File consists of reproductions of portraits of Julian Byng, 1st Viscount Byng of Vimy, and Prime Minister Mackenzie King, retrieved from the Public Archives of Canada.
File consists of reproductions of historical photographs collected by J.L. Granatstein from the Public Archives of Canada (renamed the National Archives of Canada in 1987), possibly collected as research material for his book, Canada 1957-1967: The Years of Uncertainty and Innovation (1986). The photographs depict Mitchell W. Sharp, Associate Deputy-Minister of Trade and Commerce, Brooke Claxton, Minister of National Defence, Douglas C. Abbott, Minister of National Defence, and Rear Admiral E.R. Mainguy RCN.
File consists of reproductions of historical photographs collected by J.L. Granatstein from the Public Archives of Canada (renamed the National Archives of Canada in 1987), possibly collected as research material for his book, Canada 1957-1967: The Years of Uncertainty and Innovation (1986).
Accession consists of the records of the Confederation of Resident and Ratepayer Association (Toronto), which J.L. Granatstein was involved with.
Accession consists of documents from the Public Records Office, London, England, and the Public Archives of Canada, Ottawa, and excerts from the papers of Canadian politicians, relating to the Conscription Crisis (WWII).
Accession consists of drafts and galley proof of Canada's War. The politics of the Mackenzie King Government, 1939-1945.
Accession consists of interviews with members of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada.
Accession consists of the records of the Core Area Task Force (Toronto).
Accession consists of taped interviews with members of the Liberal Party of Canada or about the Liberal Party; particularly regarding World War II politics.
Accession consists of correspondence, publication files relating to Granatstein's books on the Conscription Crisis, the Conservative Party, etc.; book reviews, and newspaper clippings
Accession consists of publication files for Granatstein's book on Norman A. Robertson and the Ottawa civil service, 1935-1957; correspondence relating to the Robertson book and American Dollars - Canadian Prosperity; and copies of the proceedings of Taschereau-Kellock Royal Commission re: Igor Gouzenko, 1946.
Accession consists of Publication files concerning Broken Promises, American Dollars-Canadian Prosperity; and correspondence re: a biography of George Drew, and the Toronto Newspaper Guild and the Printing Specialties Union.
Accession consists of publication files relating to Twentieth Century Canada and A Reader's Guide to Canadian History 2: Confederation to the Present; correspondence and papers.
Accession consists of publication files relating to Bloody Victory: Canadians and the D-Day Campaign 1944, 'And the Winner is : a juror takes us inside the GG's' (Quill and Quire); Facts on Canada; and correspondence, including letters regarding the CHA Archives Committee / PAO Users' Committee.
Accession consists of 1 folder containing correspondence, notes, and typescripts of published articles.
Accession consists of minutes, correspondence, papers, manuscripts, printed material.
Accession consists of correspondence; resource material; publication files for A Nation Forged in Fire and articles on Japanese-Canadians; transcripts of interviews for Pirouette (Trudeau's foreign policy), Sacred Trust (Mulroney government); farm account books, and photographs.
Accession consists of papers for the Social Science Federation of Canada and Task Force on Freedom of Information.
Accession consists of general correspondence, biographical files, research notes and transcripts of interviews for publications.
Accession consists of Norman Robertson letters, the Paul Martin Diaries, the material on the Royal Society of Canada, and the Canada Council donated in 1996 (Accession 1996-007) and Correspondence, Files related to 'The Valour and the Horror', Research files, Publication files (includes Yankee Go Home, Fighting the Good Fight: Canada in World War II, Normandy 1944: Canada Remembers, Empire to Umpire), Professorial files (includes departmental records), and Files related to the Special Committee on the Restructuring of the Reserves.
Accession includes personal and business correspondence, clippings, cards, conference papers ; minutes, budgets, annual reports, agendas and other material related to his work at the Canadian War Museum and notes and drafts of several of his books.
Accession consists of textual records in the form of email correspondence, news clippings, reports and ephemera pertaining to Prof. Granatstein's monograph Who Killed Canadian History, his work with the Canadian War Museum, the RMC Board of Governors, Canada: A People's History and the Army Reserves.
Accession consists of records documenting J. L. Granatstein's activities as an author, teacher, editor, defence critic, expert witness, journalist, and member of the Royal Society of Canada, Royal Military College Board of Governors, Historica Council, Canadian War Museum Advisory Council, Council for Canadian Security in the 21st Century, Dominion Institute Advisory Council, Normandy Foundation Board of Directors, Vimy Ridge Memorial project, and the Valiant 16 project. Includes correspondence, drafts and clippings of Granatstein's scholarly and jounalism articles, drafts for Canada's Army: Waging War and Keeping the Peace (2002), Who Killed Canadian History (1998), and Canada and the Two World Wars (2003). Also includes correspondence, drafts, manuscripts and other materials related to Granatstein's role as editor of Irwin Publishing's New Canadian Readings series and the CIIA Contemporary Affairs series.
