Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The War at Home
- Canadian
Economy
- When Canada entered the
war, the country was in
economic recession, but the
economy had recovered by
1916
- During the war, the prodiction and
export of Canadian goods reached
an all-time high
- Most of what Canada was producing
was going to Europe, so goods
became hard to get ahold of in
Canada
- The lack of goods made prices rise in
Canada
- The rise in prices made citizens very angry,
because wages stayed the same
- Imperial Munitions board was created, they were
in charge of contracts for production of war
materials.
- The Changing role of
Women
- Before the war started, women only
worked low skill, low paying jobs
like cashier
- When canada's increased
production created a great demand
for labour, women were hired for all
types of work
- Women worked on fishing boats,ran
farms, and were in every imaginable line
of work
- Women also contributed to the war, Thousands
were employed to make ammunition, and drive the
delivery trucks
- The change in roles of
women helped push the
campaign for women's
sufferage
- On September 20, 1917 the
wartime elections act passed,
giving women the right to vote.
- Conscription Crisis
- Prime Minister Borden
promised there would not
be conscription
- Borden saw the slaughter at
Vimy Ridge
- He decided the war needed
to be won at all costs, so he
introduced the Military
Service Act, this bill made
enlistment mandatory
- Conscription turned out to
be one of Canada's most
controversial events
- Quebec was so against
conscription, that they
rioted between March
28, and April 1st
- Canada's volunteer rates
were uneven, the lowest rate
was Quebec
- Halifax
Disaster
- In December of 1917, the French "Mont Blanc"
ship crashed into another ship by accident
- The ship was carrying over 2500t of dynamite
- The crash caused the dynamite to explode, the explosion
was so large that it destroyed Halifax's harbour, and a lot
of the city.
- Shelters were built after the disaster to house the
people left homeless due to the accident
- Over 2000 people died
and another 9000 were
injured
- Paying for War
- The Canadian government
could not pay for it's
contribution to the war
- The government encouraged the
public to buy "Victory bonds"
- The government introduced a
3% income tax
- these initiatives were not enough to
keep Canada out of debt, they were
forced to borrow money from the U.S.
- New Technologies made war
very expensive
- Large amount of troops meant
more had to be spent on rations