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Imperial Munitions Board

The Imperial Munitions Board (IMB) was the Canadian branch of the British Ministry of Munitions, set up in Canada under the chairmanship of Joseph Wesley Flavelle. It was formed by the British War Cabinet to alleviate the Shell Crisis of 1915 during the First World War. The Board was mandated to arrange for the manufacture of war materials in Canada on behalf of the British government.

Women involved in the production of munitions (1916)

It was the general and exclusive purchasing agent on behalf of the War Office, the Admiralty, the British Timber Controller, the Department of Aeronautics and the Ministry of Munitions, and also acted as an agent for the United States Ordnance Department.[1]

History and organization edit

 
Trenton plant seen from the air in 1919.

Shortly after the outbreak of World War I, the War Office approached the Canadian Department of Militia and Defence as to the possibility of supplying shells.[2] Its Minister, Sam Hughes, appointed a Shell Committee in September 1914 to act on the War Office's behalf.[2] The following were its members:

Shell Committee membership[3]
Class Members of the Shell Committee
Initial appointments
Later members
  • E. Carnegie[d]
  • Colonel C. Greville-Harston[e]
  • Lieutenant Colonel F.D. Lafferty, Superintendent, Dominion Arsenal, Quebec
  • Colonel T. Benson, Master General of Ordnance
  • Colonel David Carnegie, Ordnance Adviser[f]
  • J.W. Borden, Chief Accountant for the Department

When the contracts became mired in political patronage that led to profiteering,[g][12] David Lloyd George sent Lord Rhondda to Canada to investigate.[12] Lionel Hitchens[h] and R.H. Brand then came over and approached Joseph Wesley Flavelle to help form the IMB, and this move received the approval of Prime Minister Sir Robert Borden.[13] In December 1915, the following were appointed:

IMB Organization[14]
Class Members of the Board Purchasing Agent
Initial appointments
  • E. Fitzgerald
Later appointments
  • Brigadier General Alex Bertram, Vice-Chairman
  • R.H. Brand[m]
  • Brigadier General W.E. Edwards[n][o]
  1. ^ financial member of the Board
  2. ^ upon Fitzgerald's appointment as Assistant to the Chairman

As Chairman, Flavelle had full administrative and executive authority.[21] The Board operated through twenty departments, of which the most important were Purchasing and Steel, Shipbuilding, Explosives, Forging, Aviation, Timber, Fuze and Engineering.[21]

As certain shell manufacture contracts had been granted to persons that did not even have workshops, their holders were given deadlines to either start manufacturing them or forfeit the contracts.[13] This led to political controversy later on, as the losers started to falsely accuse Flavelle of profiteering as well, because of his connection to the meat packing business.[13]

Scope edit

In a 1917 address, Carnegie reported that the Board was then dealing with 650 factories in 144 towns, stretching from Halifax to Victoria.[22] By 1918, the extent of its acquisition of lumber required the operation of 67 logging camps in British Columbia.[23] The British Government was responsible for all its expenditure.[24]

The British War Cabinet also noted the extent of Canada's war production in 1918:

15 per cent of the total expenditure of the Ministry of Munitions in the last six months of the year was incurred in that country. She has manufactured nearly every type of shell from the 18-pounder to the 9.2-inch. In the case of the 18-pdr., no less than 55 per cent of the output of shrapnel shells in the last six months came from Canada, and most of these were complete rounds of ammunition, which went direct to France. Canada also contributed 42 per cent of the total 4.5 shells, 27 per cent of the 6-inch shells, 20 per cent of the 60-pdr. H.E. shells, 15 per cent of the 8-inch and 16 per cent of the 9.2-inch. In addition Canada has supplied shell forgings, ammunition components, propel[l]ants, acetone, T.N.T., aluminum, nickel, aeroplane parts, agricultural machinery and timber, beside quantities of railway materials, including no less than 450 miles of rails torn up from Canadian railways, which were shipped direct to France.[23]

Because the private sector was unwilling or unable to operate in certain fields, the Board established seven "National plants" for the production of explosives and propellants, and one for the manufacture of airplanes.[25] The Board also oversaw the production of ships and aircraft.