Accession consists of additional material in the Jack Granatstein fonds including correspondence, notes, drafts and financial records related to the writing of such books as Battle Lines, Who Killed the Canadian Military? And other publications. It also contains general correspondence, notes and drafts related to speeches and talks presented by Granatstein and material that documents his involvement on a number of committees, organizations and/or boards related to issues surrounding Canada's military such as the Special Commisssion on Restructuring of the Canadian Reserves and the Canadian Defense and Foreign Affairs Institute.
Accession consists of Consists of additional material in the J.L. Granatstein fonds including personal and professional correspondence, subject files related to speaking engagements and committee work, clippings of articles by or about him and notes, drafts and resource material related to a number of his writing projects including Canada’s Army, Empire to Umpire, Hitler’s Car and the State of Canadian History, The Land Newly Found, Who Killed Canadian History, and Whose War is It?
Accession consists of documents created or received by J.L. Granatstein in his role as historian and his participation in programs associated with Canadian defence and military history. These records include: a collection of photographs depicting episodes of Canadian history, such as World Wars I and II, the Korean War, and the Oka Crisis; personal correspondence; professional correspondence with the Canadian Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute, the Canadian War Museum, the Never Forgotten National Memorial foundation, and his book publishers; and some lecture notes and research material.
Accession consists of documents created and received by J.L. Granatstein in the course of his activities as a historian, including: an updated curriculum vitae and list of publications; correspondence relating to national defence matters, the Canadian War Museum, the career and literary estate of Michael Bliss following his death in 2017, reviews of new books, and other topics; columns for Legion Magazine, Maclean’s Magazine, The Globe and Mail, and other media outlets; correspondence and research material for recent
books (Canada 1919, Canada at War, and revised editions of Who Killed Canadian History? and Canada’s Army); royalty statements; and transcripts of interviews of Second World War veterans by historians.
Accession consists of manuscript drafts, clippings, and other professional correspondence created and generated by Jack Granatstein.
File predominantly contains interview notes and transcripts.
File consists of correspondence and clippings related to the debate over the Afghanistan war and the book, Lessons Learned? What Canada Should Learn from Afghanistan (2011).
File consists of a promotional booklet for a development to be built around HMCS Sackville and adjacent to the Marine Museum of the Atlantic in Halifax. The booklet provides an overview of the concept, historical context, exhibits, and architectural design. It was prepared for the Canadian Naval Memorial Trust.
File consists of correspondence, including with Patrick Crean, Publisher and Editor, HarperCollins Publishers Ltd., regarding the publication of the book, The Best Little Army in the World : the Canadians in northwest Europe, 1944-1945 (Toronto: Patrick Crean Editions, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, 2015). File also includes letters of response to the book and speaking notes for events related to the book's release.
File consists of correspondence and research material related to a project to write a biography of General Sir Arthur William Currie. The project was later abandoned. The file also includes a text by John Wood, an amateur historian from Sebringville, Ontario, titled, "Bloody Marvellous! Why the Great War Ended Early: The Unheeded Story of the Canadian Corps and General Sir Arthur William Currie" (2013).
File consists of correspondence and newspaper articles regarding the campaign to bring the British North America Act to Canada.
File consists of a reproduction of the diaries of two brothers from London, Ontario, who served in the First World War, Lieutenant-Colonel E. Ibbotson Leonard (1882-1974) and Lieutenant Colonel Edwin Woodman Leonard (1883-1917). The diaries were compiled by reporter and local historian, Bill Corfield.
File consists of correspondence, symposium programmes, and the annotated text for the presentation by J.L. Granatstein, "Ethnic and Religious Enlistment During the Second World War."
File consists of correspondence, predominantly letters of praise for the book, Canada's War: The Politics of the Mackenzie King Government, 1939-45 (1975).
File predominantly contains email correspondence with museum staff, also included is historian Tim Cook, pertaining to research using their collections and writing articles for the institutions.
File consists of correspondence and other material related to J.L. Granatstein's invitation to sit on the selection committee for the 2012 Ross Munro Media Award offered by the Conference of Defence Associations Institute.
File consists of material related to Canadian Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute, which was chaired by J.L. Granatstein from 2005 to 2009, including the profiles of the former Advisory Council, correspondence, and meeting agendas of the CDFAI Advisory Council held on 25 June 2013.
