How Corporal Colin Sterling Saved Blossom, Alberta, and Most of the Rest of the World as Well…
Major Robert Anderson born June 14th 1805 was born as a soldier in a Soldiers retreat in Kentucky. He graduated from the United States West Point Military Academy. At West Point he earned a commission and became a second lieutenant in the 2nd regiment Artillery. And from there he joined Lincoln in and out of service. He was first lieutenant, then Seminole as assistant general to Winfield Scott, then captain in 1841. He was wounded in the Mexican American war where he was commanded and received a Brevet Major. He was the Major of the Union Army in 1957. Major Anderson was a slave owner back in Kentucky. He was a union commander officer of the US Army in Charleston SC. Him and Lincoln worked close in hand until one day Anderson wanted to take matters into his own hands, and move from Fort Moultrie to Fort Sumter to become the center of the Harbor. February 1861 the Confederate States demanded the fort to be turned over, and Anderson said no. Brid Gen PG Beauregard led the artillery attack on April 12th; it went on for 36 hours. Anderson had to be careful on how much the union fired back considering their supply ship has been captured. It was not til the 14th that Anderson raised the 33 American flag along with the white flag to surrender. On that day they got a 100 gun union salute, a union solider was skilled due to a misfire. Anderson became a nationalism hero when he put up that American flag with 33 stars. After that he was promoted to Brigadier general May 15th. He was then Commander of Kentucky. His last battle was August 1863, Fort Adams, Newport Rhode…
Rex Murphy’s essay, “What We Are Fighting For,” strives to outline the reasons behind the Canadian governments’ continued deployment of troops to Afghanistan. Murphy reviews the initial reasoning for deploying troops overseas, then continues on to explain that simply disbanding the Taliban government is insufficient. He indicates that the UN led mission is also implementing peacekeeping measures, and Canadian troops, as Peacekeepers remained. Murphy outlines the ambitious peacekeeping goals and provides insight into civil liberties those of us from democratic nations, often take for granted. The author then delves into the intricacies and obstacles faced in attempting to install a democratic government in a country still under threat of Taliban…
American operations against Upper Canada in the Niagara region [present-day Ontario] were led by General Stephen Van Rensselaer, a militiaman who was one of the wealthiest US citizens. The temporary ceasefire allowed him to marshall his forces and take them on an overland trek from Albany, New York, to Upper Canada.…
Lieutenant-General Sir Arthur Currie was the most capable soldier that Canada has produced. Certainly, he did not look like the great soldier he had become. A very tall man, at six-foot-four, he was also somewhat overweight. Through his successes as the Commander of the Canadian Corps, he knew how to delegate authority and stand by the decisions of his subordinates.…
battle in North America’s theater of war of the French and Indian War in the United The battle, which began on…
Sir Julian Byng was the 12th Governor General of Canada and was the Commander of all the Canadian Corps during the Battle of Vimy Ridge, which meant that he was in charge of all Canadian Corps that fought in the battle. Sir Arthur Currie was the commanding officer of the first Canadian division during the war and was mostly responsible for the winning of the ridge. Currie was the first Canadian General, he got promoted after Julian Byng was promoted and was moved up to a different part of the force. Currie was in the right place at the right time because with Byng moving up, Currie had the chance to command all of the first Canadian corps. Currie was born and raised to fight and command so it wasn’t a difficulty when he was asked to Command the First Canadian Corps.…
Sebastian Junger is a contributing editor to Vanity Fair. Who, within a time period between 2007 and 2008 follows an American platoon deployed to Afghanistan. Korangal Valley to be exact, which is roughly twenty five miles from the border of Pakistan. The United States goal was to put our American troops there to over throw the Taliban regime. We intended to help Iraqi’s clear and secure neighborhoods, and to protect their local population.…
“The hardest thing about a road not taken is that you never know where it might have led.”-Lisa Wingate Peter Jemley is unique among the growing ranks of war resister who made the decision to flee to Canada instead of being involved in the military. He didn’t take the decision to join the arm lightly. He stated, “It wasn’t a political decision, I didn’t really like the bush administration anymore then, than I do now. But Iraqi’s are people to and I am not afraid of doing difficult things, so I thought I could help.” Peter was not given enough information on what he was expected to do, and he figured they needed him to torture others, due to him being the only one who spoke there language. Secondly, Peter wanted to go into military to help out the country, not to do any crimes. By him not knowing what the government is expecting him to do, he could be expected to do something illegal, like torturing others during war. Due to Peter not getting enough information from the government on his expectations, and whether or not he was expected to do illegal crimes, Peter Jemley should be supported in his decision to desert his position in the U.S military.…
