Military History: 1945 to Present: Veteran's Rights
National Archives of Canada (PA-153195, photo by Jack
Long).
Veteran-Owned Business, May 1946.
The Department of Veterans Affairs helped
Mr. Stanley Lolly, a disabled veteran, to purchase this grocery store.
The department helped other returning soldiers to attend university,
gain vocational training, and even buy homes.
The war effort for Canada as a whole was magnificent. Approximately
1 million Canadians served in the military at a time when the population of
the country was just 10 million. Of this number, nearly 45,000 were killed
and thousands more were wounded. Great Britain and the United States each
had almost half a million soldiers killed, while the Germans lost 3 million
men. Unofficial estimates (no verifiable or official estimates exist) place
the total deaths of the military of the Soviet Union at 11 million.
For assistance in exploring the
site, please proceed to the User Information
page.
If you have any comments,
questions, or suggestions,
please contact us at ler@chinookmultimedia.com.
This website and its contents
are the intellectual property of
The Loyal Edmonton Regiment Museum.
Any reproduction of any part of
the site to which copyright laws
apply without the consent of
the owners is strictly prohibited.
The Canadian government was determined to be more generous to
its returning veterans than had been the case after the First World War. In
1944, the Veterans' Charter was passed. It provided $1.2 billion for the re-establishment
of Canada's veterans. Ex-servicemen and women could claim $100 for civilian
clothing, $10,000 in life insurance, a grant of $7.50 for each 30 days of
service, and additional sums for service in Europe or Asia. A private with
three years service, two of them in Europe, could collect $512.
Ollie McLeod Recalls Her Husband's Difficult Adjustment to Civilian
Life.
There were new benefits as well. The Reinstatement
in Civilian Employment Act guaranteed the returning, men and women
their old jobs back, plus any promotions they might have received. Veterans
could receive free university education or vocational training; funding
was available to buy homes and businesses. The Veterans' Land Act
provided loans of up to $4,500 for land, plus $1,200 for equipment.
A new Department of Veterans' Affairs was created to administer these
programs. After the Second World War, Canadians were not as ready to
forget those who had made the sacrifices and had defended the country
in its fight against fascism and militarism.
City of Edmonton Archives (Loyal Edmonton Regiment
Collection, A98-96, Box 6).
"Going Home."
Military officials distributed these
documents to demobilized soldiers to prepare them for their return home
and for the changes that had taken place in Canada during the course
of the war.