File consists of correspondence and other material related to Canadian Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute.
File consists of records of the Canadian Global Affairs Institute Advisory Council (AC), including correspondence, meeting agendas, and other material.
File consists of minutes and agenda for a meeting of the Canadian Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute Advisory Committee.
File consists of correspondence, programmes, and draft manuscripts for a paper presented by J.L. Granatstein, "From Mother Country to Far Away Relative : the Canadian-British military relationship from 1945."
File consists of a blank disc with a label showing a wreath of poppies at a war memorial with the text, "Each one lost / Bruce Cockburn," and a second disc with a rendition of the song, "I'll be seeing you," by an unidentified singer.
File consists of correspondence and letters of praise for various books by J.L. Granatstein.
File consists of a contract hiring J.L. Granatstein as a consultant to the Department of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Canada (PSEPC), to present on the topic, "Afghanistan: Lessons Learned," and related correspondence.
File consists of correspondence and J.L. Granatstein's speaking notes for his debate with Jeffrey Simpson on the question, "Has the War of 1812 been overhyped?," with the text of both speakers' remarks printed from the website of The Ottawa Citizen.
File consists of correspondence and J.L. Granatstein's speaking notes as moderator for the debate between Armine Yalnizyan of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives and William Watson of McGill University.
File consists of reproductions of editorial cartoons collected by J.L. Granatstein from the National Archives of Canada and the U.S. Department of National Defence, likely used as research material.
File consists of correspondence with D.C. Teskey, regarding excerpts from letters and diaries written by Frank Teskey, who served in World War I, and photocopies of the documents.
File includes correspondence predominantly pertaining to professional matters.
File includes correspondence predominantly pertaining to professional matters.
File includes correspondence predominantly pertaining to professional matters.
File consists of correspondence and reference material relating to the debate between Stéphane Dion and Daniel Turp on the theme, "Resolved: The Government of Quebec can decide unilaterally to secede from Canada," organized by the Macdonald-Laurier Institute.
File consists of photographs and drawings depicting the Gulf War (1990-1991).
File consists of speaking notes and other material related to a lecture delivered to the House of Commons Standing Committee on National Defence, titled "NATO's Strategic Concept and Canada's Role in International Defence Cooperation."
File consists of correspondence, including an RSVP and itinerary, related to the Halifax International Security Forum, to which J.L. Granatstein was invited but did not attend.
File consists of reproductions of wartime diaries by Maj.-Gen. Harry Wickwire Foster from September 1939 to January 1944. The file was used as research material for J.L. Granatstein's book, Canada's Army: Waging War and Keeping the Peace (University of Toronto Press, 2002).
File consists of material related to a book project which would culminate in the publication of Capturing Hill 70: Canada’s Forgotten Battle of the First World War, edited by Douglas E. Delaney and Serge Marc Durflinger (UBC Press, 2016). The file includes correspondence, the schedule for a workshop for the book held in May, and a draft of the chapter written by J.L. Granatstein, "To win at any cost" : The War at Home, 1917."
File consists of material related to the book project, Capturing Hill 70: Canada’s Forgotten Battle of the First World War, edited by Douglas E. Delaney and Serge Marc Durflinger (UBC Press, 2016). The file includes a briefing package on the project which includes its synopsis, correspondence, a draft of the chapter written by J.L. Granatstein, "To win at any cost" : The War at Home, 1917," and research material.
File consists of correspondence, newspaper articles, brochures, and speaking notes regarding a series of debates on Canadian history held at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto that were moderated by J.L. Granatstein and J. Michael Bliss.
File consists of correspondence, newspaper articles, brochures, and speaking notes regarding a series of debates on Canadian history held at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto that were moderated by J.L. Granatstein and J. Michael Bliss.
File consists of correspondence, newspaper articles, brochures, and speaking notes regarding a series of debates on Canadian history held at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto that were moderated by J.L. Granatstein and J. Michael Bliss.
File consists of correspondence, newspaper articles, brochures, and speaking notes regarding a series of debates on Canadian history held at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto that were moderated by J.L. Granatstein and J. Michael Bliss.
File consists of correspondence, research material, and J.L. Granatstein's speaking notes for his debate with Stephen Clarkson on the resolution, "The United States has coveted Canada since the War of 1812, " held at the Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto.
File consists of correspondence, a brochure, J.L. Granatstein's speaking notes as moderator, and a newspaper article regarding the debate between Sheila Copps and Andrew Coyne on the resolution, "That power corrupts Canadian Prime Ministers," held at the Royal Ontario Museum on 25 October 2011.
