Published by Canadian Legion of the British Empire Service League, 1936
Seller: Booked Experiences Bookstore, Burlington, ON, Canada
Soft cover. Condition: Good. pp.136 with a pullout leaflet attached to inside back cover showing plan of attach, Cdn troops April 1917, Canadian Corps. Disposition. Published on behalf of the Vimy Pilgrimage Committee by the Veteran Ltd, Ottawa, printed by the Perrault Printing Co. some words writting in pencil top pg.136 some tanning/soiling to outer edge and pullout charts edges front blue cover has been sunned showing dark blue in middle and lighter around the edges same to back cover slight edge and corner wear INCLUDED are: one postcard from Vimy, France from the unveiling of the Canadian Memorial and is filled in from someone who was there and addressed to a person in Toronto. 26VII36. 22 H dated photo by A. Vigneau also a photocopied picture of the monument in b/w also a page from a 1950 Calendar with the Union Jack flag on it with a poem by T. P. Cameron Wilson blue tape binding on spine is rubbed Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall.
Hardcover. Condition: Fair. Second Edition. Extensively documents the pilgrimage of 8,000 people, including 5,000 Canadians, to France to dedicate Canada's memorial to her fallen on Vimy Ridge in World War I. "An event whose importance and significance extended beyond the confines of Canada, a sacrament which was more than an act of homage to the War Dead, which, indeed, was a demonstration and an appeal for a cessation to those quarrelings afflicting the human family, the unveiling of the Canadian War Memorial on Vimy Ridge, on July 26th, 1936, was an international ceremony from which were derived elements that are bound to exercise a beneficent influence on the course of Empire as the years pass. It witnessed the establishment of several precedents, enactment for the first time of roles which in the past, had been accepted as pleasant theories, but which had not hitherto been practised. World figures whose words and deeds direct the activities of nations were assembled on the Monument. Their presence was more than a courteous gesture required as an act of international grace: it was a demonstration of first importance at a time when the European situation called for such a demonstration." - page 62. Ironically, the pilgrimage ended at Dieppe. Who knew that Canadians would shortly return to that citly on a new and much different military mission? 223 pages, including a lengthy Nominal Roll. First published in 1936. Profusely illustrated with black and white reproductions of photographs. No dust jacket, presumably as issued. Unmarked with average wear to original blue cloth lettered and decorated in gilt upon front board. Front hinge tender but intact. A hauntingly moving volume of enduring import. Cooke (3rd Edn) p.199. ; Sm 4to; Vimy Ridge France World War I One First Canadian Army Canada Comes of Age History Memorial Veterans W.s. Allward January 9th, 1917 Battles of Arras Great Hill 145 King Edward Unveiling.