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Pages in category "Canadian military personnel of World War II" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 307 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Pages in category "Canadian military personnel killed in World War II" The following 56 pages are in this category, out of 56 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
List of Canadian soldiers executed for military offences; V. List of last surviving Canadian war veterans; List of Canadian Victoria Cross recipients; W. List of ...
Ceremonial Guard stand watch over Canada's national memorial, The Response, with the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in the foreground.. Canadian war memorials are buildings, monuments, and statues that commemorate the armed actions in the territory encompassing modern Canada, the role of the Canadian military in conflicts and peacekeeping operations, and Canadians who died or were injured in a war.
During the First World War on July 1, 1917, Prime Minister Robert Borden announced a Memorial Chamber would be included in the soon-to-be constructed Peace Tower, part of the rebuild of the Centre Block of the Canadian parliament buildings after a 1916 fire. He said that it would be a "memorial to the debt of our forefathers and to the valour ...
Canada Memorial; Canada's Golgotha; Canadian Battlefields Memorials Commission; Canadian Cemetery No. 2; Commonwealth War Graves Commission; Memorial to RAF aircrew in Dębina Zakrzowska; Canadian National Vimy Memorial; Canadian war cemeteries; Cenotaph (Montreal) Central Memorial Park; Montreal Clock Tower; Commissioners Park (Ottawa ...
The Canada Memorial in Green Park, London, United Kingdom, commemorates members of the Canadian Forces killed during the First and Second World Wars. It was designed by the Canadian sculptor Pierre Granche, erected in 1992 and unveiled by Queen Elizabeth II in 1994. [2] The memorial was the result of lobbying and fund raising, much of it in ...
Canadian war cemeteries are sites for the burial of Canadian military personnel who died in conflicts since Canadian Confederation in 1867. Most of the graves are for the dead in the First and Second World Wars .