War on the Home Front.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total War” which meant that all industries, materials and people were put to work for the war effort.
Advertisements

1942 All industries, materials and people working for the war effort.
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 for the.
The Home Front.  British Commonwealth Air Training Program  Announced on Dec 17, 1939  Air Crews and Pilots from all over the commonwealth were brought.
WWII: The War at Home. Total War A war fought w/ no limits put on the resources used to achieve victory By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total.
WWI: Conscription Crisis and the War at Home. Financing the War Money was needed to train, transport, feed, equip, and pay soldiers, and to build ships,
 Even though the war was fought in Europe, Canadians were afraid that Germany might attack Canada.  The Premier of BC even bought 2 submarines to protect.
Topic #1 Review Propaganda & The War Effort. Government Control – Propaganda Government used posters, radio ads, newspaper articles to encourage people.
THE WAR AT HOME. Wars = Fought by soldiers on the FRONT LINES WWI was an exception to this: Although the battles of WWI never took place on Canadian soil,
WWII The Home Front Propaganda II. Conscription
The Canadian Home Front
Chapter 7 “The Home Front” Impact of WWII on Canada.
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.
The War At Home BCATP Bomber Command Role of Women Arsenal of Democracy Total War Conscription-NRMA Japanese Internment.
The War at Home and What the War Meant to Canada Ms. Campbell Socials 11.
WWI: Conscription Crisis and the War at Home. Financing the War Money was needed to train, transport, feed, equip, and pay soldiers, and to build ships,
Canada & WW 1, War on the Home Front.
WWII: The War at Home. Key Questions  How did World War Two create tensions between English and French Canada?  What contributions did Canadian women.
WWII: The War at Home. Total War A war fought w/ no limits put on the resources used to achieve victory By 1942, Canada was committed to a policy of “Total.
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 for the.
The Home Front How did government war policies affect Canadians? How did Canadians support the war effort?
Miscellaneous.  British, Canadians, and Americans  Farmhouse on the shores of Lake Ontario near Oshawa   Special Training Camp #103  One.
CANADA DURING & AFTER THE SECOND WORLD WAR. SOCIAL EFFECTS Government restricts unions, but labour shortage allowed unions to demand many rights. C.D.
The Conscription Issue. King’s 1939 election promise – NO CONSCRIPTION 1940 – National Resources Mobilization Act –includes conscription for home defence.
Canadian Contributions C.D. Howe Minister of Munitions – created crown corporations for war production.
Conscription Crisis “Not necessarily conscription, but conscription if necessary”
The Home Front. T HE BCATP  British Commonwealth Air Training Program  Announced on Dec 17, 1939  Air Crews and Pilots from all over the commonwealth.
WWII and the Home Front. War Time Production  Wartime production By the end of the war Canada had produced:  16, 000 aircraft  741 naval vessels 
THE GREAT WAR AT HOME. Total War All resources of a nation are organized for one purpose- TO WIN THE WAR!
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 for the.
Social Studies 11 Unit 2 Canada Emerges in the 20th Century Canada and World War One.
WWII: The War at Home.
Declaration and Initial Involvement
Canada’s home front World War Two.
The Canadian War Effort on the Homefront During WWII
Canada & WWII: The War at Home
THE WAR ON THE HOMEFRONT
WWII: The War at Home.
Canada & WW 1, War on the Home Front.
War on the Home Front WWII.
The War At Home.
WORLD WAR II ( ).
Winning World War I Chapter 11.3.
The Homefront World War Two.
World War II: The Canadian Homefront
The Conscription Crisis in Canada During World War Two
Rationing The government encouraged people not to have excess amounts of food or other supplies in their house during wartime. In 1942, the Wartime Prices.
Essential Question: What role did civilians on the homefront play during World War I?
WWII: The War at Home.
Canada: On the Home Front
British and Canadian soldiers fought alongside each other in many battles, including D-Day. People were evacuated from cities that were under threat of.
Conscription The role of Canadian women
Canada & WW 1, War on the Home Front.
1/15/2019 4:35 PM On the Home Front © 2007 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Microsoft, Windows, Windows Vista and other product names are or.
Canada & WWII: The War at Home
Minds On – Quick Review What are 3 things you remember about life at the home front in WW2? For each of those, what was the long-term impact (if there.
Winning World War I Chapter 11.3.
The War at Home.
Conscription Crisis (1917)
WWII: The War at Home.
Total War: Canada in WWII
BCATP Role of Women Total War Conscription-NRMA Japanese Internment
WWII The Home Front Propaganda II. Conscription
ECONOMIC EFFORTS. ECONOMIC EFFORTS Wartime Prices & Trade Board •The W.P.T.B. was set up in October 1939 in order to avoid conditions of inflation.
Government War Policies
World War Two An Overview.
WWII: The War at Home.
WWII Review Created by Educational Technology Network
Government War Policies
Presentation transcript:

War on the Home Front

Major Issues Camp X Total War Economy Role of Women Conscription

Camp X intelligence training school very secret graduates head to Nazis-occupied Europe

British Commonwealth Air Training Program (BCATP) train pilots, navigators, gunners, paratroopers bases all over Canada students come from all over Commonwealth

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.

Economy war decreases unemployment everything focused on war Victory Bonds: loans to the government by the public to support war

Economy gov’t controls raising of prices wage controls control inflation cost of living ~ wages rationing: limit of what people could buy Canadians given ration books and coupons

Women & War women fill labour shortage new ways of thinking about women industry/factories sew clothes work at hospitals, drive buses, etc.

Conscription, 1943 low volunteer rates by 1943 King holds plebiscite (direct vote): voters asked ‘yes’ or ‘no’ question on Conscription English support it; French do not riots in Montreal and Quebec introduced at the end of the war never sent overseas

CASE STUDY Groups of three (3) In your group, read the small biography of the person and decide whether they would be ‘for’ or ‘against’ conscription. Why?

Key Question Should everyone be compelled to support the war effort?