The Veterans Charter and Post-World War II Canada

The Veterans Charter and Post-World War II Canada
Title The Veterans Charter and Post-World War II Canada PDF eBook
Author Peter Neary
Publisher McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Pages 344
Release 1998
Genre History
ISBN 9780773516977

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Rehabilitating Canada's soldiers to civilian life following World War II was a massive undertaking. The Veterans Charter, the program devised by the federal government to do this, promised to provide "opportunity with security" and was one of the building blocks of the Canadian welfare state. This collection of essays by some of Canada's leading historians explores the Charter's origins, history, and benefits as well as highlights its role in the development of the Canadian welfare state and postwar society.

On to Civvy Street

On to Civvy Street
Title On to Civvy Street PDF eBook
Author Peter Neary
Publisher McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Pages 383
Release 2011
Genre History
ISBN 0773539131

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The story of the origins of the Veterans Charter, a program that shaped the future of a generation of Canadians.

Veterans with a Vision

Veterans with a Vision
Title Veterans with a Vision PDF eBook
Author Serge Marc Durflinger
Publisher UBC Press
Pages 484
Release 2010
Genre History
ISBN 0774818557

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"Published in association with the Canadian War Museum and the Sir Arthur Pearson Association of War Blinded."

Voices of the Left Behind

Voices of the Left Behind
Title Voices of the Left Behind PDF eBook
Author Olga Rains
Publisher Dundurn
Pages 242
Release 2006-02-25
Genre History
ISBN 1550029479

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Voices of the Left Behind contains the personal stories of nearly 50 Canadian war children who have been helped by Project Roots. It is filled with fascinating archival images and documents as well as original wartime correspondence between the mothers, the Canadian fathers, and the Department of National Defence, Veterans Affairs, and other Canadian institutions. Letters from the war children to the Military Personnel Records Unit of the National Archives of Canada illustrate the historic pattern of denial. What these institutions all have in common is their consistent refusal to help war children find their Canadian fathers. Introductory essays frame the subject and give a historical context to the tragic situations these women and their children found themselves in.

Air Force Combat Units of World War II

Air Force Combat Units of World War II
Title Air Force Combat Units of World War II PDF eBook
Author Maurer Maurer
Publisher DIANE Publishing
Pages 520
Release 1961
Genre United States
ISBN 1428915850

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Canada at War

Canada at War
Title Canada at War PDF eBook
Author J.L. Granatstein
Publisher University of Toronto Press
Pages 328
Release 2020
Genre History
ISBN 1487524765

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This essay collection traces the sustained work over the past fifty years of the foremost historian of Canadian politics in the era of the two world wars.

Wartime Lessons, Peacetime Actions

Wartime Lessons, Peacetime Actions
Title Wartime Lessons, Peacetime Actions PDF eBook
Author Gordon Christopher Case
Publisher
Pages
Release 2017
Genre
ISBN

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This study examines some of the ways in which Second World War veterans helped shape Canadian society in the years after 1945 by using the life experience of one of their number, Major-General Daniel Charles Spry, as an interpretive model. Just over one million Canadian men and women re-entered civil life after their wartime military service. Representing approximately 35 per cent of Canada's adult male population aged 25 to 49 in 1951, and found in nearly every facet of Canadian life, Second World War veterans possessed social importance that extended far beyond their experience of the Veterans Charter. Using Dan Spry's documented thoughts and actions in war and peace, this study argues that a number of these individuals learned lessons regarding leadership, character, citizenship, and internationalism during their wartime military service and - finding them useful - applied such lessons to various aspects of their lives after the war's end. In so doing, Second World War veterans helped to influence the character of postwar Canada's institutions, workplaces, and the lives of many Canadians by providing societal leadership, moulding children's character, developing future citizens, and trying to build a better world. Appreciating their varied contributions provides new insight into both veterans' attitudes and the sort of place that Canada was after the guns fell silent in 1945.