Originally posted by conmcb25
Actually EMUGOD we were thinking about only having EFFECTIVE units so Im not sure we can do this.....
Actually EMUGOD we were thinking about only having EFFECTIVE units so Im not sure we can do this.....
The Canadian contribution began early and made a crucial difference to the winning of the war. For a nation of twelve million people it was a prodigious accomplishment. Over ONE MILLION people served in the military.
Canadian shipyards during the war launched nearly eight thousand small craft and well over a thousand naval and cargo vessels.
By the end of the war, Canada had the FOURTH-LARGEST navy in the world - 900 vessels and 106,000 men and women. 373 vessels were earmarked for convoy duty. It had several aircraft carriers, heavy cruisers, etc, and carried out 48% of ALL convoy duty including the Murmansk convoy run. . .
Canadian industry produced fifty thousand tanks and guncarriers. Most of the military transport used in the English Eighth Army's drive across North Africa against Rommel was Canadian-made.
Canada built its own tanks including the RAM (which formed the basis for the American Sherman tank), the "Grizzly", etc. . .
Canada had the second largest contingent of pilots fighting in the Battle of Britain - Squadron 242.
Canada was the only other large invasion force on D-Day (along with the Americans and British) at Juno Beach. The Canadian First Army liberated Holland and suffered huge casualties (Holland still celebrates this to this day).
It produced:
9,000 boats and ships
50,000 tanks and armoured gun carriers
16,000 aircraft, including fighters and heavy bombers (the Lancaster). Canada ended the war with the THIRD LARGEST airforce in the world.
500,000 military vehicles by 1943
850,000 vehicles by war's end
Huge amounts of munitions - bullets and shells
Anti-tank and field artillery
Naval guns
Small arms and automatic weapons
Radar sets and Electronics
Synthetic rubber
Uranium for the 'Manhattan Project'
and more...
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