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Nazi Germany surrendered, unconditionally, on May 8, 1945.
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Armed Forces Armed forces are composed of the combined land, naval and ...
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Aviation, Military Military aviation began with the use of balloons for ...
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Crerar, Henry Duncan Graham Henry Duncan Graham Crerar, army officer (b at Hamilton, ...
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Monuments, World Wars I and II Since the end of WORLD WAR I, monuments commemorating the ...
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Normandy Invasion On 6 June 1944, after almost a year of special assault and ...
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VE-Day (Victory in Europe) Victory in Europe was celebrated across North America on 8 ...
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VE-Day Riots VE-Day Riots, 7-8 May 1945 in Halifax and Dartmouth, NS, ...
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World War II Memories of WWI - the tragic loss of life, the heavy burden ...
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The First Canadian Army immediately moved forward to liberate the last German-held areas
in the western Netherlands, including the great cities of Amsterdam and Rotterdam. "Every
village, street and house," reported the headquarters of the 1st Canadian Infantry Division, "was
decked with red, white and blue Dutch flags and orange streamers...the Dutch people had heard a
rumour of our arrival, and were lining the roads, streets in thousands to give us a tumultuous
welcome...When the convoy reached the outskirts of Rotterdam, it lost all semblance of a
military convoy...a vehicle would be unable to move because of civilians surrounding it,
climbing on it, throwing flowers – bestowing handshakes, hugs and even kisses...." Stripped of resources by the Nazi occupiers, the Dutch were starving and cold. The First
Canadian Army brought with them masses of food, coal and medical supplies. This was the second part of the rescue mission. Since April 29 the heavy four-engine
bombers of the Royal Air Force's Bomber Command, including No 6 (RCAF) Group, had been
dropping supplies to the Dutch population behind German lines. The bombers that had rained
fiery death on so many German cities had become life-givers. "When we flew over the occupied
part of Holland," recalled one Canadian flyer, "I was so relieved that I myself no longer had to be
destructive, that I was not too concerned about the possibility of being fired upon by the German
ground installations...And then the Dutch people would appear everywhere in the vicinity of the
drop – on treetops, on rooftops, everywhere waving banners and caps – and I'm sure of it, you felt
you could hear them cheering." On May 8, as the army took over the supply duties, the bombers
began another humanitarian task: flying to Britain thousands of Canadian and Allied prisoners of
war from German camps. What many remember vividly was the night of May 8. For the first time in Britain, and
much of Europe, cities that had been "blacked out" for over five years as a precaution against air
attack were suddenly brilliantly illuminated. Mary Buch, a member of the Royal Canadian Air
Force (Women's Division) who was stationed in Scotland, recalled that "Edinburgh Castle was
flood-lit for the first time since 1939. To us this glorious sight symbolized the true end of the
war in Europe." So it was at sea as well. The north Atlantic convoys, merchant ships sailing together under
the protection of Canadian warships, were suddenly ablaze, veritable Christmas trees of
navigation and running lights after over five years of dangerous "blacked out" steaming. For many men and women of the Canadian forces, V-E day was an "anti-climax." Too
many times, in nightmare battles, it seemed that the German forces had been irretrievably broken,
but time and again this most skillful enemy had regrouped and fought on with undiminished
intensity. "The Colonel," wrote one artilleryman in his diary for May 9, "begins to read the 36
names of our fallen. Tears are in his eyes. He falters and hands the paper to the Adjutant who
calmly folds the paper...and quietly says, 'It is not necessary. They were comrades. We
remember.'" Few Canadian service members, their thoughts turning to home, commented on the
remarkable position their country had assumed in Europe. The 200 000 men and women of the
First Canadian Army were "strung out over northern Europe from Bremen [Germany] to
Dunkirk" in France, and all through the Low Countries. It was a formidable, heavily mechanized
force whose striking power included more than a thousand artillery pieces, more than a thousand
tanks, and 39 infantry battalions, each with 800 riflemen whose arms included mortars, heavy
machine guns and an arsenal of hand-held weapons. In support were 19 Royal Canadian Air
Force fighter and fighter-bomber squadrons - a force of over 300 fast attack and reconnaissance
aircraft - that operated from airfields across northwestern Europe. In Britain there were 21 other
squadrons of the Royal Canadian Air Force, including the 15squadrons – each with 20 heavy
four-engine bombers – of No 6 Group. The Royal Canadian Navy's 250 seagoing warships, and
many smaller vessels, were operating in a wide range of roles – minesweeping, troop-carrying,
and convoy escort – from the Mediterranean to the Arctic Ocean and across the Atlantic. The
Canadian merchant marine included more than 200 seagoing merchant vessels that operated
around the world. All told, 500 000 Canadian army, navy and air personnel served in Britain and Europe
during the Second World War. At least another 100 000 served in Newfoundland (not then part
of Confederation), and in eastern Canada, operating the aircraft, warships and bases that formed
the North American end of the Atlantic supply lines that fuelled the war against Nazi Germany
with troops, weapons, vehicles, food and industrial resources. Canadian forces played a decisive part in virtually every phase of the war against Nazi
Germany and Italy, its fascist ally. The first step was to secure merchant shipping in the Atlantic
against the German submarine fleet. The cargoes carried by the merchant ships were essential to
Britain's survival and to build up the armed strength needed to strike back at the enemy.
