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History Canada

Fernie at War

1914-1919

by (author) Wayne Norton

Publisher
Caitlin Press
Initial publish date
Nov 2017
Category
Canada
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781987915495
    Publish Date
    Nov 2017
    List Price
    $24.95

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Description

From "enemy alien" internment camps to WWI disillusionment - these are the five pivotal years that shaped Fernie, BC, a city instrumental to the national identity of Canada. Fernie, a small community located in BC's Kootenay region, entered the First World War in 1914 with optimism and a sense of national pride-it emerged five years later having experienced staggering losses and multiple controversies that threatened to tear their community apart. As a resource-based economy with unusually large and varied immigrant populations, and exceptionally high recruitment levels, Fernie was profoundly affected by conflicting impulses of labour, loyalty and ethnicity. Demands for internment of enemy aliens, resistance to prohibition and moral reform, the consequences of natural and man-made disasters, the unprecedented banning of recruitment, and the western labour revolt were all issues that contributed to a war-time experience for Fernie that was more dramatic and more revealing of underlying tensions than that of any other Canadian community. In his new book, Fernie at War, historian and author Wayne Norton explores what it meant to live in Fernie during those confusing and divisive years.

About the author

Wayne Norton is a writer, publisher and historical consultant who was, for many years, a teacher in Fort Rupert and Kamloops in British Columbia and in England. Born in Calgary, he has written extensively on a wide range of historical topics. His interest in women’s ice hockey, like all his interests in history, was sparked in childhood by family visits to his grandparents in Fernie. His most recent publications are A World Apart: The Crowsnest Communities of Alberta and British Columbia and Kamloops History: Fictions, Facts and Fragments. Wayne now lives in Victoria, BC.

Wayne Norton's profile page

Awards

  • Winner, Community History Award - British Columbia Historical Federation

Editorial Reviews

“Wayne Norton provides a fascinating story of a British Columbia resource town navigating its way through the tribulations of the Great War. In so doing, he adds to the small but growing body of works that examine the home front experiences of Canadians during the world wars […] This is a book with many strengths…”

—R. Scott Sheffield, BC Studies

Fernie at War is undoubtedly the most important historic examination of the Great War years’ impact on this town ever done. Norton’s careful and thorough research is key to helping the average ‘Fernieite’ understand how events unfolded through those divisive six years.”

—John Kinnear, The Fernie Free Press

Fernie at War provides an important contribution to our provincial—and national—history…. [It] succeeds in offering a carefully researched, lovingly crafted regional history…”

BC History

"Fernie at War is a fine example of how labour and popular history can be presented in an accessible and highly readable manner. The book compels those interested in preserving BC's rich labour heritage to redouble their efforts in locating and preserving the union records that do not already exist in archives. They are the raw material of future histories such as this."

—Donna Sacuta, Executive Director of the BC Labour Heritage Centre, in Our Times

“Norton’s book not only sets a new standard for local histories, it causes us to reconsider the history of every community.”

—Dave Obee, Times Colonist

“Norton’s discussions on prohibition may be the best illustration of the risks entailed in an attempt to sever a community from its broader geographical context for individualized study … The quantity and quality of Norton’s research, and the conclusions drawn therefrom, have resulted in a valuable study. And this work raises an important question, as good works of history should. Norton captured the significance of daily life in a small but rather complex community.”

—Keith Regular, The Ormsby Review

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