It also formed several subsidiaries to perform several of the manufacturing functions, which were spread across Canada. These included:

IMB National Plants
Company[p] Location Function Extent
Canadian Aeroplanes Ltd. Wallace Emerson, Toronto, Ontario 43°40′03″N 79°26′31″W / 43.6675°N 79.442°W / 43.6675; -79.442 Production of the JN-4(Can) Canuck,[26] the Felixstowe F5L flying boat,[27] and the Avro 504. The factory had 6 acres (2.4 ha) of floor space, and its construction took only 2.5 months to complete.[28]
British Cordite Ltd. Nobel, Ontario[q] 45°24′45″N 80°04′59″W / 45.4125°N 80.083055°W / 45.4125; -80.083055 Production of cordite. The site covered 366 acres (148 ha) and had 155 buildings.
British Chemical Co. Ltd. Trenton, Ontario[r] 44°07′08″N 77°35′20″W / 44.118853°N 77.588781°W / 44.118853; -77.588781 Production of sulphuric acid, nitric acid, pyro-cotton, nitrocellulose powder and TNT. The plant covered 255 acres (103 ha) and contained 204 buildings,[29] and at the time was the largest ammunition factory in the British Empire.
British Forgings Ltd. Ashbridge's Bay, Toronto, Ontario[s] 43°38′47″N 79°21′01″W / 43.646321°N 79.350241°W / 43.646321; -79.350241 Recycling of light steel turnings which arose from shell production, through melting down and recasting into ingots.[31] The site covered 127.6 acres (51.6 ha), on land leased from the Toronto Harbour Commission, and was at the time the world's largest electrical steel plant.[32]
British Munitions Supply Co. Ltd. Verdun, Quebec 45°28′19″N 73°34′00″W / 45.471979°N 73.566586°W / 45.471979; -73.566586 Assembly of fuses. Colloquially known as "La Poudrière", the plant had 4000 (almost exclusively female) employees that assembled eight million fuses.[33]
Energite Explosives Co. Ltd.[34] Haileybury, Ontario[t] Loading and assembling operations on 18-pounder British shrapnel shells. The operation had 800 employees and produced eight million completed rounds of ammunition.

When the Montreal Gazette profiled the War Toronto on its first visit to Montreal, on April 30, 1919, they described her as the last of 46 vessels built for the Imperial Munitions Board.[35]

The IMB was dissolved in 1919. The process began immediately after the Armistice, when the Ministry of Munitions directed that it would be implemented through the following stages:[24]

  1. Production of all shells and explosives would cease immediately.
  2. Gradually cease the production of items no longer required by the Government but which may be useful elsewhere (ie, metals and other materials).
  3. Maintain contracts for articles still likely to be required (ie, commercial lumber and ships).

Impact edit

When contracting was transferred from the Shell Committee to the IMB, Flavelle decided that fair wage clauses would not be inserted into future contracts that were granted, although British and Canadian authorities did not object to continuing the prior practice.[36] As the IMB was a British agency, its activities with respect to labour relations did not fall under federal jurisdiction until the passage of an order in council in March 1916 that extended the application of the Industrial Disputes Investigation Act, 1907,[37][38] but Flavelle's opposition continued.[39] This had the effect of disrupting relations with the Trades and Labour Congress of Canada,[40] which would lead to the outbreak of strikes in 1918 and massive labour confrontations in 1919.[41]