Canadian warships provided nearly half of the escorts for merchant ship convoys, and Canadian
aircraft as much as a third of the vital air protection for the precious merchant ships. Canadian
warships and aircraft destroyed 50 enemy submarines. Canadian aircrew made up nearly a quarter of the strength of the combat commands of
Britain's Royal Air Force. These members of the Royal Canadian Air Force, half of them in 47
Canadian squadrons and half serving in a wide range of British units, were prominent in all
aspects of air warfare, and especially in the bombing offensive that destroyed Germany's
cities.
 | Military personnel and civilians celebrating V-E Day
on Sparks Street, Ottawa, 8 May 1945 (courtesy Library and Archives Canada/PA-114617).
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| Canadian Army formations stood on guard in Britain in 1940-1, when Britain's army was
shattered and a German invasion was a real possibility. From 1943 until early 1945, Canadian
Army formations played a major part in the invasion of Italy, and the liberation of that country
from the strong German occupying forces. The war at sea, the war in the air, and the war in Italy were all preliminaries to the invasion
of German occupied France, at Normandy on June 6, 1944. The 3rd Canadian
Infantry Division was one of five Allied assault divisions that landed that day, the greatest
amphibious invasion in history. A hundred Canadian warships carried troops, protected the
invasion fleet, and provided gunfire support to the troops ashore. Hundreds of Canadian bombers
and fighters hunted German submarines at sea and battered the German defences on land. In the
fearsome battles of Normandy that continued until late August 1944 and resulted in the death,
injury or surrender of 400 000 German troops, the First Canadian Army faced some of the
fiercest opposition and suffered some of the heaviest losses of the Allied armies. In October and November 1944, the Canadians again endured unrelenting, bitter combat,
this time in appalling conditions of wet and cold. They smashed the heavily fortified German
defences on the River Scheldt and thereby opened the great Belgian port of Antwerp that was the
key to supplying the vast Allied liberation armies. This important Canadian victory was critical
to ensure that the final Allied offensives went forward in full strength and on time in early 1945.
The Canadians were a spearhead in those offensives, pushing in from February to April 1945
across fortified rivers in the Netherlands and western Germany, against an enemy that showed
little sign of weakening until the very last days. Canada's military achievement was particularly notable because it had been organized so
rapidly from meager beginnings. At the outbreak of war in September 1939, there were fewer
than 10 000 full-time professional sailors, soldiers and airmen. The reserve forces –
citizens who
did a few weeks training each year – numbered fewer than 60 000. There was almost no modern
equipment. The government, still grappling with the savage economic consequences of the Great
Depression of the 1930s, planned a "limited liability" effort. Canada would concentrate on home
defence and send only small forces overseas. Finance department officials doubted that the
country could afford even that. The plan changed in May and June 1940 when France, Britain's major ally and thought to
be the strongest military power in Europe, collapsed in the face of lightning quick German
assaults led by tanks and aircraft. Suddenly Canada was Britain's largest ally (the Soviet Union
entered the war against Germany only in June 1941, and the United States in December of that
year). Canada willingly, urgently, began full-scale mobilization in 1940 to help save Britain, but
it was a late start. The effort succeeded nevertheless, and, uniquely among the major combatant
nations, the overwhelming majority of those enlisted were volunteers. Canada's overseas forces
were truly citizen forces, comprised almost entirely of ordinary people who put their lives and
health on the line to defeat tyranny and preserve democracy. Those citizens paid a very heavy price. In all, 42 000 Canadian service men and women
gave their lives during the Second World War, almost all in the Atlantic and European theatres:
22 917 in the army, 17 101 in the air force, and 2024 in the navy. A further 54 000 were
wounded. Nearly one in ten of the half-million Canadians who served in Europe suffered death or
injury. The merchant marine, all civilian volunteers who did not form part of the armed forces,
suffered still heavier loss rates. More than 1600 Canadian and Newfoundland sailors died, fully
ten percent of those who served. General H.D.G. Crerar, commander of the First Canadian Army, confessed in his V-E Day
message to feeling humbled by the achievements of his forces: "If Canada in peace can realize
the fine potentialities of her citizens...there is no limit to [her] future." Roger Sarty is Professor of History, Wilfrid Laurier University, Research Director, Laurier
Centre for Military, Strategic and Disarmament Studies, and Chair, Council for Canadian
Security in the 21st Century.
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