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Genealogy and Family History. Canada and the First World War. Military and Peacekeeping - Discover the Collection. Canadian Military History Gateway - Home. Www.canadiansoldiers.com. The Canadian Expeditionary Force was raised as an entity separate from the Canadian Militia, as Canada's Army was then known.

www.canadiansoldiers.com

Regiments of Cavalry and Mounted Rifles, and Battalions of Infantry, were formed and raised in response to the initial call for men from the United Kingdom, assembled at Valcartier in Quebec, and sent to England in the largest maritime convoy to that date in history. The Regiments of the Canadian Army were not mobilized as such, and instead, these Regiments instead recruited for the overseas units. Many of the initial units were formed from one or two Militia units, and despite the official desire of the Minister of Defence to keep these CEF units separate, some adopted regimental insignia from their parent regiments. Other CEF units drew recruits from several separate Militia Regiments, either selecting the identity of one of them, or simply adopting their new numbered identity without question.

Regional and Regimental Affiliations - CEF Cavalry Regiments. Soldiers of the First World War - CEF. Enlist!

Soldiers of the First World War - CEF

New Names in Canadian History.Source Introduction Over 600,000 men and women enlisted in the Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF) during the First World War (1914-1918) as soldiers, nurses and chaplains. The CEF database is an index to those service files, which are held by Library and Archives Canada. Library and Archives Canada (LAC) has undertaken the digitization of all service files of CEF members. The Records Records of the Canadian Expeditionary Force - First World War.

World War 1 Canadian Ship Listing. The Canadian Virtual War Memorial (CVWM) Canadian Genealogy. Généalogie. Endroits - Généalogie des Français d'Amérique du Nord. Voyageurs - Quick Search. Library and Archives Canada. Centre de généalogie francophone d'Amérique. Canadian Great War Project - Canadians in the First World War. Ship Registration Index. Ship Registration is a title system for the ownership of vessels.

Ship Registration Index

It was implemented in the late XVIIIth Century to ensure that ships used for the transportation of goods inside the British Empire were built and managed by British citizens, including those from colonies. This system remains in place at present, but with different objectives. The Ship Registration Index Database (SRI) contains more than 78,000 entries of ships registered in ports of Canada between 1787 and 1966. Through this research tool, you can obtain information about a ship such as its name, its type, its official number, the year and port of registration, where it was built, its date of construction and, in some cases, what happened to it. The database also allows you to find references for the physical registers or microfilm reels.

Links of interest Vessel Registration Query System - Transport Canada [ Comment trouver des photos qui n’ont pas encore été mises en ligne – Partie I. Bibliothèque et Archives Canada (BAC) possède plus de 25 millions de photographies, soit l’une des plus importantes collections d’archives photographiques au monde.

Comment trouver des photos qui n’ont pas encore été mises en ligne – Partie I

Pour améliorer l’accès à cette collection, BAC a entrepris de numériser ses photographies. À l’heure actuelle, plusieurs images ont déjà été numérisées et décrites à la pièce dans notre base de données Recherche de fonds d’archives. Décrire et numériser des images d’archives fragiles est une opération coûteuse et complexe; c’est pourquoi les photographies sont décrites et numérisées uniquement lorsqu’elles sont demandées par des utilisateurs.

Alors, si vous êtes à la recherche de LA photo rarissime, celle que personne n’a jamais demandé avant vous (p. ex., un OVNI, le Sasquatch ou le monstre du Loch Ness), préparez-vous à creuser! Vérifiez d’abord ce qui a déjà été décrit. Si ces recherches ne donnent pas les résultats espérés, il est temps de creuser un peu plus en profondeur.