Women and the War Effort

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Pattie Ruffner Jacobs Women’s Suffragist
Advertisements

A Nation Divided. Background  In the beginning of the war, Canadians were excited about the war effort and thousands of men volunteered  However, with.
WWI, Conscription, and a National Crisis
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,
Women’s Rights Movement and Prohibition in Canada After WWI.
Women’s Rights The suffrage movement
I MPACT OF WW1 ON C ANADA WH M AIN F ORMS Social Economic Political.
1.We will describe how some individuals, organizations, domestic and international events contributed to the development of identity, citizenship, and/or.
 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.
Women on the home front Women were expected to sacrifice for the war effort Women rationed food (especially meat), made vegetable gardens and sewed their.
PA 8.1 Contemplate the implications of Canadian citizenship on the life of Canadians Trace the changes in how citizenship has occurred for Canadians over.
Please do me a huge favor: Take your seat right away! Get out notebook/unipac/notes page. Turn off all electronics. Be ready to get started! Thanks!
The Vote for Women. Click to add text Women and the Vote Nellie McClung, Emily Murphy and the “Famous Five”
The “New Woman” The “New Woman” Changing Attitudes towards Women pre
Canadian Issues During World War I
Extending the Vote and the Suffragists:
Effects of War on Everyday Life Canadians at home supported the troops overseas in many ways. Posters, and government campaigns suggested that no sacrifice.
WOMEN Changing Roles and Rights. WOMEN AND CHANGE women started demanding rights in late 19th and early 20th century  right to vote  better labour laws,
Women and Modern Warfare. Long before the war had started, women had been pressuring politicians for a greater role in the managing of things. Women were.
The Role of Women During WW1 Friday, October 17 th, 2014.
THE CONSCRIPTION CRISIS S IMRIT D HALIWAL & M UNEER M OHAMOUD.
WOMEN’S RIGHTS MOVEMENT Women’s Rights during the early 1900s.
Attitudes on Canada’s Entry Into World War I. The Call to War After giving an ultimatum to Germany, Britain declares war on August 4, 1914 Canada follows.
The Home Front WWI in Canada. The Home Front WWI in Canada.
Who is the man with the rake. Who are the people he’s “raking up”
Chapter 4 WWI: Shaping Canada’s Identity Part 1 Answers
On the home front, the Canadian government was actively encouraging young men to enlist in the Royal Forces by enticing them with the promise of adventure.
World War I The Home Front.
Women and WWI Social Studies 11.
Chapter 4 Part 1 Questions
Mind’s On – What’s in a Name?
Women in the Early 20th Century
The Canadian War Effort on the Homefront During WWII
Canada & The Homefront.
Canada and the First World War
The Conscription Crisis of 1917
Social, Political & Economic Issues & Changes
MAY 1, 2017 Notes – Women in the 1920s and the “Person’s Case’
Women in WWI.
The Lasting Impact of War…in Canada
WW1 – The Conscription Crisis
The War at Home.
WOMEN’S ROLES IN CANADA DURING THE 1920S
The Role of Women.
Social Changes
Fighting the War at Home
Consequences of the Referendum
Conscription Crisis (1917)
Laurier Era.
Reminder – HTC Cause and Consequence
Women and the War Effort
Voting and Elections.
Conscription Crisis (1917)
Should Canadians Be Thankful For The Two World Wars?
(Why in the world would you do something like that?)
Canada and the First World War
Conscription 1917 Ch1201 December 2013.
WOMEN’S ROLES IN CANADA DURING THE 1920S
Slide Deck 4B: Electoral Participation Research
The Conscription Crisis of 1917
War on the Canadian Homefront
PowerPoint 4: Political Parties
Document A Discussion Questions
Source A, a poster created in 1910 to support the suffrage movement.
Why did Britain become more democratic?
Chapter 6 Section 1.
Slide Deck 7B: Electoral Participation Research
PowerPoint 2: Rights and Responsibilities in a Democracy
Presentation transcript:

Women and the War Effort Look at the following primary sources and infer – what do they tell us about what women did in the First World War? What do they tell us about Canadians or Canadian society?

Before 1916, women could not vote in Canadian elections

How does this source help us to understand attitudes towards woman and politics at the time?

Bit by bit, suffrage was achieved 1916 – Manitoba, Sask, and Alta became the first provinces to recognize women’s right to vote in provincial elections In 1917, Sir Robert Borden proposed, in the Wartime Elections Act, that wives, mothers, sisters, daughters of soldiers should be allowed to vote in the federal election of 1917. WHY?