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Arthur Currie

General Sir Arthur William Currie, GCMG, KCB (5 December 1875 – 30 November 1933) was a senior officer of the Canadian Army who fought during World War I. He had the unique distinction of starting his military career on the very bottom rung as a pre-war militia gunner before rising through the ranks to become the first Canadian commander of the Canadian Corps. Currie's success was based on his ability to rapidly adapt brigade tactics to the exigencies of trench warfare, using set piece operations and bite-and-hold tactics. He is generally considered to be among the most capable commanders of the Western Front, and one of the finest commanders in Canadian military history.


Sir Arthur Currie

Currie in 1917
Nickname(s)"Guts and Gaiters"
Born(1875-12-05)5 December 1875
Napperton, Ontario
Died30 November 1933(1933-11-30) (aged 57)
Montreal, Quebec
Buried
Mount Royal Cemetery, Montreal, Quebec
AllegianceCanada
Service/branchCanadian Militia
Canadian Expeditionary Force
Years of service1897–1920
RankGeneral
Commands heldInspector General of the Armed Forces (1919–1920)
Canadian Corps (1917–19)
1st Canadian Division (1915–17)
2nd Canadian Brigade (1914–1915)
Battles/warsWorld War I
AwardsKnight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George
Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath
Mentioned in Despatches (9)
Chevalier of the Legion of Honour (France)
Croix de guerre (France)
Knight of the Order of the Crown (Belgium)
Croix de guerre (Belgium)
Distinguished Service Medal (United States)
Other workEstablished Khaki University, President & Vice-Chancellor of McGill University

Currie began his military career in 1897 as a part-time soldier in the Canadian militia while making his living as a teacher and later as an insurance salesman and real estate speculator. Currie rose quickly through the ranks: commissioned as an officer in 1900, promoted to captain in 1901, then major in 1906 and became an artillery regimental commander in 1909. In 1913 Currie accepted the command of the newly created 50th Regiment Gordon Highlanders of Canada. Finding himself in debt following a real estate crash in Victoria, Currie embezzled ten thousand dollars earmarked for regimental uniforms into his personal accounts to pay off his debts. When the First World War broke out Canadian Minister of Militia Sam Hughes appointed Currie as commander of the 2nd Canadian Brigade. Following the Second Battle of Ypres Currie was promoted to major-general and commander of the 1st Canadian Division. Following the Battle of Vimy Ridge, Canadian Corps commander Julian Byng was promoted to general and Currie, the 1st Canadian Division commander, was promoted to lieutenant-general and assumed command of the Canadian Corps. Upon returning to Canada, Currie was promoted to general and was made Inspector General of the Canadian Army. Although he had only a high school diploma, Currie became the principal and vice-chancellor of McGill University in 1920, holding this post until his death in 1933.

Early life edit

 
The farm homestead of Arthur Currie (1919)

Arthur Currie was born on 5 December 1875 to William Garner Curry and Jane Patterson on their farm near the hamlet of Napperton, Ontario, just west of Strathroy.[1][2] He was the third in a family of eight children and grew up on the homestead of his paternal grandparents, John Corrigan and Jane Garner.[3] Currie's grandparents had emigrated from Ireland in 1838 to escape religious strife, and upon their arrival in Canada they had converted from Catholicism and Anglicanism to Methodism, changing the family name from Corrigan to Curry.[3] Arthur Currie modified the spelling of his surname from Curry to Currie in 1897.[3]

Currie was educated in local common schools and at the Strathroy District Collegiate Institute, where he proved to be a good student especially interested in literature. He had plans to pursue a professional career in law or medicine; however, the death of his father when Arthur was fifteen made this impossible due to his limited financial means.[3] Currie instead pursued teacher training, but he was unable to secure a job and returned to high school to complete an honours certificate in order to gain university entrance.[3] In May 1894, mere months before his final exams, Currie quarrelled with one of his teachers, and subsequently left high school to seek his fortune in British Columbia,[3] hoping to take advantage of the financial boom resulting from the construction of the transcontinental railway.[3] However, Currie found no prospects outside of teaching, so he qualified as a teacher in British Columbia and took a teaching position on the Saanich Peninsula north of Victoria, British Columbia.[3] In 1896 Currie moved to Victoria, taking a position at Boy's Central School and later Victoria High School.[1][3][4]

Early military career edit

On 6 May 1897 Currie joined the Canadian Militia as a part-time gunner for the 5th (British Columbia) Field Artillery Regiment. Currie achieved the rank of corporal in 1900 and was soon after offered an officer's commission, which would give him a much higher status in the social circles of Victoria.[2] A military commission was however an expensive proposition. Officers were expected to provide their own set of tailored uniforms and to donate their pay to the officer's mess.[5] Currie was discouraged by his financial prospects as a teacher;[3] and consequently, in February 1900, he left teaching and took a position as an insurance salesman with Matson & Coles, a local insurance firm.[6][3][7] On 14 August 1901 Currie married Lucy Chaworth-Musters, who had been raised by Currie's aunt and uncle in British Columbia after being abandoned by her British military officer father following the death of her mother in childbirth.[8][9]

 
Officers of the 5th Regiment at Macaulay Point in 1909. Currie is seated on the bench, third from left.

Currie took on his role as militia officer seriously.[10] He attended every available course offered by the British Army Contingent at Work Point Barracks in Esquimalt, often ordered military text books from London and was found on the shooting range every Saturday.[8][4] He was a keen marksman and was elected president of the British Columbia Rifle Association in 1905.[9] Currie was promoted to captain in November 1901, and then to major in 1906.[8][10] By September 1909, he had risen to the rank of lieutenant-colonel, commanding the 5th Regiment.[11] Apart from his interest in the militia, Currie was also an active Freemason, rising to the position of deputy grandmaster of the Victoria District of Freemasonry in 1907. He also served two years as president of the Young Men's Liberal Association of Victoria, and several times was suggested as a candidate for the provincial legislature.[8][12]

In addition to his military career, Currie continued to be active in business. He was appointed head of the Matson Insurance Firm in 1904 when Sam Matson, who had many business interests beyond his insurance firm, decided to concentrate his energy on publishing the Daily Colonist.[4][7] With a land speculation boom in Victoria in full swing, Currie and a Victoria businessman, R. A. Power, formed Currie & Power in 1908. Currie invested heavily in the real estate market.[13] The firm was a success until 1912 when property prices began to decline.[8] In 1913 Currie's financial situation deteriorated rapidly as the value of his real estate holdings decreased and he became financially over-extended.[7] In August, Currie's five-year term as commander of the 5th Regiment came to a close and he faced a forced retirement from the Canadian Militia at the age of 38.[5][14] At this critical juncture, he was approached to take command of a new militia regiment.

 
Lieutenant-Colonel Arthur Currie in Highland dress of the 50th Regiment

Following the Canadian federal election of 1911, Minister of Militia and Defence Sam Hughes had ordered a rapid expansion of the national force.[5] The large number of Scottish citizens of Victoria appealed for the formation of a Highland regiment in Victoria to augment the 88th Regiment Victoria Fusiliers, which had been formed in 1912. On 15 August 1913 the government authorized the formation of the 50th Regiment Gordon Highlanders of Canada.[5] The originally designated commanding officer for the new regiment failed to qualify for the post and Currie was approached as a logical replacement.[15] Currie initially turned down the idea, likely recognizing that the cost of the new Highland uniforms and mess bills would only add to his financial problems.[16] His subordinate and friend, Major Garnet Hughes, Sam Hughes' son, was responsible for persuading Currie to reconsider and accept the position.[17] Currie attended the Militia Staff Course conducted by Major Louis Lipsett, future commander of the 3rd Canadian Division, and qualified in March 1914.[18]

Currie was desperate to avoid personal bankruptcy, which would have resulted in a loss in social standing and forced him to resign his commission.[19] On 31 July 1914, Currie received CA$10,833.34 (equivalent to $255,667 in 2021) from the Militia Department with which to purchase new uniforms.[19] Instead of using the funds to pay contractor Moore, Taggart and Co for the regimental uniforms, Currie embezzled the funds to pay off his personal debts.[19] The 50th Regiment's honorary colonel, William Coy, had promised to underwrite the regiment with $35,000, and Currie planned to use the funds to pay the uniform contractor.[20][21] Unfortunately for Currie, Coy did not follow through with his financial commitment to the regiment, leaving Currie's accounting sleight-of-hand potentially exposed.[22]

When World War I broke out and Canada found itself at war on 4 August 1914, Currie was offered command of Military District No. 11 – British Columbia.[17] When he turned this down, he was then offered command of the 2nd Infantry Brigade of the Canadian Expeditionary Force's 1st Canadian Division. Currie considered turning down this offer as well so he could attempt to solve his financial woes.[17] He once again changed his mind at the urging of Garnet Hughes. Currie's promotion to brigadier-general was confirmed on 29 September 1914,[23] and he took command of the 2nd Brigade at the Valcartier Camp in Quebec. When the 50th Regiment's acting commanding officer, Major Cecil Roberts, wrote to him inquiring as to the status of the uniform grant, Currie ignored the correspondence and sailed overseas with his brigade in October 1914.[19]

World War I edit

Brigade commander edit

The Canadian 1st Division spent the winter of 1914–15 training in England, and were sent to France in February 1915. After a period of indoctrination in the realities of trench warfare, they took control of a section of trench in the Ypres Salient on 17 April 1915. Only five days later, the Germans used poison gas for the first time on the Western Front.[24] French colonial troops on the Canadians' left flank broke, leaving a 7-kilometre (4.3 mi) long hole in the Allied line.[25] In the chaos that followed, Currie proved his worth as a leader by assessing the situation, and coolly issuing commands from his brigade headquarters even as it was gassed and then destroyed by fire. Currie cobbled together a fluid defence and counterattacked. At one point, he personally went back to the rear to try to convince two regiments of British reinforcements to move forward.[26] After several days of fierce fighting, Allied counterattacks re-established a stable defensive line, denying the Germans a breakthrough.

