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The very nature of warfare had changed. Conscription,
mass production and advances in military weaponry in the previous decades
had not been attended by significant changes in military tactics. As
a result, soldiers were slaughtered by the millions. The carnage was
unimaginable. Those not killed or wounded suffered through the nightmare
of life in the trenches. In these damp, disease-ridden, rat-infested
hell holes, the soldiers' lives alternated between mind-numbing boredom
and abject terror, with their lives hanging in the balance.
Eventually, further advances in technology and new battle
tactics would help to end the war. By then, 59,544 Canadians had been
killed and 172,950 more had been wounded. The carnage claimed a large
percentage of an entire generation of young Canadian men. The brave
soldiers were marked for life by their experience, and Canada was a
different nation.
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Copyright Canadian War Museum (CN 8157).
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The Defence of Sanctuary Wood,
by Kenneth Keith Forbes.
At Sanctuary Wood, soldiers of the Princess
Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry (PPCLI) were trapped in an exposed
salient, where they were decimated by enemy fire. Of the units ordered
to reinforce the PPCLI, only the 49th Battalion, under the command of
Lieutenant-Colonel William Griesbach, arrived in time. Acting alone,
the 49th successfully relieved the PPCLI. This painting of the defence
of Sanctuary Wood, 1-3 June 1916, vividly portrays the almost surreal
qualities of the First World War battlefield. Several soldiers man their
machine guns and return fire against a not-too-distant enemy. Some attend
comrades who have fallen during the furious fighting; others, who have
not survived, await stretchers to take them off to casualty stations.
The battlefield, once dense forest, has been reduced to charred tree
stumps.
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