CHAPTER V (2)

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THE CONSCRIPTION ACT

The question of conscription came to a final issue on May 18, 1917, when the premier returned from England, where he had been in conference with his colleagues on the Imperial War Board. It was then that he announced that it would be necessary to introduce a conscription measure in the near future.

"A great struggle lies before us," he said, "and I cannot put that before you more forcibly than by stating that at the commencement of this spring's campaign Germany put in the field one million more men than she put in the field last spring.... Hitherto we have depended on voluntary enlistment. I, myself, stated to Parliament that nothing but voluntary enlistment was proposed by the Government. But I return to Canada impressed at once with the extreme gravity of the situation and with a sense of responsibility for our further effort at the most critical period of the war. It is apparent to me that the voluntary system will not yield further substantial results."

Only a little over fifty thousand men more were needed to supply the need at the front, and to complete Canada's full quota, but they were needed most imperatively. That this need was strongly impressed on the public mind became apparent during the month which intervened between these utterances by the premier and the first presentation of the Conscription Bill in Parliament. As a matter of fact, Australia and South Africa were the only belligerent countries besides Canada, at this time, which had not been compelled to adopt the principle of forcible enlistment.

On June 11 the bill was presented to Parliament, with a speech by the premier explaining all its provisions. Administration was placed under the Department of Justice, and the term was for the duration of the war, including demobilization. All male British subjects in Canada were included, from the ages of twenty to forty-five. Those eligible were divided into six classes, according to their marital conditions and ages, and each class was to be called in succession. An amendment presented by the leader of the opposition would have submitted the bill to a referendum vote of the electorate, but this was rejected by a vote of 111 against 62. The bill finally passed the third reading by a vote of 102 against 44.

At the end of the year 404,395 eligible men had registered. The number of men eventually drafted under this law amounted to 83,000, making the total number of enlistments up to the end of the war 611,741.

The army thus raised was eventually represented in infantry and cavalry battalions, exclusive of engineers, forestry, railway construction, pioneer, and cyclist corps, or the Siberian expeditionary force of 4,000 men. The following list was issued by the Government at the close of the war:

ORIGINAL OFFICERS OF INFANTRY BATTALIONS

fourth
" A. W. Morley Winnipeg September 18, 1916
Hundred-forty-fifth " W. E. Forbes Moncton, N. B. " 25, 1916
Hundred-forty-sixth Major C. A. Lowe Kingston, Ont. " 25, 1916
Hundred-forty-seventh Lt. Col. G. F. McFarland Owen Sound November 18, 1916
Hundred-forty-eighth " A. Magee Montreal, P.Q. September 26, 1916
Hundred-forty-ninth " R. G. C. Kelley Watford, Ont March 28, 1917
Hundred-fiftieth " H. Barre Montreal September 23, 1916
Hundred-fifty-first " J. W. Arnott Strathcona October 3, 1916
Hundred-fifty-second " S. Nells Wayburn, Sask " 3, 1916
Hundred-fifty-third " R. T. Pritchard Guelph, Ont April 29, 1917
Hundred-fifty-fourth " A. G. F. McDonald Cornwall October 25, 1916
Hundred-fifty-fifth " M. K. Adams Belleville " 17, 1916
Hundred-fifty-sixth " T. C. D. Bedell Brockville " 17, 1916
Hundred-fifty-seventh " D. H. McLaren Barrie, Ont " 17, 1916
Hundred-fifty-eighth " C. Milne Vancouver November 13, 1916
Hundred-fifty-ninth " E. F. Armstrong Haileybury October 31, 1916
Hundred-sixtieth " A. Weir Walkerton, Ont " 17, 1916
Hundred-sixty-first " H. B. Combe Clinton, Ont " 30, 1916
Hundred-sixty-second " J. Arthurs Parry Sound " 30, 1916
Hundred-sixty-third " H. Desrosiers Montreal November 27, 1916
Hundred-sixty-fourth " P. Domville Milton, Ont April 11, 1916
Hundred-sixty-fifth " L. C. D'Aigle Moncton March 28, 1916
Hundred-sixty-sixth " W. G. Mitchell Toronto October 12, 1916
Hundred-sixty-seventh " O. Readman Quebec [1]
Hundred-sixty-eighth " W. T. McMullin Woodstock October 3, 1916
Hundred-sixty-ninth " J. G. Wright Toronto " 17, 1916
Hundred-seventieth " L. Reed " " 25, 1916
Hundred-seventy-first " Sir W. Price Quebec November 23, 1916
Hundred-seventy-second " J. R. Vickers Kamloops, B. C. October 25, 1916
Hundred-seventy-third " W. H. Bruce Hamilton, Ont November 13, 1916
Hundred-seventy-fourth " H. F. Osler Winnipeg April 29, 1917
Hundred-seventy-fifth " N. Spencer Medicine Hat October 3, 1916
Hundred-seventy-sixth " D. Sharpe St. Catherines April 29, 1917
Hundred-seventy-seventh " J. B. McFee Simcoe, Ont May 3, 1917
Hundred-seventy-eighth " L. de la B. Girouard Victoriaville March 3, 1917
Hundred-seventy-ninth " J. Y. Reid Winnipeg October 3, 1916
Hundred-eightieth " R. H. Green Toronto November 13, 1916
Hundred-eighty-first " H. B. Combe Brandon, Man April 18, 1917
Hundred-eighty-second " A. A. Cockburn Whitby May 3, 1917
Hundred-eighty-third " W. T. Edgecomb Winnipeg ORIGINAL OFFICERS OF CAVALRY UNITS

