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These
slightly comic-opera incidents emphasize how remote the idea of war was
in 1913. The training of the militia in Edmonton reflected the same assumptions.
Both cavalry and infantry paraded weekly on a more or less regular basis.
Winter parades were less frequent and less well attended because of the
lack of indoor facilities that could accommodate drill and instruction during
the cold weather. Prince of Wales Armoury was not completed until the war
was underway, and, until then, various makeshifts were employed. Schools
were used for lectures and courses of instruction. The 101st used Edmonton's
largest indoor venue, the Thistle Rink, until it burned down early in 1914,
destroying all the regiment's uniforms and equipment. Most of the training
that took place involved musketry. Rifle shooting was a high-profile sport
at the beginning of the twentieth century, and the militia participated
enthusiastically in the competitions that led to the annual Bisley matches
in England. Both the 19th and the 101st were equipped with the Ross Rifle,
which, whatever its shortcomings as a combat weapon, was an excellent target
rifle. |
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| Except for the occasional
ceremonial parade, the only time the militia trained at anything beyond
the platoon level was during the annual Calgary camps in late June. Here,
units from across the military district would gather, usually 2,000 to
2,500 strong. They lived under canvas and the infantry got a taste of
working not just with the cavalry but also with signallers, engineers,
and artillerymen. This |
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City of Edmonton Archives (Loyal Edmonton Regiment
Collection)
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Ross Rifle, n.d.
Both the 49th Battalion and the 101st Regiment
were equipped with the Ross Rifle. The Ross Rifle was an excellent
sporting and target rifle but it proved to be a highly ineffectual
and unreliable weapon during the First World War.
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training, however, provided no more than a taste: the cavalry
spent only two weeks in camp and the infantry just a week. The militia camps
were fun for all; beyond the allure of living outdoors in the shadow of the
Rockies in high summer, the men enjoyed the camaraderie and the entertainment,
such as bands, that was provided for them. Even the food was all right. In terms
of getting ready for the coming war, however, militia training was rather like
preparing to run a marathon by doing a few sprints once a year. |
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Ashley G. Brown, ed., The Prairie Provinces of
Canada: Their History, People, Commerce, Industries, and Resources (London:
Sells, 1914).
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Military Training Camp, Calgary,
AB, ca. 1914.
Edmonton's soldiers had few chances to train before
the war. The best opportunity came during the annual Calgary camps,
which took place every year in late June. Although this training was
productive, it was hardly enough to prepare the Edmonton regiments for
active service.
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| Of course, as late
as June of 1914, nobody really expected a major European war. In the House
of Commons that month, the Liberals criticized the prime minister Robert
Borden's government for overspending on the militia. (13)
War news appeared on the front pages of the newspapers in the spring of
1914, but it came from Mexico where civil conflict was raging and American
marines were intervening. Many other dramatic stories served to distract
readers from the ominous rumblings in central Europe that spring. Irish
Home Rule and the possibility of a mutiny in the British Army vied with
the "outrages" (the editors' favourite term) of the suffragettes
for public attention. The sinking of the Empress of Ireland in
the St. Lawrence |
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Edmonton, AB, 1890-1914 Slideshow
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NAC (C-080878).
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Gas Gushing from a Well, Turner
Valley, AB, June 1914.
In 1914, the discovery of oil at Turner Valley,
south of Calgary, was one of the many news stories that diverted
Albertans' attention away from increasing political tensions in
Europe.
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River in May was second only to the Titanic tragedy
in lives lost in a passenger ship accident, and June saw the Hillcrest Mine
explosion in southern Alberta, the worst disaster in Canadian mining history.
A sensational investigation of corruption in the Edmonton's police force dominated
the local news. On a happier note, the first significant oil discoveries at
Turner Valley filled the newspapers with share offerings and the prospects of
easy wealth. The baseball exploits of American Ty Cobb, the star second baseman
of the Detroit Tigers, filled the sport pages.
On 28 June, the heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary, the Archduke
Franz Ferdinand, and his wife were assassinated in Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina.
The press reported the event the next day, but coverage was quite low key
and the story disappeared from the newspapers after a few days. The public
was generally uninterested. The reaction of Sholto Douglas, an Oxford student
finishing his first year of university, serves as an interesting example.
Douglas, soon to be an artillery officer, fighter pilot, and eventually Marshall
of the Royal Air Force, noted that "there appeared in the newspapers
a report of yet another incident in the tiresome Balkans." His reaction
was absolutely typical, even among European diplomats and professional military
men. The Balkans had been in a state of constant turmoil for over a decade
without producing a wider conflict. Why should this incident be any different?
13. Ibid., 2 June 1914
14. Sholto Douglas, Years of Combat: The First Volume of the Autobiography
of Sholto Douglas, Marshall of the Royal Air Force Lord Douglas of Kirtleside
(London: Collins, 1963), p. 39.
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