Close
The page header's logo
Help
Login
Staff Login
Register
FR
0
Selected 
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
 Add to Cart
 Click here to refresh results
 Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
 Hide details
doctype icon
play button
0
Selected 
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
 Add to Cart
 Click here to refresh results
 Click here to refresh results
Linked assets
42nd Battalion resting in the Grand Place, Mons, Belgium, on the morning of Nov. 11, 1918. THE CANADIAN PRESS/National Archives of Canada
Pictured here on Feb. 3, 1955, wearing their Canada uniforms for the first time are the Penticton V ice hockey team who represented Canada at the World Hockey Championships in Germany in 1955. The V's, in taking the Allen Cup in 1955, ensured their trip to Russia. Seen here from L to R are: Front Row, Mike Shabaga, Bill Warwick, Ivan McLelland, Don Moog, Dick Warwick, Jack McIntyre. 2nd Row: Ed Kassian, Bernie Bathgate, Don Berry, Grant Warwick, Jim Fairburn, George McAvoy, Dino Mascotto. Back Row: Harry Harris, Hal Tarala, Kev Conway, Jack McDonald, Doug Kilburn, Ernie Rucks. (CP PHOTO)
France October, 1918. First World War - Canadian wounded voting in British Hospital, France. Advance East of Arras(CP PHOTO) 1999 (National Archives of Canada)-003314
doctype icon
CP1STO578047 | 1918 
FIRST  WORLD WAR
CP2781905 | FIRST WORLD WAR 
FIRST  WORLD WAR
CP2774878 | FIRST WORLD WAR 
 FIRST  WORLD WAR
CP2774869 | FIRST WORLD WAR 
IMMIGRATION
CP2767984 | IMMIGRATION 
IMMIGRATION
CP2767973 | IMMIGRATION 
IMMIGRATION
CP2767955 | IMMIGRATION 
IMMIGRATION
CP2767943 | IMMIGRATION 
IMMIGRATION
CP2767911 | IMMIGRATION 
FIRST WORLD WAR
CP2767715 | FIRST WORLD WAR 
FIRST WORLD WAR
CP2767517 | FIRST WORLD WAR 
Action button
Conceptually similar
FILE - In this Oct. 11, 1918, file photo first lady Edith Wilson, center, and President Woodrow Wilson, left, arrive in New York to take part in the Liberty Day Parade. Woodrow Wilson was more focused on the end of World War I than a flu virus that was making its way around the globe, ultimately sickening hundreds of thousands of Americans, including him. (AP Photo, File)
**FILE**Vladimir Lenin, revolutionary leader of the first government of the Soviet Union, poses in his study at the Kremlin in this Oct. 1918 file photo. He is the subject of the book "Lenin's Private War: The Voyage of the Philosophy Steamer and the Exile of the Intelligentsia"  by Lesley Chamberlain. (AP Photo)
doctype icon
CP2STO51984 | 1918-10 
World War One - Hindenburg line tunnel where the St Quentin canal runs underground troops standing on boards across the canal. 1918. Mirrorpix/Courtesy Everett Collection (MPWA697911)
doctype icon
CP2STO50740 | 1918-10 
FILE In this Nov. 11, 1918 file photo, American troops cheer after hearing the news that the Armistice had been signed, ending World War I. At 11 a.m. on the 11th day of the 11th month of 2018, scores of world leaders are gathering in Paris to mark 100 years since the armistice that ended World War I entered into force, and to celebrate peace. (AP Photo, File)
FILE - In this Oct. 11, 1918, file photo first lady Edith Wilson, center, and President Woodrow Wilson, left, arrive in New York to take part in the Liberty Day Parade. Woodrow Wilson was more focused on the end of World War I than a flu virus that was making its way around the globe, ultimately sickening hundreds of thousands of Americans, including him. (AP Photo, File)
FILE-This 1918 file photo shows President Warren G. Harding delivering an address in St. Louis, Mo. The centennial of President Warren G. Harding's election was marked Monday in his home county in Ohio with a modest radio tribute rather than the grand museum and homestead re-opening envisioned before the pandemic. Harding, a Republican, was elected Nov. 2, 1920, his 55th birthday, succeeding Democrat Woodrow Wilson. He beat a fellow Ohio newspaper publisher, James Cox, on a platform of restoring normalcy after World War I and the 1918 influenza pandemic. (AP Photo, File)
doctype icon
CP1STO578046 | 1918 
Suffragette Christabel Pankhurst in a Polling Booth during the General Election of December 1918.  She was one of the leaders of the movement to secure votes for women, and stood as the Women's Party Candidate in the Smethwick constituency in Staffordshire during the election. She won 47.8% of the vote, losing by only 778 votes to her only opponent, the Labour Party's John Davison.
American troops stand in formation in the courtyard of Buckingham palace.
PREMIUM --