UNIT ORIGINAL OFFICER IN COMMAND MOBILIZED SAILED
R. C. D Lt. Col. C. M. Nelles Toronto October 3, 1914
L. S. H " A. C. MacDonald Winnipeg " 3, 1914
R. N. W. M. P Major C. L. Jennings Regina June 4, 1918
C. M. R. Depot Lt. Col. W. C. Brooks Hamilton Oct. 22, 1917
First C. M. R. Bde " F. O. Sissons Winnipeg June 12, 1915
First Regt. C. M. R " H. J. Stevenson Included in First Brigade " 12, 1915
Second " " "J. C. L. Bott " "12, 1915
Third " " "L. J. Whittaker " "12, 1915
Second C. M. R. Bde Col. C. A. Smart Sherbrooke July 18, 1915
Fourth Regt. C. M. R Lt. Col. S. F. Smith Included in Second Brigade "18, 1915
Fifth " " "G. H. Baker " "18, 1915
Sixth " " "R. H. Ryan " "18, 1915
Seventh " " Major E. I. Leonard London, Ont June 29, 1915
Eighth " " Lt. Col J. R. Munro Ottawa Oct. 9, 1915
Ninth " " "G. C. Hodson Lloydminster, Sask Nov. 23, 1915
Tenth " " Major F. C Washington Portage la Prairie Apr. 28, 1916
Eleventh " " Lt. Col. G. H. Kirkpatrick Vancouver July 8, 1916
Twelfth " " "G. MacDonald Calgary Oct. 9, 1915
Thirteenth Regt. C. M. R "V. H. Holmes Medicine Hat June 28, 1916
First Can. Div. Cav. Sq. "F. C. Jamieson Valcartier Oct. 3, 1914
Second " " Major H. J. Leonard London, Ont. June 9, 1915
Third " " "T. W. Wright Winnipeg Jan. 22, 1916
Fourth " " Lt. Col. R. A. Carman Portage la Prairie Apr. 28, 1916

A digest of the foregoing tables will indicate the proportionate enlistments in the various sections of the country. Population considered, the West did better than the East.

As to the proportional representation of the various occupations in the enlistments, some light is thrown on that by figures presented by Mr. N. W. Rowell, K. C., in the Ontario Legislature, covering the period of heaviest voluntary enlistment, up to March 1, 1916. Out of a total of 263,111 recruits, 6 per cent, or 16,153 were professional men; 2 per cent, or 6,530, were merchants or men in the employing class; 18 per cent, or 48,777, were clerical workers; 64 per cent, or 170,369, were manual workers; 6 per cent, or 17,044, were farmers; and 1 per cent, or 4,238, were students.

The latter item deserves special mention, in the unusual enthusiasm shown by the students of the Canadian universities. At the end of 1914 McGill University had nearly a hundred of its student body in training on Salisbury Plain, many more were at Exhibition Park, preparing themselves for active service at the front, while others were in different camps throughout the country; 1,800 men were in the Officers' Training Corps, with 80 members of the faculty acting as officers. On March 1, 1915, 307 undergraduates had enlisted. Out of 4,000 registered students there were, at the end of 1915, 811 enlisted men, together with 1,003 graduates and 83 members of the staff.

The University of Toronto, by the end of 1918, was represented by 5,308 men, from its staff, graduates, undergraduates, and its faculty of education, of which 531 were killed. Other Ontario universities were represented by 900 men on active service. At the close of the war it was estimated that about 17,000 college students, or graduates, had enlisted, of which about 1,200 were reported as casualties.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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