

Canadians and the Second World War
The Canadian contribution to World War Two was extraordinary in scale and variety. More than one million people, out of nation of just eleven million, volunteered to serve. To transform a small, virtually unequipped military into a powerful army, navy and air force was a remarkable achievement. No Price Too High traces Canada's involvement from the prewar years through 1945, explaining the events of the war in the context of the political and military realities of the time. There is none of the second guessing that has characterized so much recent analysis of the war. No Price Too High draws on original sources - personal letters and diary entries, and powerful photographs - to evoke the mood of those momentous years. The thoughts, hopes, dreams, fears, and heartbreaks of the generation of Canadians who faced the war are captured. Produced by Norflicks, No Price Too High chronicles Canada's role in the major events of the war, including The Battle of Britain, Dieppe and D-Day.
7

1936 to June 1940
Jan 1, 1995

June 1940 to December 1941
Jan 8, 1995

1942
Jan 15, 1995

1943
Jan 22, 1995

1944
Jan 29, 1995

March 1945 to year's end
Feb 5, 1995

Tomb of the unknown soldier
Feb 12, 1995

Narrator

Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King

Jean Partridge




Pat Patterson


self