Currie's leadership during the Second Battle of Ypres was a source of dispute by British historian James Edward Edmonds, who argued that Currie and his 2nd Canadian Brigade performed poorly at Ypres. Currie, supported by the Canadian official historian Colonel Archer Fortescue Duguid, waged a vigorous defense, charging that Edmonds was seeking to diminish the Canadian contribution to the Second Battle of Ypres.[27] Edmonds wrongly accused Currie of ordering his men to retreat on 24 April 1915 because of the chaos caused by the chlorine gas and fierce attacks of the German infantry; Currie and Duguid said it was Brigadier-General Richard Turner, commanding the 3rd Canadian Brigade on Currie's left, who had ordered a retreat without orders, leaving Currie with an exposed left flank.[28] Canadian historian Timothy Travers also argued that Edmonds was very unfair to Currie since the 1st Canadian Division occupied a position that would have been difficult to defend even under normal conditions, without considering the effects of the first mass use of poison gas and the complete withdrawal of French forces on their left flank.[29] Although acknowledging that Currie had made mistakes, Travers maintained that unlike the Algerians who fled, Currie's 2nd Brigade held its ground at Ypres, consequently losing 46% of its total strength either killed or wounded over two days of fighting.[29]

Following the battle, Currie was promoted to major-general, and given command of the entire First Canadian Division. He was also invested as a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) and as Commander of the Legion d'Honneur.

Division commander edit

Although the Canadians did not take part in the infamous Anglo-French offensive on the Somme on 1 July 1916, they did eventually move into the line in the fall to aid the slow crawl forward. Currie proved himself to be the master of the set-piece assault, designed to take limited objectives and then hold on in the face of inevitable German counterattacks. It was at this time that Currie lost favour with former friends Sam and Garnet Hughes. Sam Hughes wanted Garnet promoted to command of a division, but Currie, having seen Garnet in action at the Second Battle of Ypres, believed Garnet to be an incompetent officer, and refused. Currie's reputation was on the rise, and Hughes did not have the necessary leverage to force Currie to comply.

By late 1916, the four Canadian divisions were in France, gathered together as the Canadian Corps under the command of Sir Julian Byng. The British High Command informed Byng that the Canadians would have a central role in the upcoming Battle of Arras by attacking Vimy Ridge, 8 km (5.0 mi) northeast of Arras on the western edge of the Douai Plains.[30] Byng ordered Currie to study the Battle of the Somme and advise what lessons could be taken and applied. Currie was also among a set of officers who attended a series of lectures hosted by the French Army regarding their experiences during the Battle of Verdun.[30] Currie not only questioned senior French officers but also sought out junior officers and asked the same questions, carefully noting the discrepancies between the senior officers' beliefs and the junior officers' experiences.[31] On 20 January 1917 Currie began a series of well received lectures to Corps and divisional headquarters based on his research.[32] In response to the Verdun visit, organizational changes were made to the platoon structure within the infantry battalions that would later become corps-wide changes.[33] In his report, Currie evaluated not only the French tactics but also what the Canadians had done wrong in the fighting around Pozières in 1916.[33] Currie summarized the primary factors behind successful French offensive operations as: careful staff work, thorough artillery preparation and support, the element of surprise, and a high state of training in the infantry units detailed for the assault.[33]

Currie, in command of the 1st Canadian Division, was responsible for the broad southern sector of the Canadian Corps advance and expected to make the greatest advance in terms of distance. The attack was to begin at 5:30 am on Easter Monday, 9 April 1917. By the end of the first day, the 1st Canadian Division had captured all of its first line objectives and the left half of its second line.[34] The next morning by 9:30 am, fresh troops had leap-frogged existing battalions to advance to the third objective line.[35] To permit the troops time to consolidate the third line, the advance halted and the barrage remained stationary for ninety minutes while machine guns were brought forward.[36] Shortly before 1:00 pm, the advance recommenced and, by 2:00 pm, the 1st Canadian Division secured their final objective.[37]

Canadian Corps commander edit

 
King George V conferring the honour of knighthood on Currie on 12 July 1917

When Byng was promoted to general in command of the British Third Army in June 1917, Currie was raised to the temporary rank of lieutenant-general on 9 June,[38] and given command of the entire Canadian Corps. Currie was knighted by King George V and appointed Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George (KCMG) in the King's Birthday Honours of 4 June 1917.[39] As he was taking command of the Corps, word reached Currie that the Canadian cabinet had been informed of his embezzlement. To avoid news of the scandal from breaking, Currie borrowed money from two wealthy subordinates, David Watson and Victor Odlum, to finally pay back the money he had taken from the 50th Regiment.[40]

 
Lieutenant-General Sir Henry Horne, GOC British First Army, and Lieutenant-General Sir Arthur Currie, GOC Canadian Corps, at the First Army Commemoration Service of the beginning of the fourth year of the First World War, Ranchicourt, France, 5 August 1917. French officers are also present.

The British First Army commander Lieutenant-General Henry Horne ordered the Canadian Corps to relieve I Corps opposite the city of Lens on 10 July 1917, and directed Currie to develop a plan for capturing the city by the end of July 1917.[41] The operation was intended to engage as many German formations as possible and to prevent them from reinforcing the Ypres sector during the Third Battle of Ypres.[42] After examining the area, Currie instead proposed to take the high ground outside the city, marked on allied maps as Hill 70,[43] hold the feature in the expectation of a German counterattack, and inflict casualties by preparing a zone of concentrated artillery and machine gun fire.[44] Currie's plan was implemented successfully, and by the end of the battle, some 20,000 Germans had been killed or wounded at the cost of 9,000 Canadians.[44] The operation was effective in preventing German formations from transferring local men and equipment to Ypres, and Haig believed that the Battle of Hill 70 was one of the finest minor operations of the war.[44]

The Canadian Corps was then transferred from Lens to Ypres to take part in the Battle of Passchendaele. Currie was tasked with continuing the advance started by the now exhausted II Anzac Corps in order to ultimately capture Passchendaele village and gain favourable observation positions and drier winter positions. Currie submitted his provisional operational plan on 16 October and presented a plan with extensive resources made available in reserve. He estimated the attack would result in 16,000 casualties.[45] Currie's preparations included reconnaissance, road construction and a massing of artillery and heavy machine guns.[46] Rather than one mass assault, Currie designed a series of well-prepared, sharp attacks that allowed the Corps to take an objective and then hold it against the inevitable German counterattacks. By 30 October, the Canadians, aided by two British divisions, gained the outskirts of the village in a driving rainstorm, and then held on for five days against intense shelling and counter-attacks, often standing waist deep in mud as they fought. The Canadians' victory came at the cost of 15,654 casualties, including 4,028 killed. Currie's grim casualty prediction had been accurate.[47]

End of the war edit

By early 1918 the Canadian Corps was in a state of uncertainty. The Canadian government wanted to expand the Canadian Corps by forming a 5th Division but the BEF wanted the Canadian Corps reorganized to mirror British divisions. British command also intended to integrate American battalions into the depleted corps, which Currie predicted would be a disaster and would destroy the homogeneous structure of the corps.[48] Currie was opposed to all those measures since he did not view them as being in the best interests of the corps.[49] Currie, with the aid of the Minister of Overseas Military Forces, prevailed against the structural changes. The Canadian Corps retained its original Canadian organizational structure and fought as a homogeneous formation for the entire Hundred Days Offensive.[50]

On 21 March 1918 the Germans launched a major Spring Offensive hoping to force an armistice on their terms, but by the summer their forward momentum had been contained and the Allies prepared to counterattack. In August 1918, when Currie was ordered to move the corps 70 miles (110 km) south to Amiens, the Canadians took pains to camouflage their move. This included sending a radio unit and two battalions to Ypres as a diversion.[51] With no preliminary artillery bombardment at Amiens to warn the Germans, the attack on 8 August was a success. The Canadians were withdrawn from the line, and moved to the Somme, where they participated in the attack on the Hindenburg Line at the Drocourt–Quéant Line on 2 September. The assault resulted in the Germans being overrun along a 7,000-yard (6,400 m) front.[52][failed verification] Historian Denis Winter called the seizure of the Drocourt–Quéant line by the Canadian Corps the "greatest single achievement" of the British Expeditionary Force during the entire war, and praised Currie for his ability to bring an "unprecedented" concentration of artillery and machine gun fire together with flexible infantry sections that were adjusted for the situation.[53] The German Seventeenth Army then retreated behind the flooded Canal du Nord. Currie took three weeks to prepare perhaps his most audacious plan: he suggested the entire corps cross the drier section of the canal on a front of only 2,700 yards (2,500 m).[54] On 27 September the entire corps moved across the canal as planned, and then through the German lines in a series of planned zig-zag manoeuvres designed to confuse the Germans. Exhausted and demoralized, the German army staged a controlled retreat over the next five weeks. On 10 November, in what was to be his most controversial decision, Currie, under orders to continue to advance, ordered elements of the corps to liberate Mons. On the morning of 11 November, as Currie received orders confirming there would be a general armistice at 11:00 am, the capture of Mons was completed.