 King George V meets a young dockyard worker during a visit to a Sunderland shipyard
doctype icon
CP2STO47773 | 1918 
President Woodrow Wilson arrives in France December 1918 and enters car to drive to station and acknowledges the  welcome which greets him. Mirrorpix/Courtesy Everett Collection (MPWA1433689)
A train load of light French tanks 1918 being transported by the American Army in France World War One. Mirrorpix/Courtesy Everett Collection (MPWA634309)
World War One - Hindenburg line tunnel where the St Quentin canal runs underground troops standing on boards across the canal. 1918. Mirrorpix/Courtesy Everett Collection (MPWA697911)
doctype icon
CP2STO47776 | 1918 
42nd Battalion resting in the Grand Place, Mons, Belgium, on the morning of Nov. 11, 1918. THE CANADIAN PRESS/National Archives of Canada
Pictured here on Feb. 3, 1955, wearing their Canada uniforms for the first time are the Penticton V ice hockey team who represented Canada at the World Hockey Championships in Germany in 1955. The V's, in taking the Allen Cup in 1955, ensured their trip to Russia. Seen here from L to R are: Front Row, Mike Shabaga, Bill Warwick, Ivan McLelland, Don Moog, Dick Warwick, Jack McIntyre. 2nd Row: Ed Kassian, Bernie Bathgate, Don Berry, Grant Warwick, Jim Fairburn, George McAvoy, Dino Mascotto. Back Row: Harry Harris, Hal Tarala, Kev Conway, Jack McDonald, Doug Kilburn, Ernie Rucks. (CP PHOTO)
France October, 1918. First World War - Canadian wounded voting in British Hospital, France. Advance East of Arras(CP PHOTO) 1999 (National Archives of Canada)-003314
doctype icon
CP1STO578047 | 1918 
American troops stand in formation in the courtyard of Buckingham palace.
doctype icon
CP2STO50739 | 1918-11 
The military funeral of Baron Manfred Freiherr von Richthofen,the 'Red Baron', shot down on the 21st of April, 1918. At his burial at the village of Bertangles, near Amiens, riflemen from No.3 Squadron, Australian Flying Corps fired three volleys over the grave in tribute to the airman who had chalked up 80 kills.
doctype icon
CP2STO50751 | 1918-04 
Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig, with his Lancer escort, stops to congratulate Canadians from the 85th Nova Scotian battalion after a successful action on the Western Front.
doctype icon
CP2STO50754 | 1918-02 
President Woodrow Wilson arrives in France December 1918 and enters car to drive to station and acknowledges the  welcome which greets him. Mirrorpix/Courtesy Everett Collection (MPWA1433689)
doctype icon
CP2STO50737 | 1918-12 
Action button

1918-10

 Add to collection
1918-10 
Source name: 
The Canadian Press
Unique identifier: CP1STO580048 
Legacy Identifier: CP1STO1767_1918-10 
Type: Folder 
Visibility Class / Rating