File consists of J.L. Granatstein's speaking notes as moderator regarding the debate between Sheila Copps and Andrew Coyne held at the University of Ottawa, and transcripts of the speakers' arguments in The Ottawa Citizen, 11 May 2012.
File consists of correspondence and a list of potential topics for a series of debates on Canadian history held at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto that were moderated by J.L. Granatstein and J. Michael Bliss.
Fonds consists of research files, committee files (including minutes, memoranda, etc.), correspondence, professorial files (including notes, lectures, departmental business), financial records, publication files, printed materials, and other materials. Includes records related to the following publications: "The Politics of Survival: The Conservative Party of Canada" (1967), "Canada's War: The Politics of the MacKenzie King Government, 1939-1945" (1975, 1990), "A Reader's Guide to Canadian History 2: Confederation to the Present" (1982), "Bloody Victory: Canadians and the D-Day Campaign, 1944" (1984, 1994), "The Great Brain Robbery: Canada's Universities on the Road to Ruin" (1984), "Sacred Trust: Brian Mulroney and the Conservative Party in Power" (1985), "The Collins Dictionary of Canadian History" (1986), "How Britain's Weakness Forced Canada into the Arms of the United States" (1989), "A Nation Forged in Fire: Canadians and the Second World War" (1989), "Pirouette: Pierre Trudeau and Canadian Foreign Policy" (1990), "Mutual Hostages: Canadians and Japanese in World War II" (1990), "Spy Wars: Canada and Espionage form Gouzenko to Glasnost" (1990), "For Better or For Worse: Canada and the United States to the 1990s" (1991), "Dictionary of Canadian Military History" (1992), "The Generals: The Canadian Army's Senior Commanders in the Second World War" (1993, 1995), "Empire to Umpire: Canadian Foreign Policy to the 1990s" (1994), "Victory 1945: Canadians from War to Peace" (1995), "The Good Fight: Canadians and World War II" (1995), "Yankee Go Home? Canadians and Anti-Americanism" (1996, 1997), "Petrified Campus: Canada's Universities in Crisis" (1997), "The Canadian 100: the Hundred Most Influential Canadians of the Twentieth Century" (1997, 1998), "Trudeau's Shadow: The Life and Legacy of Pierre Trudeau" (1998, 1999), "Who Killed Canadian History?" (1998, 1999), "Prime Ministers: Rating the Prime Ministers" (1999, 2000), "Our Century" (2000), "Canada's Army: Waging War and Keeping the Peace" (2002), Hell's Corner: An Illustrated History of Canada's Great War (2004), The Last Good War: An Illustrated History of Canada in the Second World War, 1939-1945 (2005), Lessons Learned? What Canada Should Learn from Afghanistan (2011), The Best Little Army in the World: The Canadians in Northwest Europe, 1944-45 (2015, 2016), The Weight of Command: Views of Canada's Second World War Generals and Those Who Knew Them (2016), Trudeau's World: The Insiders on Foreign Policy, Trade, and Defence, 1968-84 (2017), the New Canadian Readings series, the CIIA Contemporary Affairs series, as well as numerous scholarly papers, newspaper articles, and editorials. Fonds also includes a collection of reproductions of photographs from other Canadian archival institutions, documenting Canada's role in the World Wars and other significant events in Canadian history.
Also includes records connected to Granatstein's activities with the Marlborough Avenue (Toronto) Ratepayers Association, the Social Science Federation of Canada, the Canadian Historical Association, the Senate Sub-committee on Veteran's Affairs (regarding the CBC's "The Valour and the Horror"), the Historica Foundation, the Dominion Institute, the Vimy Ridge Memorial Foundation, the Never Forgotten National Memorial Foundation, the Conference of Defence Associations Institute, the Council for Canadian Security in the 21st Century, the Canadian Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute, the Canadian Institute of International Affairs, the Canadian War Museum, the Royal Society of Canada, the Order of Canada, the Special Committee on the Restructuring of the Reserves, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's mini-series, Canada: A People's History; and oral history projects exploring the Conservative Party and the Liberal Party.
Granatstein, J. L.File contains remarks for the Michael Bliss memorial and correspondence regarding his literary estate.
File consists of historical photographs collected by J.L. Granatstein from the National Archives of Canada and the U.S. Department of National Defence, likely used as research material for a publication on the Canadian army in the Korean War (1950-1953).
Files consist of correspondence and text for columns written by J.L. Granatstein for the magazine of the Royal Canadian Legion, pertaining to Canadian military history.