Synopses & Reviews
The Great War was a pivotal experience for twentieth-century Canada. Shoestring Soldiers is the first scholarly study since 1938 to focus exclusively on Canada's initial overseas experience from late 1914 to the end of 1915.
In this exciting new work, Andrew Iarocci challenges the dominant view that the 1st Canadian Division was poorly prepared for war in 1914, and less than effective during battles in 1915. He examines the first generations of men to serve overseas with the division: their training, leadership, morale, and combat operations from Salisbury Plain to the Ypres Salient, from the La Bass?e Canal to Ploegsteert Wood. Iarocci contends that setbacks and high losses in battle were not so much the products of poor training and weak leadership as they were of inadequate material resources on the Western Front.
Shoestring Soldiers incorporates a wealth of research material from official documents, soldiers' letters and diaries, and the battlefields themselves, surveyed extensively by the author. It marks an important contribution to the growing body of literature on Canada in the First World War.
Synopsis
'Shoestring Soldiers is a well-written account of the 1st Division at war, from its origins as the First Contingent to September 1915 when the Canadian Corps was formed with the addition of the 2nd Division. Andrew Iarocci strengthens our understanding of battlefield performance during the first year of the war, and provides an excellent assessment of the training in England, which is the single-best account of how the 1st Division prepared to fight. This book is a significant contribution to the field of Canadian military history, and one that historians will have to address when writing about Canada's fighting forces in the first eighteen months of the Great War.'-Tim Cook, author of At the Sharp End