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Canada & WWII: The War at Home
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Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

Jan 02, 2016

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Page 1: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

Canada & WWII: The War at Home

Page 2: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

Total War By 1942, Canada

was committed to a policy of “Total War”.

All industries, materials and people were put to work for the war effort.

Page 3: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

Government and the Economy The war launched Canada out of the

depression and into an economic boom. C.D. Howe, minister of munitions and supply,

quickly organized Canada’s war economy, he assumed near dictatorial powers telling businessmen what they would produce including how much and how fast.

Canada became an industrial power, new factories were built, and old ones adapted for war purposes. Factories churned out thousands of guns, ships, fighter planes and military vehicles.

Page 4: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

Canadian Production 1939-1945Aircraft 16 000

Rifles 900 000

Military Vehicles 815 000

Merchant Ships 410

Landing Craft 3 302

Navy Tugs 254

Tanks 6 500

Escort Ships 487

Machine Guns 244 000

Page 5: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

Labour With so many men enlisting,

Canada faced a labour shortage as early as 1941, most notably in war-related industries.

In 1942, the Canadian government passed the National Selective Service Act to mobilize the country’s labour resources for the benefit of the war effort.

One of the main strategies of the program was to recruit women for the work force.

Page 6: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

“Women, Back Them Up -To Bring Them Back!”

■ At first only single women were recruited, but upon severe labour shortages, both married women and mothers were sought out; the government even funded daycare centres so that women would be free to work.

■ In 1943, there were approximately 225,000 Canadian women working in munitions factories.

Page 7: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

In The Army Now… In 1941, for the first time in Canadian history,

women were able to enlist in their own divisions of the Army, Navy and Air Force. Although Canadian women were not allowed into combat during the Second World War, they did just about everything else.

Page 8: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

In The Army Now… Women served as nurses, stretcher bearers,

drivers, machine operators, cooks and secretaries. They also flew Canadian built planes to bases in Britain and ferried officers and politicians from Ottawa to London.

They were paid roughly 60% of what their male counterparts made

Page 9: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

Enlistment By Women In Canada’s Armed Forces:

Navy 6 781

Air Force 17 018

Army 21 624

Medical Services 4 518

Doctors 58

Over 43,000 women served overseas in the Canadian Women’s Army Corps, the Royal Women’s Navy Service and the Women’s Division of the Royal Canadian Air Force.

http://archives.cbc.ca/war_conflict/second_world_war/clips/4974/

Page 10: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

Wartime Prices and The Trade Board

Prime Minister Mackenzie King was determined to avoid the problems of greed and inflation which had plagued the Canadian political landscape during the first World War

The government set up the Wartime Prices and Trade Board (WPTB) to control prices and supervise the distribution of food and other scarce goods.

Page 11: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

Rationing: A Little Goes a Long Way! To ensure there was a large enough supply to meet

both military and civilian needs, certain staple goods were rationed.

Rationed Items Included:

Meat, Butter, Tea, Coffee, Gasoline, Tires (rubber), Alcohol, Clothing Fabric and Silk

Page 12: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.
Page 13: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

Pitching in on all fronts■ dedication to the war effort also extended outside the factories.

■ Women’s organizations collected paper, glass, metal, rubber, rags and bones to be recycled into war supplies.

■ They planted victory gardens, sewed clothes for troops and were recruited to work on farms and in factories.

Page 14: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

Financing the War The Canadian Government did

raise taxes during the Second World War to help offset the cost of financing the war. The increased revenue from higher taxes accounted for about one-half of all war-related expenses.

To help pay for the rest, the Canadian government turned to an old idea: Victory Loans drives.

The government conducted nine Victory Loan drives between June 1941 and October 1945. These campaigns raised nearly $12 billion by the end of the war.

Page 15: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

Conscription Crisis: Part II

Page 16: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

Conscription Timeline

1939 – King rejects conscription for overseas service

1940 – during election campaign, rejects conscription again (for overseas service)

Page 17: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

Conscription Timeline

1940 June – Gov’t enacts National Resource Mobilization Bill. Allows conscription for service at home term for 30 days then 4 months then extended to end of war

Page 18: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

Conscription Timeline

1942 – King needs more troops, holds Plebiscite asking to be released from promise not to send conscripts overseas. Results: 79% Anglophones vote yes, 85% Francophones vote no

1942 Spring – Parliament authorizes use of conscripts overseas

Page 19: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

Conscription Timeline

1944 – King orders 16000 conscripts overseas after losses at Normandy and the Italian campaigns

 1945 – 13000 conscripts go overseas, 2500 reach front lines, and 60 are killed

"Mackenzie King was successful in his efforts to deal with the conscription issue during WWII"

Page 20: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

Top Secret: Camp X

Camp X, which operated in Oshawa, Ontario from 1941 to 1946, was a training camp responsible for training recruits for the Special Operations Executive of the British Security Coordination during World War II.

It was comprised of two sections,

the Special Training School No. 103, which trained allied agents in the techniques of secret warfare, and Hydra, a network which communicated messages between Canada, United States, and Great Britain.

Page 21: Canada & WWII: The War at Home. Total War By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War”. All industries, materials and people were put to work.

Social Support: Expanding The Social Safety Net The increased role of government was also visible in the

expansion of the social safety net. In 1940, the government passed the Unemployment Insurance

Act. In the face of unemployment, workers could now collect insurance.

In 1944, the government introduced Family Allowance and in 1945 the first “baby bonus” cheques were mailed out.