Government of Canada / Gouvernement du Canada
Symbol of the Government of Canada

Institutional links

Timeline

SELECT A CENTURY

SELECT A DECADE

SELECT A YEAR / SUBJECT BY YEAR

1810181118121813181418151816181718181819 
1810: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders (81)1811: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders (82)1812: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders (129)1813: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders (140)1814: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders (120)1815: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders (98)1816: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders (91)1817: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders (87)1818: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders (88)1819: Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders (88)Soldiers, Warriors and Leaders
1810: Wars, Battles and Conflicts (78)1811: Wars, Battles and Conflicts (79)1812: Wars, Battles and Conflicts (140)1813: Wars, Battles and Conflicts (158)1814: Wars, Battles and Conflicts (140)1815: Wars, Battles and Conflicts (104)1816: Wars, Battles and Conflicts (97)1817: Wars, Battles and Conflicts (93)1818: Wars, Battles and Conflicts (93)1819: Wars, Battles and Conflicts (92)Wars, Battles and Conflicts
1810: Armed Forces (58)1811: Armed Forces (58)1812: Armed Forces (87)1813: Armed Forces (96)1814: Armed Forces (87)1815: Armed Forces (71)1816: Armed Forces (64)1817: Armed Forces (62)1818: Armed Forces (61)1819: Armed Forces (60)Armed Forces
1810: Strategy and Tactics (8)1811: Strategy and Tactics (8)1812: Strategy and Tactics (21)1813: Strategy and Tactics (27)1814: Strategy and Tactics (26)1815: Strategy and Tactics (16)1816: Strategy and Tactics (17)1817: Strategy and Tactics (15)1818: Strategy and Tactics (16)1819: Strategy and Tactics (13)Strategy and Tactics
1810: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications (48)1811: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications (47)1812: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications (64)1813: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications (71)1814: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications (68)1815: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications (59)1816: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications (60)1817: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications (59)1818: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications (61)1819: Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications (63)Weapons, Equipment and Fortifications
 
 

Date > 1800 > 1810-1819 > 1819

Subject > Wars, Battles and Conflicts

  1. 92 Results
  2. « Previous
  3. 1
  4. 2
  5. 3
  6. 4
  7. 5
 
Type: Document
Online Reference Books
Description: A list of the regiments and other units of the American, British, Canadian, French and Spanish militaries that served in present-day Canada during the period 1755-1871. Included are the dates of each unit's service, and the modern-day provinces in which the service was done.
Site: National Defence
 
 
Type: Document
Online Reference Books
Description: The Plains Amerindians ruled the Prairies during the first half of the 19th century. These nomadic nations, fierce fighters and skilled riders, fought the advance of American settlement. Their relations with the traders of the Hudson's Bay Company were relatively smooth.
Site: National Defence
 
 
Type: Document
Description: This report discusses the growth and development of the Canadian Militia from its beginnings in early New France until Confederation in 1867.
Requires Adobe Reader, download here
Site: National Defence
 
Title: Weapons
 
Type: Document
Online Reference Books
Description: This section illustrates a selection of firearms and bladed weapons used by British and Canadian military units during the 18th and 19th centuries.
Site: National Defence
 
 
Type: Document
Online Reference Books
Description: New recruits to the British army during the 18th and 19th centuries were sent to a regimental depot. There, they were issued clothing and equipment and started to learn how to drill and to handle a weapon. They were given a (cursory) medical and formally enlisted before a magistrate.
Site: National Defence
 
 
Type: Document
Online Reference Books
Description: British army officers were primarily responsible for supervising the activities of their men. The British took up the practice of awarding military medals only in the nineteenth century. First for officers only, then for all ranks, campaign medals became a source of great pride.
Site: National Defence
 
 
Type: Image
Online Reference Books
Description: Mortars were designed to shoot an exploding shell at a very high angle, 45 degrees or more. They were used in the siege and defence of fortifications. An explosive shell was fired up into the air and arced downwards to drop within the enemy defences. When the shell's fuse burned down, it exploded. These projectiles are the 'bombs bursting in air' mentioned in the American national anthem, where they were being fired from a British fleet attacking Baltimore.
Site: National Defence
 
 
Type: Document
Online Reference Books
Description: As units moved from posting to posting within the British empire during the 18th and 19th centuries, some soldier's wives (up to 6 per company) were transported with their husbands at government expense. Before each move, a lottery was held. Losers were abandoned without support.
Site: National Defence
 
 
Type: Image
Online Reference Books
Description: Fort Lennox was built on Isle-au-Noix just north of the American border between 1819 to 1826. Its purpose was to block the way towards Montreal to any hostile force coming up the Richelieu River from Lake Champlain. (Parks Canada)
Site: National Defence
 
 
Type: Document
Online Reference Books
Description: British officers rose in rank by either through seniority or by purchasing promotion during the 18th and 19th centuries. Professional training was done mostly by an officer's regiment, although artillery and engineering officers had to attend an academy at Woolwich.
Site: National Defence
 
  1. 92 Results
  2. « Previous
  3. 1
  4. 2
  5. 3
  6. 4
  7. 5

Policy - External Hyperlinks

All search result links will open in a new browser window. We have made every reasonable effort to ensure that all links from the Gateway are accurate and reliable. However the Department of National Defence is not responsible for the accuracy, reliability or currency of the information contained on external sites. Please be aware that hyperlinks do change from time to time and in some cases those changes may not be reflected immediately. Please contact us if you encounter broken links. (More on Important Notices...)