The Canadian Expeditionary Force was the designation of the field force created by Canada for service overseas in the First World War. The force fielded several combat formations in France and Flanders, the largest of which was the Canadian Corps, consisting of four divisions. The Canadian Cavalry Brigade and the Canadian Independent Force, which were independent of the Canadian Corps, also fought on the Western Front. The CEF also had a large reserve and training organization in England, and a recruiting organization in Canada. In the later stages of the European war, particularly after their success at Vimy Ridge and Passchendaele, the Canadian Corps was regarded by friend and foe alike as the most effective Allied military formation on the Western Front. The Germans went so far as to ca
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| - The Canadian Expeditionary Force was the designation of the field force created by Canada for service overseas in the First World War. The force fielded several combat formations in France and Flanders, the largest of which was the Canadian Corps, consisting of four divisions. The Canadian Cavalry Brigade and the Canadian Independent Force, which were independent of the Canadian Corps, also fought on the Western Front. The CEF also had a large reserve and training organization in England, and a recruiting organization in Canada. In the later stages of the European war, particularly after their success at Vimy Ridge and Passchendaele, the Canadian Corps was regarded by friend and foe alike as the most effective Allied military formation on the Western Front. The Germans went so far as to ca
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| - Canadian Expeditionary Force
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abstract
| - The Canadian Expeditionary Force was the designation of the field force created by Canada for service overseas in the First World War. The force fielded several combat formations in France and Flanders, the largest of which was the Canadian Corps, consisting of four divisions. The Canadian Cavalry Brigade and the Canadian Independent Force, which were independent of the Canadian Corps, also fought on the Western Front. The CEF also had a large reserve and training organization in England, and a recruiting organization in Canada. In the later stages of the European war, particularly after their success at Vimy Ridge and Passchendaele, the Canadian Corps was regarded by friend and foe alike as the most effective Allied military formation on the Western Front. The Germans went so far as to call them "storm troopers" for their great combat efficiency. In August 1918, the CEF organized the Canadian Siberian Expeditionary Force, which reinforced the anti-Bolshevik garrison in Vladivostok during the winter of 1918–19.
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is Branch
of | - 10th Battalion, CEF
- 192nd (Crow's Nest Pass) Battalion, CEF
- 187th (Central Alberta) Battalion, CEF
- Frederick Coppins
- Arthur George Knight
- Michael James O'Rourke
- Frederick William Hall
- Thain Wendell MacDowell
- Cecil John Kinross
- Okill Massey Learmonth
- Milton Fowler Gregg
- Edward Donald Bellew
- Francis Alexander Caron Scrimger
- 218th (Edmonton) Battalion, CEF
- Hugh Cairns (VC)
- Frederick William Campbell
- Graham Thomson Lyall
- Charles Pingle
- 1st Canadian Division
- James Edward Tait
- Claude Nunney
- Dougall Carmichael
- James Cleland Richardson
- Walter Leigh Rayfield
- 2nd Canadian Division
- Colin Fraser Barron
- George Mullin (VC)
- Samuel Lewis Honey
- Talbot Mercer Papineau
- John Francis Young
- Francis Pegahmagabow
- Thomas Orde Lawder Wilkinson
- 31st (Alberta) Battalion, CEF
- Harry Miner
- 191st (Southern Alberta) Battalion, CEF
- Raphael Louis Zengel
- Wallace Lloyd Algie
- 138th (Edmonton, Alberta) Battalion, CEF
- 3rd Canadian Division
- Alexander Picton Brereton
- James Peter Robertson
- John Chipman Kerr
- Harcus Strachan
- 82nd Battalion, CEF
- Bellenden Seymour Hutcheson
- 175th (Medicine Hat) Battalion, CEF
- Frederick Fisher
- Herman James Good
- Robert Spall
- Joseph Kaeble
- Christopher O'Kelly
- George Burdon McKean
- 194th Battalion (Edmonton Highlanders), CEF
- William Johnstone Milne
- 4th Canadian Division
- 5th Battalion, Canadian Mounted Rifles, CEF
- John MacGregor (VC)
- Garnet Hughes
- Billy Bishop
- Thomas William Holmes
- Frederick Hobson
- Cyrus Wesley Peck
- 151st (Central Alberta) Battalion, CEF
- Hugh McKenzie (VC)
- Coulson Norman Mitchell
- Robert Grierson Combe
- William Hew Clark-Kennedy
- Leo Clarke
- Harry W. Brown
- Canadian Cavalry Brigade
- Jean Brillant
- 202nd (Sportsman's) Battalion, CEF
- William Henry Metcalf
- Charles Smith Rutherford
- Gordon Flowerdew
- John George Pattison
- George Fraser Kerr
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