NEW! Canadian Military History Trivia Challenge
Search

Canadian Military History Trivia Challenge

Take the quiz and Win a Trivia Challenge prize pack!

Canadian Military History Trivia Challenge

Take the quiz and Win a Trivia Challenge prize pack!

On This Date: January 2013

January 1, 1923: The Air Board and the departments of Naval Services, Militia and Defence are amalgamated, creating the Department of National Defence. January 2, 1940: Pilot Officer S.R. Henderson and Wing Commander J.F. Griffiths, serving with the Royal Air Force, are awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross, the first Canadians to be decorated during the Second World War.

January 1, 1923: The Air Board and the departments of Naval Services, Militia and Defence are amalgamated, creating the Department of National Defence.

January 2, 1940: Pilot Officer S.R. Henderson and Wing Commander J.F. Griffiths, serving with the Royal Air Force, are awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross, the first Canadians to be decorated during the Second World War.

January 3, 1793: Upper Canada becomes the first British Territory to pass an anti-slavery act.

January 4, 1971: Troops are withdrawn from Montreal following the October Crisis.

January 5, 1950: A North Star aircraft of No. 412 Squadron continues its round-the-world flight, a first by the Royal Canadian Air Force. On board is Lester B. Pearson, en route to a Commonwealth foreign ministers’ conference in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka).

Members of the Canadian Forces Disaster Assistance Response Team in Sri Lanka. [PHOTO: MCPL PAUL MACGREGOR, CANADIAN FORCES COMBAT CAMERA]

January 6, 2005: Canada’s Disaster Assistance Response Team leaves for Ampara, Sri Lanka, where 10,000 died in the Dec. 26 tsunami. The 200-member team repairs schools, provides medical help, and 3.5 million litres of drinking water.

January 7, 1966: Stranded in trains by snow slides in B.C.’s Fraser Canyon, 184 passengers are airlifted to safety by a Labrador helicopter from the Search and Rescue unit in Vancouver.

Rt. Hon. W. Lyon Mackenzie King [PHOTO: LEGION MAGAZINE ARCHIVES]

January 8, 1948: Mackenzie King beats Sir John A. Macdonald’s record, becoming not only Canada’s, but also the Commonwealth’s, longest-serving prime minister.

January 9, 1838: Amherstburg is shelled by Patriots intent on extending American-style government into Canada.

January 10, 1920: Drafted in 1919, the Treaty of Versailles takes effect, formally ending the First World War. It redraws the map of Europe and imposes punitive economic reparations on Germany.

January 11, 1896: Master spy Sir William Stephenson, code-named Intrepid as head of British counter-espionage in the Second World War, is born in Winnipeg.

January 12, 1916: The number of Canadian military forces committed to the First World War is boosted to 500,000 by order-in-council. Eventually more than 600,000 Canadians will serve.

January 13, 1849: Vancouver Island becomes a British Colony, with the Hudson’s Bay Company responsible for promoting settlement.

January 14, 1918: Canada’s 41 volunteers for Dunsterforce prepare to leave to protect the Baku oilfields and hold the line in Afghanistan against Turkish forces.

RCMP practising for Musical Ride. [PHOTO: LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES CANADA PA047836]

January 15, 1962: A tradition of the force since at least the 1880s, the RCMP Musical Ride becomes a full-time, permanent unit.

January 16, 1969: Soviet astronauts make history as their spaceships dock in space and transfer personnel.

January 17, 1957: Canada’s last aircraft carrier, HMCS Bonaventure, is commissioned.

January 18, 1945: Roughly 13,000 conscripts are en route to Europe. Conscription was controversial; a 1942 plebiscite divided the country with 80 per cent support in anglophone provinces, and 73 per cent disapproval in Quebec.

January 19, 1989: Canada’s first female combat soldier, Heather Erxleben, completes her training at CFB Wainwright, Alta.

January 20, 2004: Nearly 2,000 Canadian troops leave CFB Valcartier, Que., for Afghanistan.

January 21, 1980: Three Russian diplomats are caught buying secret information in Ottawa and are expelled from Canada.

January 22, 1944: A small Canadian force is part of the huge landing party in Anzio, Italy, 50 kilometres south of Rome. Nearly five bitter months of fighting lie ahead before Rome falls in June.

January 23, 1941: German prisoner of war Franz Von Warrna escapes en route to a prison camp in Ontario and makes his way back to Germany. He is awarded the Iron Cross, but is later killed in action.

January 24, 1932: During a revolution in El Salvador, HMCS Skeena and HMCS Vancouver land armed parties at Acajutla to protect British subjects.

January 25, 1932: The Copper Highway, the trans-Canada telephone system, is inaugurated.

General Charles Gordon [PHOTO: LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES CANADA C009992]

January 26, 1885: The Canadian Nile Voyageurs sight Khartoum in the Sudan, Africa, too late to rescue British General Charles Gordon.

January 27-30, 1973: Canada sends 115 personnel to South Vietnam for peacekeeping duties. By the end of the mission in 1974, 248 Canadians helped monitor the ceasefire and return of prisoners.

January 31, 1923: The Royal Canadian Naval Reserve and Royal Canadian Naval Volunteer Reserve are created.

For ON THIS DATE February Events, come back to legionmagazine.com on February 1, 2013.

 


Advertisement


Most Popular
Sign up to our newsletter

Stay up to date with the latest from Legion magazine

By signing up for the e-newsletter you accept our terms and conditions and privacy policy.

Advertisement
Listen to the Podcast

Sign up today for a FREE download of Canada’s War Stories

Free e-book

An informative primer on Canada’s crucial role in the Normandy landing, June 6, 1944.