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Fought in 1917 during the First World War, the Battle of Passchendaele became infamous for its relentless mud, staggering ...
Passchendaele opened on July 31, 1917 and finally ended on November 10. By that time, the five Australian divisions had withdrawn from the line, with 38,000 casualties, including 12,000 dead.
New exhibit at the Atwater Library in Montreal traces Passchendaele's fall from grace among Canada's First World War battle honours.
A century since the city became a muddy battlefield, Britons flock to Ypres to remember Passchendaele.
The remarkable bravery of the nurses who tended to wounded soldiers as bombs rained down on them during the Battle of Passchendaele has been highlighted in a new book. Nurses of Passchendaele uses ...
But in November 1917, as the Canadians fought in Passchendaele along the Western Front — also known as the Third Battle of Ypres — these lists had become nightmarish.
A SCULPTURE commemorating the deadly battle of Passchendaele, where thousands of Aussie soldiers died, has been unveiled in London, but it’ll completely dissolve by the end of the week. Made ...
Though the Canadians went on to liberate Passchendaele on November 6, when they got there they found the dead bodies of Lancastrians from the 66th Division who had fought their way through, in ...
When Marilyn McInnes used to sit on her beloved grandfather’s knee, she never noticed anything remarkable about his face.
War, as they say, never changes - as the horror slowly developing around the Ukrainian city of Bakhmut proves when compared to the Battle of Passchendaele more than 100 years ago.
The multihyphenate Paul Gross gets lot of credits on his new film, Passchendaele: director, writer, star and composer, to which he could add: Seeker of the elusive grail of Canadian popular taste ...