Further reading edit

  • "Part IV: Munitions Organisation in Canada". History of the Ministry of Munitions. Vol. II: General Organisation for Munitions Supply. London: Ministry of Munitions. 1922.
  • Canada's Part in the Great War (PDF). Ottawa: Department of External Affairs. 1921.
  • Canada's War Effort, 1914-1918. Department of Public Information. 1918.
  • Women in the Production of Munitions in Canada. Imperial Munitions Board. 1916.
  • Bercuson, D.J. (1973). "Organized Labour and the Imperial Munitions Board". Industrial Relations. Université Laval. 28 (3): 602–616. doi:10.7202/028422ar. ISSN 1703-8138. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  • Carnegie, David (1925). The History of Munitions Supply in Canada 1914-1918. London: Longmans, Green and Co. OCLC 4673665.
  • Fraser, Peter (1983). "The British 'Shells Scandal' of 1915". Canadian Journal of History. University of Toronto Press. 18 (1): 69–86. doi:10.3138/cjh.18.1.69. ISSN 0008-4107.
  • Hopkins, J. Castell (1918a). "The Shell Committee and Sir Sam Hughes: The Making of Munitions". Canadian Annual Review of Public Affairs, 1916. War Series. Toronto: The Canadian Annual Review Limited. pp. 269–296. OL 7101035M.
  • Hopkins, J. Castell (1918b). Canadian Annual Review of Public Affairs, 1917. Toronto: The Canadian Annual Review Limited.
  • Hopkins, J. Castell (1919a). Canadian Annual Review of Public Affairs, 1918. Toronto: The Canadian Annual Review Limited.
  • Hopkins, J. Castell (1919b). Canada at War: A Record of Heroism and Achievement, 1914-1918. Toronto: The Canadian Annual Review Limited. OL 7205289M.
  • Moir, Michael B. (1989). "Toronto's Harbourfront at War". Archivaria. Association of Canadian Archivists (28): 126–140. ISSN 0318-6954.
  • Meredith, William; Duff, Lyman Poore (1916). Royal Commission on Shell Contracts (PDF). Ottawa: King's Printer.
  • Neilson, Keith (2011). "R.H. Brand, the Empire and Munitions from Canada". English Historical Review. Oxford University Press. CXXVI (523): 1430–1455. doi:10.1093/ehr/cer324. ISSN 0013-8266.
  • Rider, Peter Edward (1974). The Imperial Munitions Board and its relationship to government, business, and labour, 1914-1920 (PhD). University of Toronto. OCLC 318178043.
  • Sullivan, Alan (1919). Aviation in Canada, 1917-1918. Toronto: Rous & Mann Limited.
  • Vaughan, Henry Hague (10 February 1919). The Manufacture of Munitions in Canada (Speech). Presidential Address, Annual Meeting. Ottawa: Engineering Institute of Canada.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Prior to the War, Bertram was the President of John Bertram & Sons, Dundas, Ontario,[4][5] notable for the manufacture of the hydraulic rams used in the Peterborough Lift Lock[6]
  2. ^ formerly a works manager with Canadian General Electric[7]
  3. ^ formerly of the Nova Scotia Steel Company, a predecessor of the Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation[8]
  4. ^ formerly of the Electric Steel and Metals Company of Welland, Ontario[4]
  5. ^ formerly with the Royal Marine Light Infantry before retiring in 1871 and moving to Canada, he later became an offices in the Royal Grenadiers and patented many military innovations[9]
  6. ^ described as "a consulting engineer of high standing"[10]
  7. ^ including ones given to the former employers of Bertram, Cantley and E. Carnegie, as well as to the Universal Steel and Tool Company (owned and controlled by William Mackenzie and Donald Mann[11]
  8. ^ head of the shipbuilding firm Cammell Laird
  9. ^ Departed in 1917, upon his appointment as the Director-General of War Supplies of the British War Mission, and Representative of the Ministry of Munitions, in Washington[15]
  10. ^ A fellow colleague of Brand in Milner's Kindergarten,[16] they, together with Flavelle, belonged to the Toronto Round Table[17]
  11. ^ President of the Banque d'Hochelaga
  12. ^ brother of Frank Porter Wood and, in association with George Albertus Cox, founder of Dominion Securities Corporation Limited
  13. ^ From 1915 to 1917, Brand served as the Board's representative in London, acting as the key link between that body and the Ministry of Munitions.[18]
  14. ^ of the Royal Field Artillery[19]
  15. ^ later placed in charge of the Ministry of Munition's Department of Inspection in 1916[20]
  16. ^ IMB subsidiary, except for Energite
  17. ^ Operated by Canadian Explosives Limited (a predecessor of Canadian Industries Limited), on behalf of British Cordite
  18. ^ located on the east side of the Trent River near Number 1 Dam, before it empties into the Bay of Quinte
  19. ^ Located to the southeast from Commissioners Street and Munition Street[30]
  20. ^ Operated by Energite for the IMB. It also had other plants at Widdifield, Ontario and Renfrew, Ontario.

