Canada History



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Prehistory | 2 Worlds Meet | New France | England Arrives | Clash of Empires | Revolution | British America | Reform/Revolt | Responsible Government | Confederation | Nation Building | Laurier | The Great War | Roaring 20's | Great Depression | WWII | The Peace | Cold War | Trudeau | PC's in Power | Modern Canada

Golden Summer | European Powder Keg | Sarajavo | Canada Goes to War | Building an Army | Union Government | Nationalism | Women Get the Vote | Conscription Act | The Home Front | Victory | Aftermath

One of the most traumatic events for Canada and the world was the First World War. The golden era before the war was a time of scientific discovery, social reform, artistic innovation, a time of belief in the progress of mankind. This illusion was abruptly shattered in August of 1914 with the outbreak of war in Europe. Over the next 4 years science was perverted, societies were corrupted, the truth suppressed and traditions destroyed.

The western front became a hell on earth which killed a generation of Europe's, Canada's and many other nations finest youth. Out of this upheaval and disruption came one of Canada's finest moments and perhaps the first that defined it as a nation - Vimy Ridge.

The end of the war brought a period or readjustment, an outbreak of influenza, a new view of values and the nationalistic euphoria of victory.  




Source:
Reference: www.canadahistory.com/sections/eras/eras.html