In December 1918, Currie established the Canadian War Narrative Section to maintain a level of control as to how the Canadian contribution to the Hundred Days Offensive would be documented in print and presented to the public.[55] Tim Cook argues that the Canadian War Narrative Section was an important step in not only recording and presenting the achievements of the Canadian Corps but also in restoring Currie's damaged reputation, which had been battered by Sam Hughes and his supporters in Parliament.[55] Hughes frequently referred to Currie as a butcher.

Post-war edit

Currie and family had moved to England in 1915. They returned to Canada following the war, arriving in Halifax on 17 August 1919.[56] No band or crowd received the ship when it docked and when Currie arrived at the Victoria Memorial Building to greet the 13th Canadian Parliament he received a lukewarm reception.[56][57] Currie was appointed Inspector General of the Armed Forces and was then promoted to full general on 10 December, the highest ranking position in the Canadian forces. Currie intended to use the position to reform the military. However, in the post-war period, military funding was cut and Currie encountered significant opposition from the military bureaucracy to organizational changes.[58] Deeply unhappy, Currie retired from the military, and in May 1920 accepted the position of principal and vice-chancellor of McGill University in Montreal.[59]

McGill University edit

 
Currie as the McGill University Principal in 1930

Currie had only a high school diploma, but on the recommendation of McGill's acting principal, Frank Dawson Adams, Currie was selected as principal and vice-chancellor of McGill University on the basis of his "exceptional powers of organization and administration" and his "capacity for inspiration and leadership" rather than academic prowess.[60] Within months of Currie's appointment, he led a fund-raising campaign to revive the university, travelling from coast to coast in a personal appeal for support;[61] the fundraising campaign raised CA$6.5 million, more than the original goal of CA$5 million.[62] Currie made a name for himself as a premier university administrator. From 1925 to 1927 he served as president of the National Conference of Canadian Universities and was elected as a trustee of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching in 1927.[63] Currie was also instrumental in saving the School for Graduate Nurses at Royal Victoria College from closure in the early 1930s.[64] During Currie's time as McGill's Principal the university established the Faculty of Music, the School for Graduate Nurses, and the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research, and doubled its income despite the difficulties brought on by the Great Depression.[65][66] Currie was also President of the Last Post Fund from 1924 to 1932.[67]

Libel suit edit

In June 1927, the city of Mons erected a plaque commemorating its liberation by the Canadian Corps nine years earlier. But, when this event was reported in Canadian newspapers, Currie's enemies took the opportunity to again question the necessity of the final day of fighting. A front-page editorial published on 13 June 1927 by the Hughes-friendly Port Hope Evening Guide argued that Currie was either negligent or deliberate in wasting the lives of soldiers under his command in taking Mons on the final day of the war.[68][69][70] The newspaper had only a small local circulation, and Currie's friends advised him against pursuing the matter.[70] However, Currie was unwilling to let the matter go,[70] and sued the newspaper for libel, seeking $50,000 ($778,000 today) in damages.[71] The trial in April 1928 was front-page news across Canada.[72] On the stand, Currie testified that he had been under orders from Allied Supreme Commander Ferdinand Foch to pursue German forces; to do otherwise would have been treason.[73] Many of Currie's senior officers testified that Currie had urged them to advance with caution, avoiding unnecessary casualties.[74] At the end of the trial, the jury returned a verdict after four hours, finding the newspaper guilty of libel but awarding Currie only $500 ($7,800 today) in damages, plus costs.[75][76]

Although Currie was awarded only a small portion of the value sought, newspapers across Canada referred to the result as a victory for him.[72] The trial helped to restore Currie's reputation; however, the stress took a toll on his health.[68] Currie was subsequently elected Dominion president of the Canadian Legion of the British Empire Service League in 1928.[77] However, he suffered a stroke the following year and his ill health obliged him to resign, whereupon he was bestowed with the honorary title of Grand President.[77][78]

Death edit

 
Funeral procession of Arthur Currie in Montreal, Quebec

Currie suffered another stroke on 5 November 1933 and died on 30 November at the age of 57 at Royal Victoria Hospital from bronchial complications brought on by pneumonia.[79] His civilian and military funeral on 5 December was held in Montreal and was the largest to that point in Canadian history. The Times wrote of his funeral: "It was, by common consent, the most impressive funeral ever seen at Montreal" and Robert Borden believed the ceremony "was perhaps more elaborate than at any state or military funeral in the history of Canada".[80] Approximately 150,000 people lined the streets to watch the procession and the Canadian Radio Broadcasting Commission broadcast the funeral over radio.[81] Those attending the funeral included Lord Bessborough, at the time the Governor General of Canada, important Canadian politicians, foreign diplomats and representatives of McGill University.[82] No less than 170 organizations sent floral tributes.[83][84] The service was conducted by the Bishop of Montreal at Christ Church Cathedral and was followed by a graveside service presided over by Archdeacon (Hon. Colonel) John Almond, a wartime Director of the Canadian Chaplain Service for the Canadian Expeditionary Force.[80][85] Eight general officers acted as pallbearers.[82] The funeral procession received a 17-gun salute.[86] In London a memorial service was conducted in Westminster Abbey on the same day as the funeral in Montreal, which was filled to capacity.[79] Memorial services were held elsewhere in Canada also. On 3 December, 7,000 persons attended a memorial service for Currie at Toronto's Arena Gardens.[87] Currie was initially interred in a family plot at Mount Royal Cemetery in Montreal. However, three years after his death, Currie's remains were moved to a more prominent site surmounted by a cross of sacrifice.

Currie was survived by his wife, Lucy, and a son and daughter. Lucy was left in some financial difficulty following her husband's death when McGill decided it could not afford to continue paying her a portion of his salary. In 1935 the Canadian government finally recognized his service to Canada by granting $50,000 to his estate.

Honours and tribute edit

 
Portrait of Currie by Irish war artist William Orpen, 1919

Currie was named a Companion of the Order of the Bath after the Second Battle of Ypres in 1915 and promoted Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath in the 1918 New Year Honours.[88] He was made a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George in the 1919 New Year Honours, and was Mentioned in Despatches nine times over the course of the war.[89] Currie also received a number of foreign awards, including the French Légion d'honneur and Croix de guerre (with Palm),[90] the Belgian Croix de guerre and Order of the Crown,[91] and the US Distinguished Service Medal. Currie's contributions both to the war effort as well as post-war education was recognized in 19 honorary degrees.

Many tributes have been made to Currie. In 1919 General Currie Elementary School was built in Richmond, British Columbia.[92] A Sir Arthur Currie Elementary School under the Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal was also built.[93] Mount Currie (2810m) located at the Spray River headwaters in Banff National Park is named after Currie.[94] The Currie Barracks in Calgary opened in 1933 was named in his honour (later renamed to CFB Calgary).[95] In 1934, Currie was designated as a Canadian Person of National Historic Significance.[96] The Currie Building and Currie Hall at the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston, Ontario were subsequently named in his honour. In Victoria the street where Currie lived was renamed Arthur Currie Lane and an on-campus housing building at University of Victoria is named in his honour.[97] In Strathroy, Ontario the local branch of the Royal Canadian Legion bears his name, and a statue has been raised to him.[98] Robert A. Heinlein, in his science fiction novel Starship Troopers, named one of the basic training facilities "Camp Arthur Currie".[99] In 2006 Canada honoured Currie as one of fourteen Canadians in the Valiants Memorial, and is one of the five people commemorated with a life-sized statue.[100] and the Sir Arthur Currie Memorial Gymnasium at McGill University in Montreal.