References edit

  1. ^ DEA 1921, p. 26.
  2. ^ a b DPI 1918, p. 13.
  3. ^ Vaughan 1919, pp. 2–3.
  4. ^ a b Vaughan 1919, p. 2.
  5. ^ "The John Bertram & Sons Co. Fonds" (PDF). Dundas Museum. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  6. ^ "Peterborough Lift Lock, 1904". The Wheels of Progress. Retrieved 5 June 2018.
  7. ^ Shell Inquiry 1916, pp. 4, 8.
  8. ^ Shell Inquiry 1916, p. 4.
  9. ^ Moss, Matthew (19 December 2016). "In the 1880s, Charles Harston Tried to Force a Magazine Onto a Single-Shot Rifle: It didn't go well". War is Boring.
  10. ^ Shell Inquiry 1916, p. 5.
  11. ^ "Shell and Fuse Scandals: A Million Dollar Rake-off" (PDF). Ottawa: Central Liberal Information Office. 1916. p. 4.
  12. ^ a b "Sir Robert Borden Did Better". Ottawa Citizen. 10 February 1939.
  13. ^ a b c Bowman, Charles A. (19 April 1949). "Sir Joseph Flavelle and Munitions Board". Ottawa Citizen. p. 3.
  14. ^ Vaughan 1919, pp. 38, 43.
  15. ^ Who's Who in the British War Mission in the United States of America, 1918. New York: Edward J. Clode. 1918. p. iv.
  16. ^ Banyan, Will (2005). "A Short History of the Round Table". Nexus. 12 (1).
  17. ^ Wise, S.F. Canadian Airmen and the First World War: The Official History of the Royal Canadian Air Force (PDF). Vol. I. University of Toronto Press. pp. 57–58. ISBN 0-8020-2379-7.
  18. ^ Neilson 2011.
  19. ^ William Egerton Edwards
  20. ^ Vaughan 1919, p. 75.
  21. ^ a b DPI 1918, p. 14.
  22. ^ Hopkins 1918b, p. 385.
  23. ^ a b Hopkins 1919a, p. 543.
  24. ^ a b Hopkins 1919a, p. 545.
  25. ^ DPI 1918, p. 15.
  26. ^ . Canada Aviation and Space Museum. 2015. Archived from the original on 28 January 2015. Retrieved 24 January 2015.
  27. ^ Shadwick, Martin (2015). . The Canadian Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 12 October 2012. Retrieved 24 January 2015.
  28. ^ Sullivan 1919, p. 44.
  29. ^ Everson, Kate (11 September 2014). "Doors Open includes British Chemical Company explosion". Quinte West News.
  30. ^ Moir 1989, p. 132.
  31. ^ Moir 1989, p. 130.
  32. ^ Moir 1989, pp. 130–132.
  33. ^ Ferland, Raphaël Dallaire (7 July 2012). "Usine à munitions pour retraités slaves" [Munitions factory for Slav retirees]. Le Devoir (in French). Montreal.
  34. ^ "Collection: Energite Explosives Company Ltd". Imperial War Museum.
  35. ^ "S.S. War Toronto arrived in Port: Last of 46 vessels constructed for the Imperial Munitions Board was inspected". Montreal Gazette. 30 April 1919. Retrieved 15 December 2015.
  36. ^ Bercuson 1973, p. 605.
  37. ^ "P.C. 680". Canada Gazette. 49 (42): 3419. 15 April 1916., extending The Industrial Disputes Investigation Act, 1907, S.C. 1907, c. 20
  38. ^ Bercuson 1973, p. 607.
  39. ^ Bercuson 1973, pp. 608, 612.
  40. ^ Bercuson 1973, p. 609.
  41. ^ Bercuson 1973, p. 614.

