Looking Back: Temporal and Spatial Connections of Post-War Migration and Displacement Through the Eyes of the Toronto TelegramMain MenuLooking Back: Temporal and Spatial Connections of Post-War Migration and Displacement Through the Eyes of the Toronto TelegramBy Robyn LeLacheurTimeline of Publishing Patterns of Global Displacement between 1939-1964Photographs provided by the Toronto TelegramRefugees & Displaced Peoples: Where they came fromRefugees and MigrantsLocal Context: War Guests in TorontoTheir War Goes On: Opulence Hides Gray RefugeesArticle by Ron Poulton, Telegram Staff ReporterImage Representation of Refugees: An Analysis of Terence Wright's Article, "Moving Images: The Media Representation of Refugees"War Guests, (Im)migrants, and RefugeesThe Representation of War Guests, (Im)migrants, and Refugees Through Wartime Propaganda and IconographyAnna St.Onge25b2131b3bad72f47d55b2ab29f71ad3b83a7de6Robyn LeLacheur69764b2f71565fb3dfb6990b7c0672e799d40562
Young Brits heading home, one with a new love for hockey
12018-04-22T10:45:28-04:00Robyn LeLacheur69764b2f71565fb3dfb6990b7c0672e799d40562152"First Quebec Boat Train: These youngsters waiting outside the train gates at the Canadian Pacific Railway's Windsor Station in Montreal were passengers for the first boat train to Quebec since the outbreak of war. Child war guests from Britain they will return to the Old Country on the Stratheden which docked at Quebec City on July 30 as the first "trooper" to return Canadian servicemen from the German War by way of the ancient capital. The young Britishers were taking back to Britain many Canadian habits including a love of hockey as indicated by the lad in the left foreground who had his hockey sticks along in the humid August weather." (Caption attached)plain2018-04-22T10:46:49-04:0007/31/1945Robyn LeLacheur69764b2f71565fb3dfb6990b7c0672e799d40562