The bloody Vietnam War of the 1950’s was fought by the brave American troops with the help of the Canadian citizens. Though, sources claim that Canada had a limited amount of contribution in the war, facts state otherwise. The Vietnam War took place during the Cold War era where a military conflict had occurred in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia from November 1 1955 to April 30 1975. Canada became officially involved in the Vietnam conflict in 1954, as part of the International Commission for Supervision and Control in Vietnam. However, Canada did not post troops to Vietnam until 1973, in which Canadian troops remained under the United Nations banner to enforce the Paris Peace Accords. The War had persisted for more than nineteen years, five months, four weeks and one day. During the Cold War era, Canada remained associated with the main stream western powers. Many Canadians who truly wanted to fight in the War had served along the U.S Military. Canadians serving with the United States had occurred as far back as the Civil War. In addition, Canada was part of many organizations such as “N.A.T.O” (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) which guaranteed Canada would not partake in the Vietnam War. Even though people around the world contemplate that Canada had no contribution in the Vietnam War, various facts state that Canadians did have excessive amount of involvement towards the Vietnam War that was never taken into consideration. Throughout this essay, the reader will be able to grasp a general understanding of the ways in which the Canadians had part in The Vietnam War, regardless of what bias sources claim. To start with, Canada sent more than thirty thousand troops into the Vietnam War with the Americans – these troops volunteered and died there. Canadians had also sent plenty amounts of supplies…
John G. Diefenbaker was born in Neustadt Ontario, September 18, 1895 to father William Thomas Diefenbaker and mother Mary Florence Bannerman. (The Montreal Gazette, pg 6). Their family moved west to Fort Carlton of the North West Territories, now Saskatchewan, in 1903 then to Saskatoon in 1910 attending the University of Saskatchewan (Williams, The Canadian Encyclopedia). Diefenbaker served in WWI as a lieutenant in the 196th Western University Battalion in 1916. He returned to the U of S after his service in the war to graduate law in 1919. (The Montreal Gazette, pg 6).…
since February 2002, approximately 15, 000 Canadian soldiers have served in Afghanistan. 78 Canadian Forces (CF) casualties have occurred, including one diplomat. The role of the Canadian Forces in Afghanistan is often debated. Many disagree with the mission and want the CF to leave Afghanistan now. Doing this however would only be failing the Canadian commitment to the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and NATO. Canada should keep its commitment and remain in Afghanistan until the mission is complete. Afghanistan is in state that is almost beyond third-world. However, the mission that Canada is currently involved in has improved the country drastically and will continue to do so as long as the mission continues. So why take the…
Throughout the passage of time, in order to make sense of the world and justify established ideologies, man has put forth disproportionate effort into defining what is deemed by the masses as acceptable and appropriate. With the formation of these social life requirements, it goes without saying there will be outliers who do not fit this man-created construct, either by innate or self-realized characteristics. This social restraint is undoubtedly the source of much emotional turmoil and unrest. Here is where Sarah Rosetta Wakeman’s story begins. As a white, American woman born in the 1800’s, Wakeman’s scope of “acceptable” life directions was very limited, and much can be said about how she dealt with the obstacles created by the aforementioned social constraints. Wakeman’s decision to leave home, and assume the characteristics of a man, was more out of a sense of familial duty than an outward expression of suppressed sexual identity. In order to better understand Sarah’s motivation one must first analyze her childhood and the environmental factors which molded her.…
This essay is based on Combat High written by Sebastian Junger first published in Newsweek Magazine in 2010. The article was adapted from the author 's book War which describes life in a platoon in the Korengal Valley of Afghanistan. He spent fourteen months during 2007 and 2008 embedded in the platoon. Junger points out the costs of the war in terms of the soldiers psychological aspects, explaining how being in combat can be damaging. Another cost of war is caused by lack of proper medical and psychological care to returning soldiers to help in the re-insertion to society.…
The Canadian military as peacekeepers is a very prominent notion of the majority of Canadians. It is what distinguishes Canada most strongly from the United States, and what has become an important aspect of their foreign policy. Peacekeeping, since the conclusion of the Cold War, however, is a myth. This essay will explore the history of peacekeeping, its use as a tool during the Cold War, and Canada's very prominent role in its development and use. Peacekeeping, in the traditional sense of the word, ended in the 1980s.…