The Migration of British Ex-Servicemen to Canada and the Role
of the Naval and Military Emigration League. 1899-1914
Authors
Kent Fedorowich
Abstract
Efforts to settle British ex-servicemen in Canada prior to 1914 formed a significant
precedent for the large-scale, state-supported empire soldier settlement schemes after
World War I. Initially designed to bolster colonial defence and sustain the British connection,
these schemes possessed an important social dimension; land was a useful method
of rewarding ex-servicemen for years of devoted and faithful service. Public concern for
the welfare of Britain's soldiery continued to grow throughout the nineteenth century,
fuelled in part by the military shortcomings exposed during the Crimean War of 1854-1856
and the second Anglo-Boer War of 1899-1902. As the government grappled with the
problems of military efficiency and administration, subsequent investigations revealed the
immense problems many servicemen faced when they returned to civilian life. As military
reform and imperial defence became increasingly important political issues, the plight of
the British ex-servicemen and army pensioners attracted the attention of a growing
number of philanthropists and social reformers. Indeed, many of the debates which
emerged on post-World War I soldier settlement, migration and post-service employment
had been clearly rehearsed. Nowhere is this more undoubtedly demonstrated than in the
attempts by the Naval and Military Emigration League (NMEL) to involve the British and
Canadian governments in the migration to Canada of British ex-servicemen prior to 1914.