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For those who wished to serve their country by volunteering
to defend it in time of war, few less discouraging places could be found
than Edmonton, Alberta, at the start of the twentieth century. In 1899,
General E.T.H. Hutton, the General Officer Commanding (GOC) of the Canadian
Militia, pointed out that Canada spent only 32 cents annually per capita
on its military, less than any other country in the world. Militia units
were still armed with the ancient Snider-Enfield rifle that had first
seen service during the Fenian Raids of the 1860s. In spite of repeated
recommendations in the annual reports of GOCs for the creation of new
regiments in the West, not so much as a company existed, even on paper.
The great stretch of country between Manitoba and Vancouver did not
possess any militia units. Politics and patronage, which ruled in the
Militia Department to an even greater degree than most other branches
of government, ensured that any effort to use part of the meagre budget
to expand to the rapidly developing Prairies would come to nothing.
The attitude of the Canadian government was
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City of Edmonton Archives (EA-500-281).
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Canadian Mounted Rifles Camp,
Edmonton, AB, 1906.
The Canadian government spent very
little money on the military around the turn of the century. Although
needed, new military regiments (those additional to existing regiments
such as the Canadian Mounted Rifles) were very difficult to raise
during this period, especially in the West.
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John Willison, Reminiscences - Political
and Personal (Toronto: McClelland and Stewart, 1919).
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Sir Wilfrid Laurier, n.d.
Some Canadians, including Prime Minister Laurier,
argued that home defence was not a major concern. According to
this view, Canada, if threatened, would be protected by the United
States through the Monroe doctrine.
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summed up in Prime Minister Wilfrid Laurier's statement
to the newly appointed GOC, Lord Dundonald, on his arrival in Ottawa in 1902.
Laurier told Dundonald, "You must not take the Militia seriously, for though
it is useful for suppressing internal disturbances, it will not be required
for the defence of the country, as the Monroe doctrine protects us against enemy
aggression." (2) In September of 1905, when Edmonton hosted
the ceremonies marking the creation of the new province of Alberta, militia
units had to be imported from Fort Saskatchewan and Calgary to contribute to
the celebrations. |
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Benjamin Sulte, Histoire de la
Milice Canadienne-Francaise, 1760-1897 (Montreal: Desbarats and
Cie, 1897).
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Lieutenant-Colonel Frederick
Borden, 13 July 1896.
Borden, Minister of the Militia and Defence
(1896-1911), helped in establishing a modern army for Canada.
Modernization included developing a new organizational structure
and creating a medical service and army engineer and signals corps.
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Despite these limitations, some encouraging signs did exist.
Canadian volunteers, many drawn from the militia, had done well in the
South African War, raising the profile of military service and making
it easier for governments to allocate money. Moreover, the country was
in the middle of an economic boom, and more money was available for the
military. Even if Prime Minister Laurier did not take Canada's military
role seriously, his minister of militia and defence, Frederick Borden,
did. Borden's son, a lieutenant in the Royal Canadian Dragoons, was killed
in South Africa. Borden henceforth did what he could to overcome the apathy
of his cabinet colleagues and provide Canada with some semblance of a
modern army. Rudimentary brigade and |
divisional organization, along with medical services, appeared
shortly after the turn of the century. The first Engineer and Army Service Corps
units were authorized in 1901, and, two years later, the Canadian Ordnance Corps
and the Canadian Corps of Signals were brought into existence.
In 1908, the Militia Council finally awoke to the "astonishing
developments which have taken place in the four western provinces." (3)
The West's population was growing so rapidly that some otherwise sober economists
were predicting that the region would have 50 million people by the end of
the century. Edmonton, which had just over 8,000 people when it was incorporated
as a city in 1904, mushroomed to 18,500 four years later and to 50,000 after
its amalgamation with Strathcona in 1912. Muddy streets, horses, and wooden
buildings characterized Jasper Avenue in 1904, but pavement, electric streetcars,
and brick and stone structures had become commonplace just a few years later.
The University of Alberta was about to graduate its first class in 1911 and
the imposing legislative building was under construction on the north bank
of the North Saskatchewan River where the old Hudson's Bay Company fort had
stood. During the period, no resident of Edmonton was more conscious of the
city's growth and importance than William Antrobus Griesbach, a rising young
lawyer who had become city councillor and mayor while still in his twenties.
He would later emerge as the first of a series of inspirational leaders of
The Loyal Edmonton Regiment.
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Edmonton, AB, 1890-1914 Slideshow
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1. Edmonton Bulletin, 20 May 1914.
2. Desmond Morton, Ministers and Generals: Politics and
the Canadian Militia, 1868-1904 (Toronto: University of Toronto Press,
1970), p. 176.
3. Canada, Militia Council, Annual Report, 1909 (Ottawa, 1909),
p. 3.
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