Tuesday, September 13, 2022

Workers Undermined Canada’s Attempt to Crush the Bolshevik Revolution

Canadian prime minister Sir Robert Borden joined by a young Sir Winston Churchill, London, July 1918. It was at meetings of the Imperial War Cabinet in the summer of 1918 where Canadians, British and other imperial leaders decided to send troops to Siberia to intervene in Russia’s civil war. Photo via Department of National Defence, Canadian Military Journal Collection
259th Battalion conscripts at a “Hands Off Russia” mass meeting on December 13. Photo via Sidney Rodger Collection, Beamsville, Ontario
Soldiers in the 259th Battalion being inspected by their commanding officer. Photo via Library and Archives Canada, Dorothy I. Perrin Collection.
The Canadian hospital in Vladivostok, which held many of the STI-ridden soldiers. Photo via Eric Elkington Collection, Ladysmith, British Columbia
A May 1919 anti-strike rally in Winnipeg, linking the general strike with Bolshevism and the “enemy alien.” Photo via Canada’s Visual History
The Canadian and British plot at the Marine Cemetery in Vladivostok. Photo via Benjamin Isitt
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