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Legion Magazine January/February 2016 Edição anterior

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LEGION MAGAZINE JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2016

COVER FEATURE
GOING BACK TO GALLIPOLI
“For a long time, historians thought the original Caribou Hill was inaccessible,” historian Frank Gogos told a delegation from Newfoundland visiting Turkey last September. The hill was a battlefield position taken and reinforced by the Newfoundland Regiment in 1915, and was christened Caribou Hill after the emblem on the regiment’s badge. “The regiment left Gallipoli and no markers remained to say where it was.” But Gogos has determined that one of the roads in today’s Gallipoli Peninsula Historical National Park intersects with the hill. The discovery of the famed Caribou Hill was a highlight the pilgrimage, a century after the first overseas engagement for the regiment, deployed with 29th Division in Britain’s failed attack on the strategic Gallipoli Peninsula in the Ottoman Empire (today’s Turkey). Tom MacGregor’s story of the pilgrimage leads off the January/February 2016 issue.

Also in the issue:
• The first air war at sea: In the First World War, flying machines were thrust into battle over the ocean
• Watching Syria die: Three of the smartest minds we could find weigh in on the crisis in Syria and Iraq
• The bomb girls of Ajax: Canada’s largest munitions factory was staffed mostly by women
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January/February 2016 LEGION MAGAZINE JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2016 COVER FEATURE GOING BACK TO GALLIPOLI “For a long time, historians thought the original Caribou Hill was inaccessible,” historian Frank Gogos told a delegation from Newfoundland visiting Turkey last September. The hill was a battlefield position taken and reinforced by the Newfoundland Regiment in 1915, and was christened Caribou Hill after the emblem on the regiment’s badge. “The regiment left Gallipoli and no markers remained to say where it was.” But Gogos has determined that one of the roads in today’s Gallipoli Peninsula Historical National Park intersects with the hill. The discovery of the famed Caribou Hill was a highlight the pilgrimage, a century after the first overseas engagement for the regiment, deployed with 29th Division in Britain’s failed attack on the strategic Gallipoli Peninsula in the Ottoman Empire (today’s Turkey). Tom MacGregor’s story of the pilgrimage leads off the January/February 2016 issue. Also in the issue: • The first air war at sea: In the First World War, flying machines were thrust into battle over the ocean • Watching Syria die: Three of the smartest minds we could find weigh in on the crisis in Syria and Iraq • The bomb girls of Ajax: Canada’s largest munitions factory was staffed mostly by women


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Issue Cover

Legion  |  January/February 2016  


LEGION MAGAZINE JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2016

COVER FEATURE
GOING BACK TO GALLIPOLI
“For a long time, historians thought the original Caribou Hill was inaccessible,” historian Frank Gogos told a delegation from Newfoundland visiting Turkey last September. The hill was a battlefield position taken and reinforced by the Newfoundland Regiment in 1915, and was christened Caribou Hill after the emblem on the regiment’s badge. “The regiment left Gallipoli and no markers remained to say where it was.” But Gogos has determined that one of the roads in today’s Gallipoli Peninsula Historical National Park intersects with the hill. The discovery of the famed Caribou Hill was a highlight the pilgrimage, a century after the first overseas engagement for the regiment, deployed with 29th Division in Britain’s failed attack on the strategic Gallipoli Peninsula in the Ottoman Empire (today’s Turkey). Tom MacGregor’s story of the pilgrimage leads off the January/February 2016 issue.

Also in the issue:
• The first air war at sea: In the First World War, flying machines were thrust into battle over the ocean
• Watching Syria die: Three of the smartest minds we could find weigh in on the crisis in Syria and Iraq
• The bomb girls of Ajax: Canada’s largest munitions factory was staffed mostly by women
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Legion Magazine -- We Are Canadian History, We Are Canada Today

We are Canada’s biggest history magazine. We tell exciting stories from Canada’s military past and present. From Vimy Ridge to D-Day, through the Korean War, the Cold War and into the deserts of Afghanistan we have been there. Canada’s most influential historians bring you through the mud, dogfights and roadside bombs to a greater understanding of the events that have shaped Canadian history. Legion Magazine has been the authority on military history for almost a century. Rare archival and modern war photography presents the gritty and un-glorified face of warfare.

Legion Magazine publishes six issues a year as well as special volumes with dozens of powerful archival photographs. Join the nearly one million Canadians who read our stories, and let us tell you how we began and where we are going.

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