Abstract

The Northern Review 44 (2017): 9–30The participation of the Yukon in the First World War is a neglected part of northern history. For four years, the people of the Yukon, young and old, men and women, from all walks of life, became actively involved. A quarter of the population enlisted and fought in many of the major battles of the war; many came back as heroes, while others never came home at all. Those who remained at home were heavily committed to King and Empire. Women of the Yukon volunteered for service, raised funds for the war effort, and became socially active in such causes as prohibition and suffrage. Yukoner Joe Boyle distinguished himself in Russia during the war by financing a machine gun battery of fifty men, then volunteering to save the crown jewels and national treasury of Romania, negotiating an international treaty between Russia and Romania, and establishing a spy network. Robert Service, the Bard of the Yukon, volunteered as an ambulance driver and later penned the best-selling book of poetry of his long career. Individual acts of courage led to two men from the Yukon receiving the Victoria Cross, and many others receiving other honours. George Black, the commissioner of the Yukon, volunteered for service, bringing 250 Yukon men with him to the battlefields of France. Martha Black, his wife, accompanied him and became a mother figure to the men overseas and a Yukon goodwill ambassador. Many acts of commemoration and remembrance followed the war. This article is part of a special collection of papers originally presented at “The North and the First World War” conference held May 2016 in Whitehorse, Yukon.https://doi.org/10.22584/nr44.2017.002

Highlights

  • The par cipa on of the Yukon in the First World War is a neglected part of northern history

  • On 4 August 1914, the people of the Yukon were drawn into the vortex of a world war that would last four long years

  • At the end of this period, the Yukon was a different place than it had been at the beginning

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Summary

The Beginning

On 4 August 1914, the people of the Yukon were drawn into the vortex of a world war that would last four long years. Though not yet officially stated, the community knew what this meant: that Canada was, like Britain, at war with Germany As they filed out of the three theatres showing movies that August night, onto the twilit streets of Dawson, men and women, young and old, were abuzz with earnest discussion. The following day, Black placed advertisements in the newspaper calling for volunteers He and Dr Alfred Thompson, the Yukon’s member of. At first reported killed in action, he was wounded and captured by the Germans He died a short time later while a prisoner of war in a Bavarian field hospital at Henin Lietard. Another man, lacking the funds to obtain transportation to Whitehorse, walked the entire distance. By Christmas, sixty-five men had already left to join up

Yukon Women Support the Cause
The Boyle Detachment
The Volunteers
The Hundred Days
The Fallen
The Impact
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