Canada's Bastions of Empire: Halifax, Victoria and the Royal Navy 1749-1918

Canada's Bastions of Empire: Halifax, Victoria and the Royal Navy 1749-1918

by Bryan Elson
Canada's Bastions of Empire: Halifax, Victoria and the Royal Navy 1749-1918

Canada's Bastions of Empire: Halifax, Victoria and the Royal Navy 1749-1918

by Bryan Elson

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Overview

This book offers a fresh perspective on North American history, and the key role played by Halifax and Victoria in ensuring that Canada emerged as an independent country in the 20th century.
Brian Elson focuses on the significance of the bases for the all-powerful British navy at Halifax and Victoria through the 19th century and the First World War. As he explains, Halifax gave the Royal Navy the land base they needed to project British power along the whole east Atlantic coast of North America. Victorias Esquimault did the same thing for the Pacific coast.
During the 1800s the United States grew dramatically, adding huge swaths of lands west, south and north that had belonged to France, Spain, Mexico, and Russia while pushing aside native peoples. More than once the American government came into conflict with Britain over British territory in North America. There were threats of war and annexation, and American popular support for absorbing Canada was strong.
In this book Bryan Elson shows how the British presence in Halifax, and later in Victoria, stood in the way of US designs on Canada. American leaders knew that the British Navy, with its bases on both coasts, had the power to cut them off from the rest of the world with a naval blockade. The American threat to Canada was effectively countered by the British presence in these two cities.
The two bastions played their most important role in the early years of the First World War. As Bryan Elson explains, in 1914 the United States stood aside while the British Empire, including Canada, took on Germany. In this situation, the British navy including the Canadian navys first east coast warship mounted a show of force by stopping all incoming and outgoing traffic from the port of New York. This lasted until the US finally opted into the war, on the side of Britain, in 1917.
Meanwhile, on the west coast the Equimault naval base was buttressed by the extraordinary action of the B.C. provincial government which at the start of the war bought two new submarines from a shipyard in Seattle for the fledgling Canadian navy.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781459503274
Publisher: Formac Publishing Company, Limited
Publication date: 10/16/2014
Sold by: De Marque
Format: eBook
Pages: 280
File size: 15 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

BRYAN ELSON is a former officer of the Royal Canadian Navy, and the current director of the Canadian Naval Memorial Trust in Halifax, Nova Scotia. He lives in Halifax. This is his first book.

Table of Contents

Canada's Bastions of Empire

Contents

Introduction
Chapter One: The Watch Is Set, 1749-1858
Chapter Two: Threat and Response, 1858-1905
Chapter Three: Rumours of War, 1906-1914
Chapter Four: Defences, Defenders, and the Coming of War, August 1914
Chapter Five: Halifax Crisis, August 1914
Chapter Six: Esquimalt Crisis, August 1914
Chapter Seven: Consolidation, September to December 1914
Chapter Eight: Afterwards
Acknowledgements
Appendix: Costal Defences
Bibliography
Photo Credits
Index

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