Life on the Home Front: Montreal 1939-1945

Patricia Burns

The Second World War came hard on the heels of a devastatingDepression in which families struggled to survive.Life on the HomeFrontpaints a poignant portrait of a city coping with the demandsof war. Montrealers, along with other Canadians, were being askedfor more sacrifice but this time it would include sending their sons,brothers, fathers and husbands off to war. Montrealers had to"Use it Up, Wear it Out, Make it Do, and Do Without" as one slogancautioned, and this they did. Many women went to work for the firsttime and often enjoyed the heady success of doing "a man's job"and earning a regular salary.

Life on the Home Frontdescribes how dissent was also an ever-presentreality. Montreal was often awash with anti-war banners and angryspeeches which kept the police and journalists busy. Prime MinisterWilliam Lyon Mackenzie King had to walk a fine line in keeping thecountry together and united at a time of grave crisis.

All was not gloom and doom, however. Servicemen passing throughMontreal as well as locals could enjoy the most vibrant nightlifein Canada. The cozy relationship between city officials, the policeand the owners of "disorderly houses" as well as the shady characterswho ran gambling establishments gave the name "Sin City"to Canada's metropolis.

Biography & Autobiography 2012

Patricia Burnsis the author of The Shamrock and the Shield: An Oral History of the Irish and They Were So Young: Montrealers Remember WWII. She lives in Montreal.

Other books by Patricia Burns:
They Were so Young: Montrealers Remember World War II
The Shamrock and the Shield: An Oral History of the Irish in Montreal
Burns
Trade paperback
160 pp 8.5" x 5.5"
ISBN13: 9781550653410

CDN $20.00
US & International
US $20.00