The Great War Tour - Norm Christie
http://docstudio.tvo.org/story/great-war-tour
About the Doc Series
Military historian Norm Christie hosts a new documentary series, which commemorates the 100th anniversary of the Great War. In this unique series, Norm Christie takes audiences on a pilgrimage to significant Great War sites – some famous, others almost totally unknown. He discovers and tells the stories of Canadian men and women whose skills and courage turned Canada into a force on the world stage.
About the Episodes
ARTHUR CURRIE: MASTER OF WAR:
General Sir Arthur Currie led the Canadian Corps to a series of spectacular victories hastening the end of the Great War. Norm Christie retraces Currie’s rise from amateur soldier to the most successful Allied general. He asks why Currie was feted throughout Europe and the Empire yet maligned by enemies and forgotten at home.
THE MISSING:
Few Canadians know that 20,000 Canadian soldiers killed in the Great War are still missing. Some lie in unnamed graves others vanished on battlefields in France and Belgium. Norm Christie reveals why so many men disappeared. He solves a 90 year old mystery finding 44 men lost at the Battle of Vimy Ridge.
SACRED PLACES:
Norm Christie takes us to the Western Front battlefields - where ‘the real war is in the cemeteries’ – to discover how these faraway, exquisitely designed and little visited burial grounds, with their thousands of Canadian dead, are truly our ‘sacred places’.
THE VIMY PILGRIMAGE:
Norm Christie reveals the extraordinary story of the largest peacetime armada in Canadian history – the spectacular 1936 Vimy Pilgrimage to Europe - to honor the 60,000 dead of the Great War - and to unveil Canada's magnificent war memorial at Vimy Ridge.
About Norm Christie
Norm Christie is the author of the For King & Empire book series and host of several popular and critically acclaimed series, including For King and Empire, For King and Country, Lost Battlefields, In Korea with Norm Christie and Battlefield Mysteries.
Norm spent six years with the Commonwealth War Graves Commission in England (1990-1993) and in France (1993-1996), including three years as Chief Records Officer.
A metallurgical engineer by trade, Christie has combined his varied background and 30 years of research to produce a unique view into the First World War.
Since 1996 he has written 20 books on the Canadian Military History experience in two World Wars.