External links edit

  • "Imperial Munitions Board". Canadian Encyclopedia.
  • Fiennes-Clinton, Richard (7 April 2015). "#51: Toronto & The First World War, Part IV - Production". Toronto: Then and Now.
  • "Album of portraits of employees and directors of the Energite Explosives Company and exterior and interior views of the architecture and operations of Energite Explosives Plant No. 3, the Shell Loading Plant, Renfrew, Ontario". Canadian Centre for Architecture.

imperial, munitions, board, canadian, branch, british, ministry, munitions, canada, under, chairmanship, joseph, wesley, flavelle, formed, british, cabinet, alleviate, shell, crisis, 1915, during, first, world, board, mandated, arrange, manufacture, materials,. The Imperial Munitions Board IMB was the Canadian branch of the British Ministry of Munitions set up in Canada under the chairmanship of Joseph Wesley Flavelle It was formed by the British War Cabinet to alleviate the Shell Crisis of 1915 during the First World War The Board was mandated to arrange for the manufacture of war materials in Canada on behalf of the British government Women involved in the production of munitions 1916 It was the general and exclusive purchasing agent on behalf of the War Office the Admiralty the British Timber Controller the Department of Aeronautics and the Ministry of Munitions and also acted as an agent for the United States Ordnance Department 1 Contents 1 History and organization 2 Scope 3 Impact 4 Further reading 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksHistory and organization edit nbsp Trenton plant seen from the air in 1919 Shortly after the outbreak of World War I the War Office approached the Canadian Department of Militia and Defence as to the possibility of supplying shells 2 Its Minister Sam Hughes appointed a Shell Committee in September 1914 to act on the War Office s behalf 2 The following were its members Shell Committee membership 3 Class Members of the Shell CommitteeInitial appointments General Bertram Chairman a Lieuteant Colonel Geo W Watts b Colonel Thos Cantley c Later members E Carnegie d Colonel C Greville Harston e Lieutenant Colonel F D Lafferty Superintendent Dominion Arsenal Quebec Colonel T Benson Master General of Ordnance Colonel David Carnegie Ordnance Adviser f J W Borden Chief Accountant for the DepartmentWhen the contracts became mired in political patronage that led to profiteering g 12 David Lloyd George sent Lord Rhondda to Canada to investigate 12 Lionel Hitchens h and R H Brand then came over and approached Joseph Wesley Flavelle to help form the IMB and this move received the approval of Prime Minister Sir Robert Borden 13 In December 1915 the following were appointed IMB Organization 14 Class Members of the Board Purchasing AgentInitial appointments J W Flavelle Chairman C B Gordon Vice Chairman i Colonel D Carnegie J F Perry a 1 j J A Vaillancourt k E R Wood l E FitzgeraldLater appointments Brigadier General Alex Bertram Vice Chairman R H Brand m Brigadier General W E Edwards n o A G Woodhouse a 2 financial member of the Board upon Fitzgerald s appointment as Assistant to the Chairman As Chairman Flavelle had full administrative and executive authority 21 The Board operated through twenty departments of which the most important were Purchasing and Steel Shipbuilding Explosives Forging Aviation Timber Fuze and Engineering 21 As certain shell manufacture contracts had been granted to persons that did not even have workshops their holders were given deadlines to either start manufacturing them or forfeit the contracts 13 This led to political controversy later on as the losers started to falsely accuse Flavelle of profiteering as well because of his connection to the meat packing business 13 Scope editIn a 1917 address Carnegie reported that the Board was then dealing with 650 factories in 144 towns stretching from Halifax to Victoria 22 By 1918 the extent of its acquisition