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  • 23 - Vimy Ridge: Birth of a Nation, Cost of a Generation
    2026/04/09

    April 9th, 1917—Canada stepped onto the world stage at Vimy Ridge.

    For the first time, all four divisions of the Canadian Expeditionary Force advanced together in a single, coordinated assault—executed with precision, preparation, and discipline that set them apart on the Western Front.

    In this episode of Memory and Valour, we go beyond the familiar story to explore how Vimy Ridge became more than a battlefield victory, it became a defining moment in Canada’s national identity.

    From the meticulous planning and creeping barrage to the soldiers who carried the attack forward across the ridge, this is the story of how legend was forged on April 9th, 1917.

    Follow Memory and Valour on Spotify so you never miss an episode, and help keep these stories alive.

    Because where memory endures, valour lives on.

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    1 時間 24 分
  • 22 - Battle of Loos: 1915 — The Year the War Turned Against Canada
    2026/04/04

    1915 is the year the war stopped being an "adventure".

    What began as a war of movement and expectation hardened into something far more brutal: static trench lines, failed offensives, and a battlefield dominated by machines rather than men.

    From the costly assaults at the Battle of Neuve Chapelle and Battle of Festubert… to the devastating lessons of the Battle of Loos, we trace how Allied strategy struggled and often failed to keep pace with a rapidly evolving war.

    These were battles marked by early promise and ultimate frustration. Gains were measured in yards. Losses were counted in thousands. And again and again, soldiers were sent forward into conditions that technology had already rendered deadly.

    For the Canadian Expeditionary Force, 1915 was not a year of triumph; it was a brutal education. One that would shape how they fought, endured, and ultimately succeeded in the years that followed.

    This episode explores the collapse of illusion, the rise of industrialized killing, and the human cost of a war that no longer followed the rules.

    Because before there was victory…

    there was 1915.

    Follow Memory and Valour and listen now.

    Because where memory endures… valour lives on.

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    1 時間 13 分
  • 21 - Warriors Without Rights: Indigenous Soldiers of the CEF
    2026/03/29

    When the First World War erupted in 1914, Canada answered the call without hesitation. But among those who stepped forward were men who, under Canadian law, were not even recognized as citizens.

    In this episode of Memory and Valour, we uncover the powerful and often overlooked story of Indigenous men who volunteered to serve in the Canadian Expeditionary Force. Drawn from communities across the country from the plains of Alberta to the forests of Ontario, these soldiers fought in some of the war’s most brutal battles, including Ypres, Vimy Ridge, and Passchendaele.

    They served as snipers, scouts, and front-line infantry. Many displayed extraordinary skill and courage under fire. Many never returned home.

    And yet, their service existed within a profound contradiction.

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    1 時間 22 分
  • 20 - The Barnbow Lasses: 35 Women, One Explosion, A Hidden Story
    2026/03/21

    In 1916, an explosion tore through the Barnbow Munitions Factory in Leeds, killing 35 women in an instant.

    They were known as the Barnbow Lasses. Young workers fueling the First World War from the factory floor… until disaster struck.

    For decades, the truth of what happened that night was softened, reshaped, and in some cases, silenced entirely.

    In this episode of Memory and Valour, I sit down with author Antony J. Bell to explore the Barnbow explosion and the story of his own ancestor, Sarah Ann Jennings; one of the women killed. Drawing from his book A Penny a Shell, we uncover how memory, grief, and family history intersect with one of Britain’s deadliest wartime industrial disasters.

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    45 分
  • 19 - Behind Barbed Wire: Canadian POWs and Internment Camps of WWI
    2026/03/16

    During the First World War, Canadian POWs faced starvation, forced labour, and brutal marches in German camps, while thousands of civilians in Canada — many Ukrainian and German immigrants — were imprisoned as “enemy aliens.” Through diaries, letters, and rare firsthand accounts, this episode uncovers the parallel worlds of captivity that shaped Canada’s WWI story. “We were not soldiers, yet we lived behind barbed wire.”

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    1 時間 9 分
  • 18 - Mount Sorrel: Inside the Battle That Shook the Canadian Corps
    2026/03/08

    On June 2, 1916, the ground beneath Canadian soldiers at Mount Sorrel exploded. German mines and artillery shattered the front line near Ypres, killing hundreds in minutes and throwing the Canadian position into chaos.After weeks of preparation, German forces opened a massive artillery bombardment against the Canadian lines. Beneath the trenches, carefully planted mines detonated, tearing apart the front and killing or burying hundreds of soldiers in seconds. The attack shattered the Canadian position on Hill 62 and the slopes of Mount Sorrel.

    In the chaos that followed, Canadian forces regrouped under intense pressure. Within days, they launched a determined counterattack to reclaim the shattered ground.

    The Battle of Mount Sorrel became a brutal test of leadership, resilience, and the growing reputation of the Canadian Corps on the Western Front.

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    1 時間 13 分
  • 17 - A Nation Divided: Canada’s Conscription Crisis of 1917
    2026/03/01

    In 1917, as Canadian soldiers bled at Vimy Ridge and endured the mud of Passchendaele, the war exploded at home.

    With First World War casualties mounting and enlistment collapsing, Prime Minister Robert Borden introduced conscription. The result was the Canadian Conscription Crisis of 1917; one of the most divisive moments in our history.

    Riots in Quebec City.

    English and French Canada set against each other.

    Families fractured.

    A nation pushed to the brink.

    The First World War didn’t just test Canada on the Western Front. It tested whether the country could survive itself.

    In this episode of Memory and Valour, we examine how conscription reshaped Canadian politics, unity, and identity and why its echoes still matter today.

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    1 時間 8 分
  • 16 - Canada’s Shock Troops in WW1: Ruthlessness, Myth, and the Canadian Corps
    2026/02/22

    By 1918, the Canadian Corps had earned a reputation across the Western Front: shock troops.


    They were chosen for some of the most difficult assaults of the First World War — at Vimy Ridge, Passchendaele, Amiens, and during the Hundred Days Offensive. British command relied on them for complex, coordinated attacks. German sources warned of their aggressiveness.

    A narrative took hold: that Canadians were uniquely ruthless.

    But was that reputation earned on the battlefield — or constructed in memory?


    In this episode of Memory and Valour, we examine:

    How the Canadian Corps became known as “shock troops” in WW1

    What German reports actually said about Canadian soldiers

    The scholarship of Dr. Tim Cook on battlefield effectiveness

    Whether Canada’s First World War reputation reflects tactical innovation, myth, or something more uncomfortable.


    This is a deep dive into the Western Front, the reality of industrialized war, and the thin line between discipline and ruthlessness.


    Follow Memory and Valour for more historically rigorous explorations of Canada’s First World War history.

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    1 時間 21 分