 
Currie's funeral monument in Mount Royal Cemetery

Legacy edit

Canadian historians, including Pierre Berton and Jack Granatstein, have described Currie as Canada's greatest military commander. Although physically a large man, standing over six feet tall, Currie did not cut a heroic military figure. Nor was he a charismatic speaker. Described as aloof by his troops, who called him "Guts and Gaiters", he nevertheless inspired them. He was a brilliant tactician who used his skills to reduce casualties and is credited with accelerating the end of the war. According to historian Jack Hyatt, "His slogan was, 'Pay the price of victory in shells – not lives,' and if he did anything heroic it was that."[101] Currie's leadership of the Canadian Corps was described in an article in Maclean's: "No flashing genius, but a capable administrator, cool headed and even tempered and sound of judgment. He has surrounded himself with a capable staff whose counsel he shares and whose advice he takes. He is the last man in the world to stick to his own plan if a better one offers. So far as tactics go he is first among equals for such is the way his staff works."[102]

References edit

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  2. ^ a b . 1 December 1933. Archived from the original on 26 May 2009. Retrieved 15 September 2008.
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  5. ^ a b c d Brown & Morton 1979, p. 48.
  6. ^ Berton 1986, p. 104–105.
  7. ^ a b c Brown & Morton 1979, p. 47.
  8. ^ a b c d e Sharpe 2009, p. 17.
  9. ^ a b Bosher 2012, p. 222.
  10. ^ a b Urquhart 1950, p. 20.
  11. ^ Dancocks 1985, p. 19.
  12. ^ Urquhart 1950, p. 16.
  13. ^ Dancocks 1985, p. 18.
  14. ^ Humphries 2008, p. 16.
  15. ^ Hyatt 1987, p. 9.
  16. ^ Drysdale, D.M. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 October 2008. Retrieved 15 September 2008.
  17. ^ a b c Sharpe 2009, p. 18.
  18. ^ Dancocks 1985, p. 24.
  19. ^ a b c d Brown & Morton 1979, p. 51.
  20. ^ Dancocks 1985, p. 245.
  21. ^ Berton 1986, p. 106.
  22. ^ Brown & Morton 1979, pp. 48–49.
  23. ^ "No. 29086". The London Gazette. 2 March 1915. p. 2096.
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 30 October 2009. Retrieved 31 October 2009.
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  27. ^ Travers 1989, p. 303.
  28. ^ Travers 1989, pp. 313–314.
  29. ^ a b Travers 1989, p. 318.
  30. ^ a b Brennan 2007, p. 94.
  31. ^ Berton 1986, pp. 104–105
  32. ^ Nicholson 1962, p. 250.
  33. ^ a b c Pugsley 2006, p. 13.
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  35. ^ Campbell 2007, p. 179.
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  37. ^ Campbell 2007, p. 182.
  38. ^ "No. 30178". The London Gazette (Supplement). 10 July 1917. p. 6956.
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  41. ^ Granatstein 2004, pp. 119–120.
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  43. ^ Nicholson 1962, p. 285.
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  45. ^ Veterans Affairs Canada. "The Third Battle of Ypres and Passchendaele". Retrieved 16 September 2008.
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  47. ^ Neillands 1998, p. 401.
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  63. ^ Annual Report – Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, 1928, p. 5
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  65. ^ Caya, Marcel (1985), Guide to Archival Resources at McGill University: The archival records of McGill University, McGill University, p. 9
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  67. ^ (PDF), THE BUGLER: A Quarterly Newsletter from the Last Post Fund, vol. 5, no. 4, Last Post Fund, October 2014, archived from the original (PDF) on 7 November 2017, retrieved 6 November 2017
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Bibliography edit

  • Berton, Pierre (1986). Vimy. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 0771013396.
  • Bosher, J. F. (2012). Imperial Vancouver Island : who was who, 1850–1950. Woodstock, Oxfordshire: J.F. Bosher in conjunction with Writersworld. ISBN 978-0957375307.
  • Bishop, William Arthur (1997). Salute!: Canada's Great Military Leaders from Brock to Dextraze. Toronto: McGraw-Hill Ryerson. ISBN 978-0075600107.
  • Brennan, Patrick (2007), "Julian Byng and Leadership in the Canadian Corps", in Hayes, Geoffrey; Iarocci, Andrew; Bechthold, Mike (eds.), Vimy Ridge: A Canadian Reassessment, Waterloo: Wilfrid Laurier University Press, pp. 87–104, ISBN 978-0889205086
  • Brown, R Craig; Morton, Desmond (March 1979). "The Embarrassing Apotheosis of a 'Great Canadian': Sir Arthur Currie's Personal Crisis in 1917". Canadian Historical Review. 60 (1): 41–63. doi:10.3138/chr-060-01-03.
  • Campbell, David (2007), "The 2nd Canadian Division: A 'Most Spectacular Battle'", in Hayes, Geoffrey; Iarocci, Andrew; Bechthold, Mike (eds.), Vimy Ridge: A Canadian Reassessment, Waterloo: Wilfrid Laurier University Press, pp. 171–192, ISBN 978-0889205086
  • Cassar, George (2010). Hell in Flanders Fields : Canadians at the second battle of Ypres. Toronto: Dundurn Press. ISBN 978-1554887286.
  • Cook, Tim (December 2004). "The Madman and the Butcher: Sir Sam Hughes, Sir Arthur Currie, and Their War of Reputations". The Canadian Historical Review. 85 (4): 693–719. doi:10.1353/can.2005.0013. S2CID 159889647.
  • Cook, Tim (2006). Clio's warriors : Canadian historians and the writing of the world wars. Vancouver: UBC Press. ISBN 0774812575.
  • Crerar, Duff (2014). Padres in No Man's Land: Canadian Chaplains and the Great War (2nd ed.). Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-1322060460.
  • Dancocks, Daniel (1985). Sir Arthur Currie : a biography. Toronto: Methuen. ISBN 0458995606.
  • Davidson, Melissa (2016). "Acts of Remembrance: Canadian Great War Memory and the Public Funerals of Sir Arthur Currie and Canon F.G. Scott". Canadian Studies. 80 (80). Association française des études canadiennes: 109–127. doi:10.4000/eccs.688.
  • Farr, Don (2007), The Silent General: A Biography of Haig's Trusted Great War Comrade-in-Arms, Solihull: Helion & Company Limited, ISBN 978-1874622994
  • Fedunkiw, Marianne (2005). Rockefeller Foundation funding and medical education in Toronto, Montreal and Halifax. Montreal Que: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 0773528970.
  • Granatstein, Jack Lawrence (2004). Canada's Army: Waging War and Keeping the Peace. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0802086969.
  • Humphries, Mark, ed. (2008). The selected papers of Sir Arthur Currie : diaries, letters and report to the Ministry, 1917–1933. Waterloo, ON: LCMSDS Press of Wilfrid Laurier University. ISBN 978-0978344122.
  • Hyatt, A. M. J. (1987). General Sir Arthur Currie : a military biography. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0802026036.
  • Neillands, Robin (1998). The Great War Generals on the Western Front. London: Robinson. p. 401. ISBN 1841190632.
  • Morton, Desmond (1982). A peculiar kind of politics : Canada's Overseas Ministry in the First World War. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0802055866.
  • Morton, Desmond (2004). Fight or pay : soldiers' families in the Great War. Vancouver, B.C: UBC Press. ISBN 978-0774811088.
  • Nicholson, Gerald W. L. (1962), (PDF), Official History of the Canadian Army in the First World War, Ottawa: Queen's Printer and Controller of Stationery, OCLC 59609928, archived from the original (PDF) on 26 August 2011, retrieved 15 July 2015
  • Pugsley, Christopher (Winter 2006). "Learning from the Canadian Corps on the Western Front". Canadian Military History. 15 (2): 5–32.
  • Sharpe, Robert (2009). The last day, the last hour : the Currie libel trial. Toronto: Published for the Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History by University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0802096197.
  • Travers, Timothy (April 1989). "Allies in Conflict: The British and Canadian Official Historians and the Real Story of Second Ypres". Journal of Contemporary History. 24 (2): 301–325. doi:10.1177/002200948902400206. S2CID 159578012.
  • Urquhart, Hugh M. (1950). Arthur Currie: The biography of a great Canadian. J.M. Dent. ASIN B0007ITPX8.
  • Vance, Jonathan (1997). Death so noble : memory, meaning, and the First World War. Vancouver B.C: UBC Press. ISBN 0774806001.
  • Winter, Denis (1991). Haig's command : a reassessment. Londona and New York: Viking. ISBN 978-0670802258.

External links edit

Military offices
New creation GOC 2nd Canadian Brigade
1914–1915
Succeeded by
Preceded by GOC 1st Canadian Division
1915–1917
Succeeded by
Preceded by GOC Canadian Corps
1917–1919
Corps disbanded
Academic offices
Preceded by Principal and Vice Chancellor of McGill University
1920–1933
Succeeded by
Non-profit organization positions
Preceded by President of the Royal Canadian Legion
1928–1929
Succeeded by

