Thursday, May 24, 2012

Navigation

On the right side of this page, you will see a list of labels: The Basics, Controversy, Politics, and Aftermath. All posts on this blog are filed under one of the four categories. Simply click on one to read about the subject in relation to the Conscription Crisis of 1917.

World War II

   The Conscription Crisis of 1917 had a major influence on the choices made by future politicians. In 1944, a second conscription crisis arrived as a result of World War II and it was much better handled.

   With the arrival of World War II, Parliament was focused on keeping Canada united and did not want to repeat the previous disaster. The general consensus was that conscription should not happen again. By 1942, Germany was greatly weakening the Allies and Great Britain was pressuring Canada to bring in more people. William Lyon Mackenzie King, the Prime Minister of the time, decided to hold a plebiscite, a vote in which the entire electing population can participate. In the end, the majority of Canadians voted in favour of conscription, but 72% of Quebec was against it.

   Although he had won the support of the majority, Mackenzie King was not as quick to disregard opposing opinions as Borden had been. He waited two years before enforcing conscription, and when he did, he limited the number of conscripted citizens to 16,000. He also lessened opposition in Quebec by securing the support of Louis St. Laurent, who was a young and well-respected justice minister in Quebec at the time. Through these actions, it is clear that Mackenzie King was careful to avoid the fiasco that had taken place in 1917.

   There were brief riots in Montreal and a brigade that refused to go to Europe, but the dispute was not as severe as what had happened in the previous conscription crisis. Having had the chance to learn from World War I, the government was much more careful this time around and managed to avoid the extent of the divide caused by the previous conscription crisis.

Immediate Aftermath

Although Borden’s Union government had given exemptions to the sons of farmers before the election, the exemptions were revoked in early 1918 after Borden’s reelection.

The results of the act were, for the most part, underwhelming. The first group of conscripts consisted of 404,395 people, of which 380,510 people appealed for exemption and 20,000 ultimately reported for training. Tens of thousands of French-speaking Canadians refused to register the mandatory selection process and 93% of people who did register applied for exemption.



At the end, only 48,000 conscripts were sent overseas by the time of the November 1918 armistice.

In Quebec, the aftermath included riots in Montreal lasting two days. Store windows were smashed the tramway rails were destroyed. 150 policemen had to be called in to restore peace.

On Easter weekend in 1918, military police grabbed a young man in a bowling alley in Quebec City. He was 23 year-old Joseph Mercier and he had been caught with neither conscription registration papers nor exemption papers. A mob formed and retaliated by attacking military registry offices, looting it, and destroying files by throwing them into the snow. Local police refused to act so Ottawa sent in soldiers to restore peace. Soldiers were pelted with bricks and snowballs so they opened fire. 4 died and many more were injured.

All this made many wonder whether or not the whole commotion about conscription had been worth it. It is clear that conscription did not work out as well as Borden had hoped. More than anything, it had caused conflict between different demographic groups in the country.