of lumber required the operation of 67 logging camps in British Columbia 23 The British Government was responsible for all its expenditure 24 The British War Cabinet also noted the extent of Canada s war production in 1918 15 per cent of the total expenditure of the Ministry of Munitions in the last six months of the year was incurred in that country She has manufactured nearly every type of shell from the 18 pounder to the 9 2 inch In the case of the 18 pdr no less than 55 per cent of the output of shrapnel shells in the last six months came from Canada and most of these were complete rounds of ammunition which went direct to France Canada also contributed 42 per cent of the total 4 5 shells 27 per cent of the 6 inch shells 20 per cent of the 60 pdr H E shells 15 per cent of the 8 inch and 16 per cent of the 9 2 inch In addition Canada has supplied shell forgings ammunition components propel l ants acetone T N T aluminum nickel aeroplane parts agricultural machinery and timber beside quantities of railway materials including no less than 450 miles of rails torn up from Canadian railways which were shipped direct to France 23 Because the private sector was unwilling or unable to operate in certain fields the Board established seven National plants for the production of explosives and propellants and one for the manufacture of airplanes 25 The Board also oversaw the production of ships and aircraft It also formed several subsidiaries to perform several of the manufacturing functions which were spread across Canada These included IMB National Plants Company p Location Function ExtentCanadian Aeroplanes Ltd Wallace Emerson Toronto Ontario 43 40 03 N 79 26 31 W 43 6675 N 79 442 W 43 6675 79 442 Production of the JN 4 Can Canuck 26 the Felixstowe F5L flying boat 27 and the Avro 504 The factory had 6 acres 2 4 ha of floor space and its construction took only 2 5 months to complete 28 British Cordite Ltd Nobel Ontario q 45 24 45 N 80 04 59 W 45 4125 N 80 083055 W 45 4125 80 083055 Production of cordite The site covered 366 acres 148 ha and had 155 buildings British Chemical Co Ltd Trenton Ontario r 44 07 08 N 77 35 20 W 44 118853 N 77 588781 W 44 118853 77 588781 Production of sulphuric acid nitric acid pyro cotton nitrocellulose powder and TNT The plant covered 255 acres 103 ha and contained 204 buildings 29 and at the time was the largest ammunition factory in the British Empire British Forgings Ltd Ashbridge s Bay Toronto Ontario s 43 38 47 N 79 21 01 W 43 646321 N 79 350241 W 43 646321 79 350241 Recycling of light steel turnings which arose from shell production through melting down and recasting into ingots 31 The site covered 127 6 acres 51 6 ha on land leased from the Toronto Harbour Commission and was at the time the world s largest electrical steel plant 32 British Munitions Supply Co Ltd Verdun Quebec 45 28 19 N 73 34 00 W 45 471979 N 73 566586 W 45 471979 73 566586 Assembly of fuses Colloquially known as La Poudriere the plant had 4000 almost exclusively female employees that assembled eight million fuses 33 Energite Explosives Co Ltd 34 Haileybury Ontario t Loading and assembling operations on 18 pounder British shrapnel shells The operation had 800 employees and produced eight million completed rounds of ammunition When the Montreal Gazette profiled the War Toronto on its first visit to Montreal on April 30 1919 they described her as the last of 46 vessels built for the Imperial Munitions Board 35 The IMB was dissolved in 1919 The process began immediately after the Armistice when the Ministry of Munitions directed that it would be implemented through the following stages 24 Production of all shells and explosives would cease immediately Gradually cease the production of items no longer required by the Government but which may be useful elsewhere ie metals and other materials Maintain contracts for articles still likely to be required ie commercial lumber and ships Impact