arthur, currie, comics, character, known, arthur, curry, aquaman, general, currie, redirects, here, other, uses, general, currie, disambiguation, general, arthur, william, currie, gcmg, december, 1875, november, 1933, senior, officer, canadian, army, fought, d. For the DC Comics character known as Arthur Curry see Aquaman General Currie redirects here For other uses see General Currie disambiguation General Sir Arthur William Currie GCMG KCB 5 December 1875 30 November 1933 was a senior officer of the Canadian Army who fought during World War I He had the unique distinction of starting his military career on the very bottom rung as a pre war militia gunner before rising through the ranks to become the first Canadian commander of the Canadian Corps Currie s success was based on his ability to rapidly adapt brigade tactics to the exigencies of trench warfare using set piece operations and bite and hold tactics He is generally considered to be among the most capable commanders of the Western Front and one of the finest commanders in Canadian military history GeneralSir Arthur CurrieGCMG KCBCurrie in 1917Nickname s Guts and Gaiters Born 1875 12 05 5 December 1875Napperton OntarioDied30 November 1933 1933 11 30 aged 57 Montreal QuebecBuriedMount Royal Cemetery Montreal QuebecAllegianceCanadaService wbr branchCanadian MilitiaCanadian Expeditionary ForceYears of service1897 1920RankGeneralCommands heldInspector General of the Armed Forces 1919 1920 Canadian Corps 1917 19 1st Canadian Division 1915 17 2nd Canadian Brigade 1914 1915 Battles warsWorld War IAwardsKnight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St GeorgeKnight Commander of the Order of the BathMentioned in Despatches 9 Chevalier of the Legion of Honour France Croix de guerre France Knight of the Order of the Crown Belgium Croix de guerre Belgium Distinguished Service Medal United States Other workEstablished Khaki University President amp Vice Chancellor of McGill University Currie began his military career in 1897 as a part time soldier in the Canadian militia while making his living as a teacher and later as an insurance salesman and real estate speculator Currie rose quickly through the ranks commissioned as an officer in 1900 promoted to captain in 1901 then major in 1906 and became an artillery regimental commander in 1909 In 1913 Currie accepted the command of the newly created 50th Regiment Gordon Highlanders of Canada Finding himself in debt following a real estate crash in Victoria Currie embezzled ten thousand dollars earmarked for regimental uniforms into his personal accounts to pay off his debts When the First World War broke out Canadian Minister of Militia Sam Hughes appointed Currie as commander of the 2nd Canadian Brigade Following the Second Battle of Ypres Currie was promoted to major general and commander of the 1st Canadian Division Following the Battle of Vimy Ridge Canadian Corps commander Julian Byng was promoted to general and Currie the 1st Canadian Division commander was promoted to lieutenant general and assumed command of the Canadian Corps Upon returning to Canada Currie was promoted to general and was made Inspector General of the Canadian Army Although he had only a high school diploma Currie became the principal and vice chancellor of McGill University in 1920 holding this post until his death in 1933 Contents 1 Early life 2 Early military career 3 World War I 3 1 Brigade commander 3 2 Division commander 3 3 Canadian Corps commander 3 4 End of the war 4 Post war 4 1 McGill University 4 2 Libel suit 4 3 Death 5 Honours and tribute 6 Legacy 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksEarly life edit nbsp The farm homestead of Arthur Currie 1919 Arthur Currie was born on 5 December 1875 to William Garner Curry and Jane Patterson on their farm near the hamlet of Napperton Ontario just west of Strathroy 1 2 He was the third in a family of eight children and grew up on the homestead of his paternal grandparents John Corrigan and Jane Garner 3 Currie s grandparents had emigrated from Ireland in 1838 to escape religious strife and upon their arrival in Canada they had converted from Catholicism and Anglicanism to Methodism changing the family name from Corrigan to Curry 3 Arthur Currie modified the spelling of his surname from Curry to Currie in 1897 3 Currie was educated in local common schools and at the Strathroy District Collegiate Institute where he proved to be a good student especially interested in literature He had plans to pursue a professional career in law or medicine however the death of his father when Arthur was fifteen made this impossible due to his limited financial means 3 Currie instead pursued teacher training but he was unable to secure a job and returned to high school to complete an honours certificate in order to gain university entrance 3 In May 1894 mere months before his final exams Currie quarrelled with one of his teachers and subsequently left high school to seek his fortune in British Columbia 3 hoping to take advantage of the financial boom resulting from the construction of the transcontinental railway 3 However Currie found no prospects outside of teaching so he qualified as a teacher in British Columbia and took a teaching position on the Saanich Peninsula north of Victoria British Columbia 3 In 1896 Currie moved to Victoria taking a position at Boy s Central School and later Victoria High School 1 3 4 Early military career editOn 6 May 1897 Currie joined the Canadian Militia as a part time gunner for the 5th British Columbia Field Artillery Regiment Currie achieved the rank of corporal in 1900 and was soon after offered an officer s commission which would give him a much higher status in the social circles of Victoria 2 A military commission was however an expensive proposition Officers were expected to provide their own set of tailored uniforms and to donate their pay to the officer s mess 5 Currie was discouraged by his financial prospects as a teacher 3 and consequently in February 1900 he left teaching and took a position as an insurance salesman with Matson amp Coles a local insurance firm 6 3 7 On 14 August 1901 Currie married Lucy Chaworth Musters who had been raised by Currie s aunt and uncle in British Columbia after being abandoned by her British military officer father following the death of her mother in childbirth 8 9 nbsp Officers of the 5th Regiment at Macaulay Point in 1909 Currie is seated on the bench third from left Currie took on his role as militia officer seriously 10 He attended every available course offered by the British Army Contingent at Work Point Barracks in Esquimalt often ordered military text books from London and was found on the shooting range every Saturday 8 4 He was a keen marksman and was elected president of the British Columbia Rifle Association in 1905 9 Currie was promoted to captain in November 1901 and then to major in 1906 8 10 By September 1909 he had risen to the rank of lieutenant colonel commanding the 5th Regiment 11 Apart from his interest in the militia Currie was also an active Freemason rising to the position of deputy grandmaster of the Victoria District of Freemasonry in 1907 He also served two years as president of the Young Men s Liberal Association of Victoria and several times was suggested as a candidate for the provincial legislature 8 12 In addition to his military career Currie continued to be active in business He was appointed head of the Matson Insurance Firm in 1904 when Sam Matson who had many business interests beyond his insurance firm decided to concentrate his energy on publishing the Daily Colonist 4 7 With a land speculation boom in Victoria in full swing Currie and a Victoria businessman R A Power formed Currie amp Power in 1908 Currie invested heavily in the real estate market 13 The firm was a success until 1912 when property prices began to decline 8 In 1913 Currie s financial situation deteriorated rapidly as the value of his real estate holdings decreased and he became financially over extended 7 In August Currie s five year term as commander of the 5th Regiment came to a close and he faced a forced retirement from the Canadian Militia at the age of 38 5 14 At this critical juncture he was approached to take command of a new militia regiment nbsp Lieutenant Colonel Arthur Currie in Highland dress of the 50th Regiment Following the Canadian federal election of 1911 Minister of Militia and Defence Sam Hughes had ordered a rapid expansion of the national force 5 The large number of Scottish citizens of Victoria appealed for the formation of a Highland regiment in Victoria to augment the 88th Regiment Victoria Fusiliers which had been formed in 1912 On 15 August 1913 the government authorized the formation of the 50th Regiment Gordon Highlanders of Canada 5 The originally designated commanding officer for the new regiment failed to qualify for the post and Currie was approached as a logical replacement 15 Currie initially turned down the idea likely recognizing that the cost of the new Highland uniforms and mess bills would only add to his financial problems 16 His subordinate and friend Major Garnet Hughes Sam Hughes son was responsible for persuading Currie to reconsider and accept the position 17 Currie attended the Militia Staff Course conducted by Major Louis Lipsett future commander of the 3rd Canadian Division and qualified in March 1914 18 Currie was desperate to avoid personal bankruptcy which would have resulted in a loss in social standing and forced him to resign his commission 19 On 31 July 1914 Currie received CA 10 833 34 equivalent to 255 667 in 2021 from the Militia Department with which to purchase new uniforms 19 Instead of using the funds to pay contractor Moore Taggart and Co for the regimental uniforms Currie embezzled the funds to pay off his personal debts 19 The 50th Regiment s honorary colonel William Coy had promised to underwrite the regiment with 35 000 and Currie planned to use the funds to pay the uniform contractor 20 21 Unfortunately for Currie Coy did not follow through with his financial commitment to the regiment leaving Currie s accounting sleight of hand potentially exposed 22 When World War I broke out and Canada found itself at war on 4 August 1914 Currie was offered command of Military District No 11 British Columbia 17 When he turned this down he was then offered command of the 2nd Infantry Brigade of the Canadian Expeditionary Force s 1st Canadian Division Currie considered turning down this offer as well so he could attempt to solve his financial woes 17 He once again changed his mind at the urging of Garnet Hughes Currie s promotion to brigadier general was confirmed on 29 September 1914 23 and he took command of the 2nd Brigade at the Valcartier Camp in Quebec When the 50th Regiment s acting commanding officer Major Cecil Roberts wrote