Edmonton City as Museum Project ECAMP

Armistice 100: Edmonton & the First World War

Browse the Exhibition

  • Armistice 100: Edmonton & the First World War
  • Armistice 100 – Local Connections
    • The Canadian Motor Machine Gun Brigade
    • Edmonton’s Fighting Men
    • The University of Alberta at War
  • Armistice 100 – The Battle of Vimy Ridge
    • The Journal of F. R. Hasse
    • Edmonton’s 49th Battalion at Vimy Ridge
    • Vimy Ridge: A Forge for Canadian Identity
  • Armistice 100 – The End of The Great War
    • Homecoming: After the End of the First World War
    • Armistice 1918
  • Past Events
  • About
  • Sponsors
  • In Flanders Fields
  • WWI Memory Wall
  • Edmonton Soldier Stories
  • Armistice 100: Edmonton & the First World War
  • Armistice 100 – Local Connections
    • The Canadian Motor Machine Gun Brigade
    • Edmonton’s Fighting Men
    • The University of Alberta at War
  • Armistice 100 – The Battle of Vimy Ridge
    • The Journal of F. R. Hasse
    • Edmonton’s 49th Battalion at Vimy Ridge
    • Vimy Ridge: A Forge for Canadian Identity
  • Armistice 100 – The End of The Great War
    • Homecoming: After the End of the First World War
    • Armistice 1918
  • Past Events
  • About
  • Sponsors
  • In Flanders Fields
  • WWI Memory Wall
  • Edmonton Soldier Stories

Featured Collection

Armistice 100 – The End of The Great War

Homecoming: After the End of the First World War

Adriana A. Davies

The end of war on November 11, 1918, made headlines in Edmonton’s newspapers: The Morning Bulletin noted: “GERMANY ACCEPTS TERMS”;…

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Armistice 1918

Adriana A. Davies

When war was declared on August 4, 1914, men from the Edmonton region rushed to join up. Edmonton had two…

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See more of this exhibit

  • Armistice 100: Edmonton & the First World War
  • About
  • Video: In Flanders Fields
  • Edmonton Soldier Stories
  • WWI Memory Wall
  • Past Events
  • Sponsors

Edmonton City as Museum Project ECAMP

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An initiative of the Edmonton Heritage Council.

The Edmonton City as Museum Project acknowledges that ᒥᐢᑿᒌᐚᐢᑲᐦᐃᑲᐣ / amiskwacîwâskahikan / Edmonton is located in Treaty 6 territory, and is a traditional meeting ground, gathering place, and travelling route of the Nêhiyawak (Cree), Anishinaabe (Saulteaux), Niitsitapi (Blackfoot), Métis, Dene, and Nakota Sioux; whose resiliency, along with their histories, languages, and cultures, continues to enrich our shared heritage.

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