editWhen contracting was transferred from the Shell Committee to the IMB Flavelle decided that fair wage clauses would not be inserted into future contracts that were granted although British and Canadian authorities did not object to continuing the prior practice 36 As the IMB was a British agency its activities with respect to labour relations did not fall under federal jurisdiction until the passage of an order in council in March 1916 that extended the application of the Industrial Disputes Investigation Act 1907 37 38 but Flavelle s opposition continued 39 This had the effect of disrupting relations with the Trades and Labour Congress of Canada 40 which would lead to the outbreak of strikes in 1918 and massive labour confrontations in 1919 41 Further reading edit Part IV Munitions Organisation in Canada History of the Ministry of Munitions Vol II General Organisation for Munitions Supply London Ministry of Munitions 1922 Canada s Part in the Great War PDF Ottawa Department of External Affairs 1921 Canada s War Effort 1914 1918 Department of Public Information 1918 Women in the Production of Munitions in Canada Imperial Munitions Board 1916 Bercuson D J 1973 Organized Labour and the Imperial Munitions Board Industrial Relations Universite Laval 28 3 602 616 doi 10 7202 028422ar ISSN 1703 8138 Retrieved 19 February 2016 Carnegie David 1925 The History of Munitions Supply in Canada 1914 1918 London Longmans Green and Co OCLC 4673665 Fraser Peter 1983 The British Shells Scandal of 1915 Canadian Journal of History University of Toronto Press 18 1 69 86 doi 10 3138 cjh 18 1 69 ISSN 0008 4107 Hopkins J Castell 1918a The Shell Committee and Sir Sam Hughes The Making of Munitions Canadian Annual Review of Public Affairs 1916 War Series Toronto The Canadian Annual Review Limited pp 269 296 OL 7101035M Hopkins J Castell 1918b Canadian Annual Review of Public Affairs 1917 Toronto The Canadian Annual Review Limited Hopkins J Castell 1919a Canadian Annual Review of Public Affairs 1918 Toronto The Canadian Annual Review Limited Hopkins J Castell 1919b Canada at War A Record of Heroism and Achievement 1914 1918 Toronto The Canadian Annual Review Limited OL 7205289M Moir Michael B 1989 Toronto s Harbourfront at War Archivaria Association of Canadian Archivists 28 126 140 ISSN 0318 6954 Meredith William Duff Lyman Poore 1916 Royal Commission on Shell Contracts PDF Ottawa King s Printer Neilson Keith 2011 R H Brand the Empire and Munitions from Canada English Historical Review Oxford University Press CXXVI 523 1430 1455 doi 10 1093 ehr cer324 ISSN 0013 8266 Rider Peter Edward 1974 The Imperial Munitions Board and its relationship to government business and labour 1914 1920 PhD University of Toronto OCLC 318178043 Sullivan Alan 1919 Aviation in Canada 1917 1918 Toronto Rous amp Mann Limited Vaughan Henry Hague 10 February 1919 The Manufacture of Munitions in Canada Speech Presidential Address Annual Meeting Ottawa Engineering Institute of Canada Notes edit Prior to the War Bertram was the President of John Bertram amp Sons Dundas Ontario 4 5 notable for the manufacture of the hydraulic rams used in the Peterborough Lift Lock 6 formerly a works manager with Canadian General Electric 7 formerly of the Nova Scotia Steel Company a predecessor of the Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation 8 formerly of the Electric Steel and Metals Company of Welland Ontario 4 formerly with the Royal Marine Light Infantry before retiring in 1871 and moving to Canada he later became an offices in the Royal Grenadiers and patented many military innovations 9 described as a consulting engineer of high standing 10 including ones given to the former employers of Bertram Cantley and E Carnegie as well as to the Universal Steel and Tool Company owned and controlled by William Mackenzie and Donald Mann 11 head of the shipbuilding firm Cammell Laird Departed in 1917 upon his appointment as the Director General