| Canada in WW2 This is a short note from my files about part of the Canadian contribution during WW2. "Canada contributed with the Commonwealth Air Training Plan, that trained 135,000 pilots and air crew, here in Canada, who came from 40 different Allied nations to learn to fly. Canada not only equipped it's OWN military, with guns planes and ships, but we built all of that for other nations, such as the Indian army who were completely equipped with Canadian made trucks, or the British army that by 1945 was 70 percent equipped with Canadian made rifles and machine guns. We also supplied the Chinese army that was fighting the Japanese in the far east. We built supply ships and naval escort vessels here that were the main life line of food to the U.K. We built our army from a tiny force of less than 3,000 men in 1939 to a two Corps army of 700,000 men that could and did fight in two separate places at the same time ( Italy from 1943 to 1945, and Europe from June 1944 to May 1945). We took more dead and wounded after the D-Day landings, in the summer of 1944 than either the Brits or the Americans did, and we kept on fighting with out a break for 11 months after the Normandy landings. In some cases, Canadian infantry units were completely wiped out, That means that ALL of the 800 men in a unit had been either KILLED or so badly wounded ,that the unit ceased to exist as a fighting force. In the air, we flew fighters and coastal patrol aircraft and heavy bombers at night on bombing raids into the Occupied Countries. We became the acknowledged "best U-boat Hunters" and sank the most of them of any Allied navy in WW2. By the end of WW2 Canada had the third largest navy in the world, a amazing growth from the beginning in 1939, when we only had total of 6 RCN ships in our fleet. So Yes Canada did much more than her share in WW2 . Jim Bunting. Toronto. Ontario. Canada.
__________________ Spidge,
------------------------------------------------------- My Avatar is the memorial to the 22 Commonwealth Coastwatchers at the Temakin Cemetery on Betio (Tarawa Atoll) who were beheaded by the Japanese on 15th October 1942. http://www.dva.gov.au/media/publicat...mem_beito.html
"You were given the choice between war and dishonor.
You chose dishonor and you will have war."
(Winston Churchill made this prophetic pronouncement in a House of Commons speech in 1938, just after Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain signed the Munich agreement with Hitler. Chamberlain returned from Germany with the signed agreement in hand, proclaiming that "peace in our time" had been achieved. Churchill attacked Chamberlain's "politics of appeasement" in this and many other speeches.) What did the Australians do in ww2 and other conflicts? Check out this site: http://www.diggerhistory.info/00-pag...ster-index.htm |