commander.
In the later stages of the war, the Canadian Corps, like the Australian Corps, was among the most effective and respected of the military formations on the Western Front.
The Canadian Corps captured Vimy Ridge in one of the most successful and daring attacks of the war. Between August 8 and 11th 1917, the Corps spearheaded the offensive during the Battle of Amiens. Here a significant defeat was inflicted on the Germans which compelled the German commander-in-chief, General Erich Ludendorff, to call August 8th "the black day of the German army." This battle marked the start of the period of the war referred to as Canada's Hundred Days. After Amiens, the Canadian Corps continued to lead the vanguard of an Allied push that ultimately ended on 11 November 1918 at Mons where the British Empire had first met in conflict with Imperial German forces in 1914.
At the end of war the Canadian 1st and 2nd Divisions took part in the occupation of Germany and the Corps was eventually demobilized in 1919. Upon their return home the veterans were greeted by large and welcoming crowds all across the country.
The Canadian Expeditionary Force lost 60,661 dead during the war. That is 9.28% of the 619,636 who enlisted.
Formation:
- 1st Canadian Division
- 2nd Canadian Division
- 3rd Canadian Division
- 4th Canadian Division
- 5th Canadian Division
- See individual Divisions.
- No. 2 Construction Battalion, Canadian Expeditionary Force
External links
Websites about the Canadian Corps:- [Canadian Great War Project]
- [The C.E.F. Paper Trail]
- [The C.E.F. Study Group]
- [Central Ontario Branch – Western Front Association]
- [Library & Archives Canada Canada and the First World War]
- [National Defence – Books/Publications Online – Contains a link to download a copy of Nicholson’s Official History of the C.E.F.]
- [Veteran Affairs Canada – History of the First World War]
- [CdnMilitary.ca Article on the CEF World War One Mobilization Problems]
Suggested Reading on the Canadian Corps
Berton, Pierre. Vimy
Christie, Norm. For King & Empire, The Canadians at Amiens, August 1918, CEF Books, 1999
Christie, Norm. For King & Empire, The Canadians at Arras, August - September 1918'', CEF Books, 1997
Christie, Norm. For King & Empire, The Canadians at Cambrai, September - October 1918, CEF Books, 1997
Morton, Desmond and Granatstein, J.L. Marching to Armageddon, Lester & Orpen Dennys Publishers, 1989
Morton, Desmond. When Your Number's Up, Random House of Canada, 1993
Nicholson, Col. G.W.L. Canadian Expeditionary Force 1914-1919, Official History of the Canadian Army in the First World War, Queen’s Printer, 1964
Schreiber, Shane B. Shock Army of the British Empire – The Canadian Corps in the Last 100 Days of the Great War, Vanwell Publishing Limited, 2004
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