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4323313
The War at Home
Descripción
War at Home
Sin etiquetas
ww1
income tax
suffrage
Mapa Mental por
kristilemerson
, actualizado hace más de 1 año
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Creado por
kristilemerson
hace casi 9 años
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Resumen del Recurso
The War at Home
Paying for war
Victory Bonds
Bonds that Canadians were encouraged to cash in when the war was over
All the new war techonologies and a great number of troops cause the war to be extremely expensive
income tax
suppose to be temporary but ended up being permanent.
well off individuals and families had to pay a tax of 3% of their income, companies and businesses had to pay a 4% tax
Loans
The tax Money was not enough and by 1819 Canada was in debt and had to borrow money from other countries such as USA
changing role of women
some women organized committees to send food and letters overseas
Many became involved I'm volunteer organizations such as red Gross
Canadas increased industrial protuction created a demand for labour jobs for women.
operating fishing boats
running prairie farms
suffrage
women were finally granted the ability to vote in 1918
propaganda
appeared in media like films, magazines, radio, speeches, and posters
encouraged people to join the army, buy bonds, use less fuel, eat less meat, and support the government
The Huns
Writers used stories to portray German Troops as "The Huns", a horde of barbarians with intent to destroy the civilized world
when German U boat sank the Luistania in 1915, angry mobs attacked the innocent German businesses
Residents from Berlin, Ontario faced criticism because the town bore the same name as Germany's capitol
often distorts the truth
Halifax disaster
December 6, 1917
Mont-Blanc( french vessel) was hit by another ship
Hit so hard that it destroyed Halifax's Harbour and some of the city
Between 2000-3000 people died
more than 10000 injured
conscription crisis
compulsory enlistment for military service
The Military Service Act was a bill that made enlisment compulsory.
The act allowed exceptions such as , the disabled, the clergy, those with essential jobs, and conscientious objectors
conscientious objectors are those who did not believe in the war in terms of religion
very controversial issue that divided the country
lowest levels of recruitment from Quebec
Henri Bourassa argued that Canada had already spent enough money and lost enough men. He also believed that it would divided the nation, which it did
people such as farmers also were opposed to this because they needed their sons and workers to do farm work.
canadas most divisive election
Borden decided to call an election over the issue of conscription and he passed two new laws
military voters act
allowed women and men serving overseas to vote
Wartime Elections Act
gave the vote to all canadian women directly related to servicemen
Borden invited the Liberals to join him in forming a wartime Union Government
These Liberals were offered Cabinet positions as incentive to join the government.
The Union Govt. won the election but the anger was still there
tensions finally erupted in Quebec City during the Easter weekend of 1918
4 demonstrators were shot dead by soldiers and 10 soldiers were injured.
Canadian Economy
was in ecoonmic recession
Prime Minister Borden replaced the Shell committee with the Imperial Munitions Board.
munitions factories started building ships and airplanes
high demand for product created hundreds of thousand jobs
resources such as lumber, nickel, copper,and lead were in high demand.
caused these goods to be scarce in Canada and prices became much higher
Businesses made a ton of money from inflated prices
caused demand for high pay from workers.
Recursos multimedia adjuntos
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