to him inquiring as to the status of the uniform grant Currie ignored the correspondence and sailed overseas with his brigade in October 1914 19 World War I editBrigade commander edit Main article Second Battle of Ypres The Canadian 1st Division spent the winter of 1914 15 training in England and were sent to France in February 1915 After a period of indoctrination in the realities of trench warfare they took control of a section of trench in the Ypres Salient on 17 April 1915 Only five days later the Germans used poison gas for the first time on the Western Front 24 French colonial troops on the Canadians left flank broke leaving a 7 kilometre 4 3 mi long hole in the Allied line 25 In the chaos that followed Currie proved his worth as a leader by assessing the situation and coolly issuing commands from his brigade headquarters even as it was gassed and then destroyed by fire Currie cobbled together a fluid defence and counterattacked At one point he personally went back to the rear to try to convince two regiments of British reinforcements to move forward 26 After several days of fierce fighting Allied counterattacks re established a stable defensive line denying the Germans a breakthrough Currie s leadership during the Second Battle of Ypres was a source of dispute by British historian James Edward Edmonds who argued that Currie and his 2nd Canadian Brigade performed poorly at Ypres Currie supported by the Canadian official historian Colonel Archer Fortescue Duguid waged a vigorous defense charging that Edmonds was seeking to diminish the Canadian contribution to the Second Battle of Ypres 27 Edmonds wrongly accused Currie of ordering his men to retreat on 24 April 1915 because of the chaos caused by the chlorine gas and fierce attacks of the German infantry Currie and Duguid said it was Brigadier General Richard Turner commanding the 3rd Canadian Brigade on Currie s left who had ordered a retreat without orders leaving Currie with an exposed left flank 28 Canadian historian Timothy Travers also argued that Edmonds was very unfair to Currie since the 1st Canadian Division occupied a position that would have been difficult to defend even under normal conditions without considering the effects of the first mass use of poison gas and the complete withdrawal of French forces on their left flank 29 Although acknowledging that Currie had made mistakes Travers maintained that unlike the Algerians who fled Currie s 2nd Brigade held its ground at Ypres consequently losing 46 of its total strength either killed or wounded over two days of fighting 29 Following the battle Currie was promoted to major general and given command of the entire First Canadian Division He was also invested as a Companion of the Order of the Bath CB and as Commander of the Legion d Honneur Division commander edit See also Battle of Mont Sorrel and Battle of Vimy Ridge Although the Canadians did not take part in the infamous Anglo French offensive on the Somme on 1 July 1916 they did eventually move into the line in the fall to aid the slow crawl forward Currie proved himself to be the master of the set piece assault designed to take limited objectives and then hold on in the face of inevitable German counterattacks It was at this time that Currie lost favour with former friends Sam and Garnet Hughes Sam Hughes wanted Garnet promoted to command of a division but Currie having seen Garnet in action at the Second Battle of Ypres believed Garnet to be an incompetent officer and refused Currie s reputation was on the rise and Hughes did not have the necessary leverage to force Currie to comply By late 1916 the four Canadian divisions were in France gathered together as the Canadian Corps under the command of Sir Julian Byng The British High Command informed Byng that the Canadians would have a central role in the upcoming Battle of Arras by attacking Vimy Ridge 8 km 5 0 mi northeast of Arras on the western edge of the Douai Plains 30 Byng ordered Currie to study the Battle of the Somme and advise what lessons could be taken and applied Currie was also among a set of officers who attended a series of lectures hosted by the French Army regarding their experiences during the Battle of Verdun 30 Currie not only questioned senior French officers but also sought out junior officers and asked the same questions carefully noting the discrepancies between the senior officers beliefs and the junior officers experiences 31 On 20 January 1917 Currie began a series of well received lectures to Corps and divisional headquarters based on his research 32 In response to the Verdun visit organizational changes were made to the platoon structure within the infantry battalions that would later become corps wide changes 33 In his report Currie evaluated not only the French tactics but also what the Canadians had done wrong in the fighting around Pozieres in 1916 33 Currie summarized the primary factors behind successful French offensive operations as careful staff work thorough artillery preparation and support the element of surprise and a high state of training in the infantry units detailed for the assault 33 Currie in command of the 1st Canadian Division was responsible for the broad southern sector of the Canadian Corps advance and expected to make the greatest advance in terms of distance The attack was to begin at 5 30 am on Easter Monday 9 April 1917 By the end of the first day the 1st Canadian Division had captured all of its first line objectives and the left half of its second line 34 The next morning by 9 30 am fresh troops had leap frogged existing battalions to advance to the third objective line 35 To permit the troops time to consolidate the third line the advance halted and the barrage remained stationary for ninety minutes while machine guns were brought forward 36 Shortly before 1 00 pm the advance recommenced and by 2 00 pm the 1st Canadian Division secured their final objective 37 Canadian Corps commander edit See also Battle of Hill 70 and Second Battle of Passchendaele nbsp King George V conferring the honour of knighthood on Currie on 12 July 1917 When Byng was promoted to general in command of the British Third Army in June 1917 Currie was raised to the temporary rank of lieutenant general on 9 June 38 and given command of the entire Canadian Corps Currie was knighted by King George V and appointed Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George KCMG in the King s Birthday Honours of 4 June 1917 39 As he was taking command of the Corps word reached Currie that the Canadian cabinet had been informed of his embezzlement To avoid news of the scandal from breaking Currie borrowed money from two wealthy subordinates David Watson and Victor Odlum to finally pay back the money he had taken from the 50th Regiment 40 nbsp Lieutenant General Sir Henry Horne GOC British First Army and Lieutenant General Sir Arthur Currie GOC Canadian Corps at the First Army Commemoration Service of the beginning of the fourth year of the First World War Ranchicourt France 5 August 1917 French officers are also present The British First Army commander Lieutenant General Henry Horne ordered the Canadian Corps to relieve I Corps opposite the city of Lens on 10 July 1917 and directed Currie to develop a plan for capturing the city by the end of July 1917 41 The operation was intended to engage as many German formations as possible and to prevent them from reinforcing the Ypres sector during the Third Battle of Ypres 42 After examining the area Currie instead proposed to take the high ground outside the city marked on allied maps as Hill 70 43 hold the feature in the expectation of a German counterattack and inflict casualties by preparing a zone of concentrated artillery and machine gun fire 44 Currie s plan was implemented successfully and by the end of the battle some 20 000 Germans had been killed or wounded at the cost of 9 000 Canadians 44 The operation was effective in preventing German formations from transferring local men and equipment to Ypres and Haig believed that the Battle of Hill 70 was one of the finest minor operations of the war 44 The Canadian Corps was then transferred from Lens to Ypres to take part in the Battle of Passchendaele Currie was tasked with continuing the advance started by the now exhausted II Anzac Corps in order to ultimately capture Passchendaele village and gain favourable observation positions and drier winter positions Currie submitted his provisional operational plan on 16 October and presented a plan with extensive resources made available in reserve He estimated the attack would result in 16 000 casualties 45 Currie s preparations included reconnaissance road construction and a massing of artillery and heavy machine guns 46 Rather than one mass assault Currie designed a series of well prepared sharp attacks that allowed the Corps to take an objective and then hold it against the inevitable German counterattacks By 30 October the Canadians aided by two British divisions gained the outskirts of the village in a driving rainstorm and then held on for five days against intense shelling and counter attacks often standing waist deep in mud as they fought The Canadians victory came at the cost of 15 654 casualties including 4 028 killed Currie s grim casualty prediction had been accurate 47 End of the war edit Main articles Hundred Days Offensive and Canada s Hundred Days By early 1918 the Canadian Corps was in a state of uncertainty The Canadian government wanted to expand the Canadian Corps by forming a 5th Division but the BEF wanted the Canadian Corps reorganized to mirror British divisions British command also intended to integrate American battalions into the depleted corps which Currie predicted would be a disaster and would destroy the homogeneous structure of the corps 48 Currie was opposed to all those measures since he did not view them as being in the best interests of the corps 49 Currie with the aid of the Minister of Overseas Military Forces prevailed against the structural changes The Canadian Corps retained its original Canadian organizational structure and fought as a homogeneous formation for the entire Hundred Days Offensive 50 On 21 March 1918 the Germans launched a major Spring Offensive hoping to force an armistice on their terms but by the summer their forward momentum had been contained and the Allies prepared to counterattack In August 1918 when Currie was ordered to move the corps 70 miles 110 km south to Amiens the Canadians took pains to camouflage their move This included sending a radio unit and two battalions to Ypres as a diversion 51 With no preliminary artillery bombardment at Amiens to warn the Germans the attack on 8 August was a success The Canadians were withdrawn from the line and moved to the Somme where they participated in the attack on the Hindenburg Line at the