类别 全部 - battle - radar - reputation - conscription

作者:Avery Dickson 4 年以前

196

WW2

Canada's role in World War II, under the leadership of Prime Minister Mackenzie King, was initially focused on supplying the Allies rather than building a large army. King managed to navigate the conscription crisis by only sending volunteers overseas, though he later introduced conscription for home defense after the fall of France in 1940.

WW2

WW2 Timeline (1939-1945) By: Avery Dickson

D-Day the Assault

When: 1945
Who: Orville Fisher

Orville Fisher was deployed on Juno Beach with many other Canadian soldiers and sketched what he saw that day. He later imrpoved on the image and turned it into a painting after the battle. The painting is now one of the most famous Canadian paintings from World War 2. His paintings of the Second World War make up one of the most records showing Canada's day-to-day role in the war.

D-Day

When: June 6, 1944
Who: Allied and Axis Forces

D-Day occurred on June 6, 1944 and was one of the final pushes to end the war. The beach was split into pieces for the Allies to attack in. Our slot of land was called Juno Beach and 14,000 Canadian troops stormed through the beach and pulled more than their own weight. This solidified Canada's reputation during the war and proved oce again that Canada could handle itself.

Where: Normandy, France

Canadian soldiers heading towards Juno Beach

Radar

When: 1935 (Used in 1940)
Who: Sir Robert Watson-Watt

The radar was invented in 1935 but it wasnt really useable until Watson-Watt created a revolutionary radar which could be used in war. Radars use radiowaves to see the location of an object, the waves reflect off of an object and thats how we can see the oject. An example of this would be the Battle of Britain. The British had less planes and experienced pilots compared to the Germans but still won the battle due to the radar.

Where: Britain

Sir Robert Watson-Watt, the man who created the radar

Mackenzie King

When: 1935-1948
Who: Mackenzie King

Mackenzie King was Canada's Prime Minister from the early to mid 1900's. At the start of the war King wanted Canada to just help with supplying the Allies rather than building a huge army which is what happened. At the beginning of the war he didn't impose conscription but after France fell in 1940, he introduced conscription for home service and only volunteers were sent overseas. This is how he avoided the concription crisis of 1917. He guided the country through the six years of conflict overseeing a massive war effort and made very few errors during this time.

Where: Canada

Mackenzie King, late 1940's