of War Supplies of the British War Mission and Representative of the Ministry of Munitions in Washington 15 A fellow colleague of Brand in Milner s Kindergarten 16 they together with Flavelle belonged to the Toronto Round Table 17 President of the Banque d Hochelaga brother of Frank Porter Wood and in association with George Albertus Cox founder of Dominion Securities Corporation Limited From 1915 to 1917 Brand served as the Board s representative in London acting as the key link between that body and the Ministry of Munitions 18 of the Royal Field Artillery 19 later placed in charge of the Ministry of Munition s Department of Inspection in 1916 20 IMB subsidiary except for Energite Operated by Canadian Explosives Limited a predecessor of Canadian Industries Limited on behalf of British Cordite located on the east side of the Trent River near Number 1 Dam before it empties into the Bay of Quinte Located to the southeast from Commissioners Street and Munition Street 30 Operated by Energite for the IMB It also had other plants at Widdifield Ontario and Renfrew Ontario References edit DEA 1921 p 26 a b DPI 1918 p 13 Vaughan 1919 pp 2 3 a b Vaughan 1919 p 2 The John Bertram amp Sons Co Fonds PDF Dundas Museum Retrieved 4 June 2018 Peterborough Lift Lock 1904 The Wheels of Progress Retrieved 5 June 2018 Shell Inquiry 1916 pp 4 8 Shell Inquiry 1916 p 4 Moss Matthew 19 December 2016 In the 1880s Charles Harston Tried to Force a Magazine Onto a Single Shot Rifle It didn t go well War is Boring Shell Inquiry 1916 p 5 Shell and Fuse Scandals A Million Dollar Rake off PDF Ottawa Central Liberal Information Office 1916 p 4 a b Sir Robert Borden Did Better Ottawa Citizen 10 February 1939 a b c Bowman Charles A 19 April 1949 Sir Joseph Flavelle and Munitions Board Ottawa Citizen p 3 Vaughan 1919 pp 38 43 Who s Who in the British War Mission in the United States of America 1918 New York Edward J Clode 1918 p iv Banyan Will 2005 A Short History of the Round Table Nexus 12 1 Wise S F Canadian Airmen and the First World War The Official History of the Royal Canadian Air Force PDF Vol I University of Toronto Press pp 57 58 ISBN 0 8020 2379 7 Neilson 2011 William Egerton Edwards Vaughan 1919 p 75 a b DPI 1918 p 14 Hopkins 1918b p 385 a b Hopkins 1919a p 543 a b Hopkins 1919a p 545 DPI 1918 p 15 Curtiss JN 4 Canuck Canada Aviation and Space Museum 2015 Archived from the original on 28 January 2015 Retrieved 24 January 2015 Shadwick Martin 2015 Military Aviation The Canadian Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 12 October 2012 Retrieved 24 January 2015 Sullivan 1919 p 44 Everson Kate 11 September 2014 Doors Open includes British Chemical Company explosion Quinte West News Moir 1989 p 132 Moir 1989 p 130 Moir 1989 pp 130 132 Ferland Raphael Dallaire 7 July 2012 Usine a munitions pour retraites slaves Munitions factory for Slav retirees Le Devoir in French Montreal Collection Energite Explosives Company Ltd Imperial War Museum S S War Toronto arrived in Port Last of 46 vessels constructed for the Imperial Munitions Board was inspected Montreal Gazette 30 April 1919 Retrieved 15 December 2015 Bercuson 1973 p 605 P C 680 Canada Gazette 49 42 3419 15 April 1916 extending The Industrial Disputes Investigation Act 1907 S C 1907 c 20 Bercuson 1973 p 607 Bercuson 1973 pp 608 612 Bercuson 1973 p 609 Bercuson 1973 p 614 External links edit Imperial Munitions Board Canadian Encyclopedia Fiennes Clinton Richard 7 April 2015 51 Toronto amp The First World War Part IV Production Toronto Then and Now Album of portraits of employees and directors of the Energite Explosives Company and exterior and interior views of the architecture and operations of Energite Explosives Plant No 3 the Shell Loading Plant Renfrew Ontario Canadian Centre for Architecture Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Imperial Munitions Board amp oldid 1159340067, 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