Drocourt Queant Line on 2 September The assault resulted in the Germans being overrun along a 7 000 yard 6 400 m front 52 failed verification Historian Denis Winter called the seizure of the Drocourt Queant line by the Canadian Corps the greatest single achievement of the British Expeditionary Force during the entire war and praised Currie for his ability to bring an unprecedented concentration of artillery and machine gun fire together with flexible infantry sections that were adjusted for the situation 53 The German Seventeenth Army then retreated behind the flooded Canal du Nord Currie took three weeks to prepare perhaps his most audacious plan he suggested the entire corps cross the drier section of the canal on a front of only 2 700 yards 2 500 m 54 On 27 September the entire corps moved across the canal as planned and then through the German lines in a series of planned zig zag manoeuvres designed to confuse the Germans Exhausted and demoralized the German army staged a controlled retreat over the next five weeks On 10 November in what was to be his most controversial decision Currie under orders to continue to advance ordered elements of the corps to liberate Mons On the morning of 11 November as Currie received orders confirming there would be a general armistice at 11 00 am the capture of Mons was completed In December 1918 Currie established the Canadian War Narrative Section to maintain a level of control as to how the Canadian contribution to the Hundred Days Offensive would be documented in print and presented to the public 55 Tim Cook argues that the Canadian War Narrative Section was an important step in not only recording and presenting the achievements of the Canadian Corps but also in restoring Currie s damaged reputation which had been battered by Sam Hughes and his supporters in Parliament 55 Hughes frequently referred to Currie as a butcher Post war editCurrie and family had moved to England in 1915 They returned to Canada following the war arriving in Halifax on 17 August 1919 56 No band or crowd received the ship when it docked and when Currie arrived at the Victoria Memorial Building to greet the 13th Canadian Parliament he received a lukewarm reception 56 57 Currie was appointed Inspector General of the Armed Forces and was then promoted to full general on 10 December the highest ranking position in the Canadian forces Currie intended to use the position to reform the military However in the post war period military funding was cut and Currie encountered significant opposition from the military bureaucracy to organizational changes 58 Deeply unhappy Currie retired from the military and in May 1920 accepted the position of principal and vice chancellor of McGill University in Montreal 59 McGill University edit nbsp Currie as the McGill University Principal in 1930 Currie had only a high school diploma but on the recommendation of McGill s acting principal Frank Dawson Adams Currie was selected as principal and vice chancellor of McGill University on the basis of his exceptional powers of organization and administration and his capacity for inspiration and leadership rather than academic prowess 60 Within months of Currie s appointment he led a fund raising campaign to revive the university travelling from coast to coast in a personal appeal for support 61 the fundraising campaign raised CA 6 5 million more than the original goal of CA 5 million 62 Currie made a name for himself as a premier university administrator From 1925 to 1927 he served as president of the National Conference of Canadian Universities and was elected as a trustee of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching in 1927 63 Currie was also instrumental in saving the School for Graduate Nurses at Royal Victoria College from closure in the early 1930s 64 During Currie s time as McGill s Principal the university established the Faculty of Music the School for Graduate Nurses and the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research and doubled its income despite the difficulties brought on by the Great Depression 65 66 Currie was also President of the Last Post Fund from 1924 to 1932 67 Libel suit edit In June 1927 the city of Mons erected a plaque commemorating its liberation by the Canadian Corps nine years earlier But when this event was reported in Canadian newspapers Currie s enemies took the opportunity to again question the necessity of the final day of fighting A front page editorial published on 13 June 1927 by the Hughes friendly Port Hope Evening Guide argued that Currie was either negligent or deliberate in wasting the lives of soldiers under his command in taking Mons on the final day of the war 68 69 70 The newspaper had only a small local circulation and Currie s friends advised him against pursuing the matter 70 However Currie was unwilling to let the matter go 70 and sued the newspaper for libel seeking 50 000 778 000 today in damages 71 The trial in April 1928 was front page news across Canada 72 On the stand Currie testified that he had been under orders from Allied Supreme Commander Ferdinand Foch to pursue German forces to do otherwise would have been treason 73 Many of Currie s senior officers testified that Currie had urged them to advance with caution avoiding unnecessary casualties 74 At the end of the trial the jury returned a verdict after four hours finding the newspaper guilty of libel but awarding Currie only 500 7 800 today in damages plus costs 75 76 Although Currie was awarded only a small portion of the value sought newspapers across Canada referred to the result as a victory for him 72 The trial helped to restore Currie s reputation however the stress took a toll on his health 68 Currie was subsequently elected Dominion president of the Canadian Legion of the British Empire Service League in 1928 77 However he suffered a stroke the following year and his ill health obliged him to resign whereupon he was bestowed with the honorary title of Grand President 77 78 Death edit nbsp Funeral procession of Arthur Currie in Montreal Quebec Currie suffered another stroke on 5 November 1933 and died on 30 November at the age of 57 at Royal Victoria Hospital from bronchial complications brought on by pneumonia 79 His civilian and military funeral on 5 December was held in Montreal and was the largest to that point in Canadian history The Times wrote of his funeral It was by common consent the most impressive funeral ever seen at Montreal and Robert Borden believed the ceremony was perhaps more elaborate than at any state or military funeral in the history of Canada 80 Approximately 150 000 people lined the streets to watch the procession and the Canadian Radio Broadcasting Commission broadcast the funeral over radio 81 Those attending the funeral included Lord Bessborough at the time the Governor General of Canada important Canadian politicians foreign diplomats and representatives of McGill University 82 No less than 170 organizations sent floral tributes 83 84 The service was conducted by the Bishop of Montreal at Christ Church Cathedral and was followed by a graveside service presided over by Archdeacon Hon Colonel John Almond a wartime Director of the Canadian Chaplain Service for the Canadian Expeditionary Force 80 85 Eight general officers acted as pallbearers 82 The funeral procession received a 17 gun salute 86 In London a memorial service was conducted in Westminster Abbey on the same day as the funeral in Montreal which was filled to capacity 79 Memorial services were held elsewhere in Canada also On 3 December 7 000 persons attended a memorial service for Currie at Toronto s Arena Gardens 87 Currie was initially interred in a family plot at Mount Royal Cemetery in Montreal However three years after his death Currie s remains were moved to a more prominent site surmounted by a cross of sacrifice Currie was survived by his wife Lucy and a son and daughter Lucy was left in some financial difficulty following her husband s death when McGill decided it could not afford to continue paying her a portion of his salary In 1935 the Canadian government finally recognized his service to Canada by granting 50 000 to his estate Honours and tribute edit nbsp Portrait of Currie by Irish war artist William Orpen 1919 Currie was named a Companion of the Order of the Bath after the Second Battle of Ypres in 1915 and promoted Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath in the 1918 New Year Honours 88 He was made a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George in the 1919 New Year Honours and was Mentioned in Despatches nine times over the course of the war 89 Currie also received a number of foreign awards including the French Legion d honneur and Croix de guerre with Palm 90 the Belgian Croix de guerre and Order of the Crown 91 and the US Distinguished Service Medal Currie s contributions both to the war effort as well as post war education was recognized in 19 honorary degrees Many tributes have been made to Currie In 1919 General Currie Elementary School was built in Richmond British Columbia 92 A Sir Arthur Currie Elementary School under the Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal was also built 93 Mount Currie 2810m located at the Spray River headwaters in Banff National Park is named after Currie 94 The Currie Barracks in Calgary opened in 1933 was named in his honour later renamed to CFB Calgary 95 In 1934 Currie was designated as a Canadian Person of National Historic Significance 96 The Currie Building and Currie Hall at the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston Ontario were subsequently named in his honour In Victoria the street where Currie lived was renamed Arthur Currie Lane and an on campus housing building at University of Victoria is named in his honour 97 In Strathroy Ontario the local branch of the Royal Canadian Legion bears his name and a statue has been raised to him 98 Robert A Heinlein in his science fiction novel Starship Troopers named one of the basic training facilities Camp Arthur Currie 99 In 2006 Canada honoured Currie as one of fourteen Canadians in the Valiants Memorial and is one of the five people commemorated with a life sized statue 100 and the Sir Arthur Currie Memorial Gymnasium at McGill University in Montreal nbsp Currie s funeral monument in Mount Royal CemeteryLegacy editCanadian historians including Pierre Berton and Jack Granatstein have described Currie as Canada s greatest military commander Although physically a large man standing over six feet tall Currie did not cut a heroic military figure Nor was he a charismatic speaker Described as aloof by his troops who called him Guts and Gaiters he nevertheless inspired them He was a brilliant tactician who used his skills to reduce casualties and is credited with accelerating the end of the war According to historian Jack