Borden Battery
New member
The CEF Study Group is pleased to be able to announce the release of the new book on Canadian generals from the Great War.
Edited by Major Andrew B. Godefroy, PhD this 248 page book from the Canadian Defence Academy Press is being made available free of charge in Adobe pdf format. Hard copies can be obtained shortly with details being provided on this website.
In addition, the free Adobe pdf file will be available from a number of websites of members of the CEF Study Group very shortly.
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Great War Commands: Historical Perspectives on Canadian Army Leadership 1914-1918
Edited By Andrew B. Godefroy - Canadian Defence Academy Press
Chapter 1 The Advent of the Set-Piece Attack:
Major-General Arthur Currie and the Battle of Mount Sorrel, 2-13 June 1916
Andrew B. Godefroy
Chapter 2 “A Leap in the Dark” – Intelligence and the Struggle for the St. Eloi Craters:
Reassessing the Role of Major-General Richard Turner
David Campbell
Chapter 3 “A Bonny Fighter & a Born Leader”
A Portrait of Sir Archibald Cameron Macdonell, KCB, CMG, DSO
Ian Macpherson McCulloch
Chapter 4 “A Brutal Soul-Destroying Business”:
Brigadier-General F.O.W. Loomis and the Question of “Impersonal Generalship”
David R. O’Keefe.
Chapter 5 Major-General David Watson:
A Critical Appraisal of Canadian Generalship in the Great War
Patrick Brennan
Chapter 6 Leadership and Innovation:
Andrew McNaughton and the Counter-Battery Staff Office
Paul Dickson
Chapter 7 Lieutenant-Colonels Glen Campbell and Andrew T. Thompson and the Evolution of Native Canadian Participation during the First World War
Timothy C. Winegard
Chapter 8 Creating Combat Leaders in the Canadian Corps:
The Experiences of Lieutenant-Colonel Agar Adamson
Tod Strickland
ABSTRACT
From popular literature to reprinted memoirs and new media, over the last decade military historians have taken a renewed interest in Canada’s role in the First World War. In particular, their attention has focused greatly on the Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF) and its decisively lethal Canadian Corps, an ably-led and well-supported combat formation that was often unmatched for success on the western front. As the hammer of the British Army, the Canadian Corps soon earned the title “shock troops” and was often referred to as the “tip of the spear” in the Entente drive towards final victory on the western front. By the end of the war, over a half million men and women had served in the CEF and the Canadian Corps. Sadly, 64,944 of them never returned home.
Examinations of military organizations cannot be considered complete without some consideration for those who lead, shape, and guide them through both war and peace. Yet, despite the renewed attention on the Canadian Corps itself, the study of those who commanded this juggernaut at the highest levels remains much less well defined than the mass of men and women who filled its ranks. This is somewhat odd given that there exist many detailed political, social, operational, and tactical studies on theca, and begs one to ask how historians have assessed the movements and actions of the body of the Canadian Corps without developed understanding of what was going on in the mind of this titan as it did so.
Great War Commands: Historical Perspectives on Canadian Army Leadership, 1914-1918, brings together Canada’s leading military historians of the First World War to conduct the first ever in-depth study of the senior leadership of the CEF. Although by no means exhaustive, this book presents major contribution to broadening the current understanding of how theca was led and why it performed as it did both at home and on the battlefields of the western front.
Edited by Major Andrew B. Godefroy, PhD this 248 page book from the Canadian Defence Academy Press is being made available free of charge in Adobe pdf format. Hard copies can be obtained shortly with details being provided on this website.
In addition, the free Adobe pdf file will be available from a number of websites of members of the CEF Study Group very shortly.
------------------------------------------------------------
Great War Commands: Historical Perspectives on Canadian Army Leadership 1914-1918
Edited By Andrew B. Godefroy - Canadian Defence Academy Press
Chapter 1 The Advent of the Set-Piece Attack:
Major-General Arthur Currie and the Battle of Mount Sorrel, 2-13 June 1916
Andrew B. Godefroy
Chapter 2 “A Leap in the Dark” – Intelligence and the Struggle for the St. Eloi Craters:
Reassessing the Role of Major-General Richard Turner
David Campbell
Chapter 3 “A Bonny Fighter & a Born Leader”
A Portrait of Sir Archibald Cameron Macdonell, KCB, CMG, DSO
Ian Macpherson McCulloch
Chapter 4 “A Brutal Soul-Destroying Business”:
Brigadier-General F.O.W. Loomis and the Question of “Impersonal Generalship”
David R. O’Keefe.
Chapter 5 Major-General David Watson:
A Critical Appraisal of Canadian Generalship in the Great War
Patrick Brennan
Chapter 6 Leadership and Innovation:
Andrew McNaughton and the Counter-Battery Staff Office
Paul Dickson
Chapter 7 Lieutenant-Colonels Glen Campbell and Andrew T. Thompson and the Evolution of Native Canadian Participation during the First World War
Timothy C. Winegard
Chapter 8 Creating Combat Leaders in the Canadian Corps:
The Experiences of Lieutenant-Colonel Agar Adamson
Tod Strickland
ABSTRACT
From popular literature to reprinted memoirs and new media, over the last decade military historians have taken a renewed interest in Canada’s role in the First World War. In particular, their attention has focused greatly on the Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF) and its decisively lethal Canadian Corps, an ably-led and well-supported combat formation that was often unmatched for success on the western front. As the hammer of the British Army, the Canadian Corps soon earned the title “shock troops” and was often referred to as the “tip of the spear” in the Entente drive towards final victory on the western front. By the end of the war, over a half million men and women had served in the CEF and the Canadian Corps. Sadly, 64,944 of them never returned home.
Examinations of military organizations cannot be considered complete without some consideration for those who lead, shape, and guide them through both war and peace. Yet, despite the renewed attention on the Canadian Corps itself, the study of those who commanded this juggernaut at the highest levels remains much less well defined than the mass of men and women who filled its ranks. This is somewhat odd given that there exist many detailed political, social, operational, and tactical studies on theca, and begs one to ask how historians have assessed the movements and actions of the body of the Canadian Corps without developed understanding of what was going on in the mind of this titan as it did so.
Great War Commands: Historical Perspectives on Canadian Army Leadership, 1914-1918, brings together Canada’s leading military historians of the First World War to conduct the first ever in-depth study of the senior leadership of the CEF. Although by no means exhaustive, this book presents major contribution to broadening the current understanding of how theca was led and why it performed as it did both at home and on the battlefields of the western front.