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If the PBS documentary The War of 1812 piques your curiousity, you may want to learn more from the experts involved with the project.
Interviews were conducted with twenty-six leading authorities on the war — American, British, Canadian and First Nations historians — presenting important accounts and research.
All book titles (except The Corps of Colonial Marines: Black freedom fighters of the War of 1812) link to Chapters-Indigo.ca. When you visit Chapters-Indigo via our website links and make any purchase, Canada’s History receives a commission that supports our programs.
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Two tiny islands off Newfoundland and Labrador are all that remain of what was once a vast French empire in North America.
David O’Keefe discusses his new book One Day in August, which re-examines the tragic Dieppe Raid by Canadian forces during the Second World War.
A Canadian professor’s research into sensory deprivation and its connection to disturbing new methods of interrogation.
Michael O'Hagan's PhD research on German prisoner of war camps in Canada helps connect Winnipegger to POW family history.
Jerry Bannister, a historian at Dalhousie University in Halifax, laments the collective shift of focus away from traditional, older histories of Canada toward more modern events.