Hyatt His slogan was Pay the price of victory in shells not lives and if he did anything heroic it was that 101 Currie s leadership of the Canadian Corps was described in an article in Maclean s No flashing genius but a capable administrator cool headed and even tempered and sound of judgment He has surrounded himself with a capable staff whose counsel he shares and whose advice he takes He is the last man in the world to stick to his own plan if a better one offers So far as tactics go he is first among equals for such is the way his staff works 102 References edit a b Hyatt A M J 2004 Currie Sir Arthur William 1875 1933 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 32670 Retrieved 16 December 2008 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b Obituary of General Sir Arthur Currie The London Times 1 December 1933 Archived from the original on 26 May 2009 Retrieved 15 September 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k Sharpe 2009 p 16 a b c Bosher 2012 p 221 a b c d Brown amp Morton 1979 p 48 Berton 1986 p 104 105 a b c Brown amp Morton 1979 p 47 a b c d e Sharpe 2009 p 17 a b Bosher 2012 p 222 a b Urquhart 1950 p 20 Dancocks 1985 p 19 Urquhart 1950 p 16 Dancocks 1985 p 18 Humphries 2008 p 16 Hyatt 1987 p 9 Drysdale D M Pipe Band of the 50th Regiment Gordon Highlanders PDF Archived from the original PDF on 30 October 2008 Retrieved 15 September 2008 a b c Sharpe 2009 p 18 Dancocks 1985 p 24 a b c d Brown amp Morton 1979 p 51 Dancocks 1985 p 245 Berton 1986 p 106 Brown amp Morton 1979 pp 48 49 No 29086 The London Gazette 2 March 1915 p 2096 Battles of Ypres Archived from the original on 30 October 2009 Retrieved 31 October 2009 Duffy Michael The Second Battle of Ypres 1915 firstworldwar com Retrieved 25 September 2010 Cassar 2010 pp 180 181 Travers 1989 p 303 Travers 1989 pp 313 314 a b Travers 1989 p 318 a b Brennan 2007 p 94 Berton 1986 pp 104 105 Nicholson 1962 p 250 a b c Pugsley 2006 p 13 Nicholson 1962 p 255 Campbell 2007 p 179 Nicholson 1962 p 257 Campbell 2007 p 182 No 30178 The London Gazette Supplement 10 July 1917 p 6956 No 30111 The London Gazette Supplement 4 June 1917 p 545 Brown amp Morton 1979 p 52 Granatstein 2004 pp 119 120 Nicholson 1962 p 282 Nicholson 1962 p 285 a b c Cook 2004 p 698 Veterans Affairs Canada The Third Battle of Ypres and Passchendaele Retrieved 16 September 2008 Neillands 1998 p 402 Neillands 1998 p 401 Hyatt 1987 p 100 Hyatt 1987 pp 100 101 Morton 1982 p 155 179 Kennedy Hickman World War I Battle of Amiens Archived from the original on 12 January 2011 Retrieved 17 September 2008 Nicholson 1962 p 438 Winter 1991 pp 270 271 Farr 2007 p 212 a b Cook 2006 p 35 a b Humphries 2008 p 325 Dancocks 1985 p 197 Hyatt 1987 p 135 Hyatt 1987 pp 135 136 Hopkins John Castell 1921 The Canadian Annual Review of Public Affairs Toronto Canadian Review Company p 648 Currie Arthur 13 October 1920 The Influence of Canadian Universities in Canadian Development The Empire Club of Canada Addresses Toronto Canada The Empire Club of Canada pp 344 355 Fedunkiw 2005 pp 93 104 Annual Report Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching 1928 p 5 Dancocks 1985 pp 269 274 Caya Marcel 1985 Guide to Archival Resources at McGill University The archival records of McGill University McGill University p 9 Dancocks 1985 p 287 SIR GENERAL ARTHUR CURRIE 1875 1933 Celebrated WWI Figure was LPF s fifth National President PDF THE BUGLER A Quarterly Newsletter from the Last Post Fund vol 5 no 4 Last Post Fund October 2014 archived from the original PDF on 7 November 2017 retrieved 6 November 2017 a b Cook 2004 p 706 Sharpe 2009 p 54 a b c Vance 1997 p 183 Sharpe 2009 p 57 a b Vance 1997 p 184 Sharpe 2009 p 197 Sharpe 2009 p 175 Howarth Scott 9 November 2008 A Picture and a Thousand Words Toronto Star pp ID2 Sharpe 2009 p 230 a b Morton 2004 p 325 Dancocks 1985 p 224 a b Bishop 1997 p 108 a b Davidson 2016 p 117 Davidson 2016 p 115 a b Dancocks 1985 p 281 Homage Shown by Floral Tributes Montreal Herald Montreal 5 December 1933 p A5 Davidson 2016 p 118 Crerar 2014 pp 63 64 Sir Arthur Currie s Funeral News The Times No 46620 London 6 December 1933 col B p 19 Thousands mourn loss of Canadian Corps commander Toronto Star 4 December 1933 p 3 No 30450 The London Gazette Supplement 28 December 1917 p 1 No 31092 The London Gazette Supplement 31 December 1918 p 3 a No 31615 The London Gazette Supplement 21 October 1919 p 13007 Imperial And Foreign News Items News The Times No 41696 London 29 January 1918 col F p 4 Online Heritage Inventory General Currie School BookBaby Retrieved 28 December 2018 Jan Wong 2012 Out of the Blue A Memoir of Workplace Depression Recovery Redemption and Yes Happiness City of Richmond 2012 ISBN 978 0987868510 Retrieved 6 November 2017 permanent dead link Canadian Mountain Place Names The Rockies and Columbia Mountains White Richard 15 March 2015 White Where a gated community meets with history Calgary Herald Currie Sir Arthur William National Historic Person Parks Canada Retrieved 6 November 2017 Canada s Historic Places 1144 Arthur Currie Lane Retrieved 21 December 2008 The General Sir Arthur Currie Memorial Project Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 28 April 2010 Heinlein Robert 1960 Starship Troopers Putnam Publishing Group p 51 ISBN 0399202099 Canada honours 14 Valiants dead link Remembering Arthur Currie Canadian War Hero CTV News CTVGlobemedia 4 April 2007 Retrieved 19 February 2016 Winter 1991 p 271 Bibliography editBerton Pierre 1986 Vimy Toronto McClelland amp Stewart ISBN 0771013396 Bosher J F 2012 Imperial Vancouver Island who was who 1850 1950 Woodstock Oxfordshire J F Bosher in conjunction with Writersworld ISBN 978 0957375307 Bishop William Arthur 1997 Salute Canada s Great Military Leaders from Brock to Dextraze Toronto McGraw Hill Ryerson ISBN 978 0075600107 Brennan Patrick 2007 Julian Byng and Leadership in the Canadian Corps in Hayes Geoffrey Iarocci Andrew Bechthold Mike eds Vimy Ridge A Canadian Reassessment Waterloo Wilfrid Laurier University Press pp 87 104 ISBN 978 0889205086 Brown R Craig Morton Desmond March 1979 The Embarrassing Apotheosis of a Great Canadian Sir Arthur Currie s Personal Crisis in 1917 Canadian Historical Review 60 1 41 63 doi 10 3138 chr 060 01 03 Campbell David 2007 The 2nd Canadian Division A Most Spectacular Battle in Hayes Geoffrey Iarocci Andrew Bechthold Mike eds Vimy Ridge A Canadian Reassessment Waterloo Wilfrid Laurier University Press pp 171 192 ISBN 978 0889205086 Cassar George 2010 Hell in Flanders Fields Canadians at the second battle of Ypres Toronto Dundurn Press ISBN 978 1554887286 Cook Tim December 2004 The Madman and the Butcher Sir Sam Hughes Sir Arthur Currie and Their War of Reputations The Canadian Historical Review 85 4 693 719 doi 10 1353 can 2005 0013 S2CID 159889647 Cook Tim 2006 Clio s warriors Canadian historians and the writing of the world wars Vancouver UBC Press ISBN 0774812575 Crerar Duff 2014 Padres in No Man s Land Canadian Chaplains and the Great War 2nd ed Montreal McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 1322060460 Dancocks Daniel 1985 Sir Arthur Currie a biography Toronto Methuen ISBN 0458995606 Davidson Melissa 2016 Acts of Remembrance Canadian Great War Memory and the Public Funerals of Sir Arthur Currie and Canon F G Scott Canadian Studies 80 80 Association francaise des etudes canadiennes 109 127 doi 10 4000 eccs 688 Farr Don 2007 The Silent General A Biography of Haig s Trusted Great War Comrade in Arms Solihull Helion amp Company Limited ISBN 978 1874622994 Fedunkiw Marianne 2005 Rockefeller Foundation funding and medical education in Toronto Montreal and Halifax Montreal Que McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 0773528970 Granatstein Jack Lawrence 2004 Canada s Army Waging War and Keeping the Peace Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 0802086969 Humphries Mark ed 2008 The selected papers of Sir Arthur Currie diaries letters and report to the Ministry 1917 1933 Waterloo ON LCMSDS Press of Wilfrid Laurier University ISBN 978 0978344122 Hyatt A M J 1987 General Sir Arthur Currie a military biography Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 0802026036 Neillands Robin 1998 The Great War Generals on the Western Front London Robinson p 401 ISBN 1841190632 Morton Desmond 1982 A peculiar kind of politics Canada s Overseas Ministry in the First World War Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0802055866 Morton Desmond 2004 Fight or pay soldiers families in the Great War Vancouver B C UBC Press ISBN 978 0774811088 Nicholson Gerald W L 1962 Canadian Expeditionary Force 1914 1919 PDF Official History of the Canadian Army in the First World War Ottawa Queen s Printer and Controller of Stationery OCLC 59609928 archived from the original PDF on 26 August 2011 retrieved 15 July 2015 Pugsley Christopher Winter 2006 Learning from the Canadian Corps on the Western Front Canadian Military History 15 2 5 32 Sharpe Robert 2009 The last day the last hour the Currie libel trial Toronto Published for the Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History by University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0802096197 Travers Timothy April 1989 Allies in Conflict The British and Canadian Official Historians and the Real Story of Second Ypres Journal of Contemporary History 24 2 301 325 doi 10 1177 002200948902400206 S2CID 159578012 Urquhart Hugh M 1950 Arthur Currie The biography of a great Canadian J M Dent ASIN B0007ITPX8 Vance Jonathan 1997 Death so noble memory meaning and the First World War Vancouver B C UBC Press ISBN 0774806001 Winter Denis 1991 Haig s command a reassessment Londona and New York Viking ISBN 978 0670802258 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arthur Currie Arthur Currie at The Canadian Encyclopedia First World War com Sir Arthur Currie Collection McGill University Archives A selection of digitized records reflecting Sir Arthur Currie s tenure as Principal of McGill University from 1920 to 1933 Canada s 25 Most Renowned Military Leaders Archived 11 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine Military offices New creation GOC 2nd Canadian Brigade1914 1915 Succeeded byLouis Lipsett Preceded bySir Edwin Alderson GOC 1st Canadian Division1915 1917 Succeeded byArchie Macdonell Preceded bySir Julian Byng GOC Canadian Corps1917 1919 Corps disbanded Academic offices Preceded byAuckland Geddes 1st Baron Geddes Principal and Vice Chancellor of McGill University1920 1933 Succeeded byArthur Eustace Morgan Non profit organization positions Preceded byPercy Lake President of the Royal Canadian Legion1928 1929 Succeeded byLeo Richer Lafleche Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arthur Currie amp oldid 1220758323, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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