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   Johnny Côté  

Canadian Expeditionary Force to Siberia

1918 - 1919

 

My Maternal Grandfather Johnny Côté

Company D, 259th Batallion

Siberian Expeditionary Force

1918 - 1919


My maternal grandfather Johnny Côté served in the Canadian Expeditionary Force which was sent to Siberia at the end of 1918. Although the First World War had ended on November 11, Canada was still committed to helping the Russian Tsar against the Bolsheviks. In the morning of December 23, 1918, my grandfather and 1200 other Canadian soldiers boarded a small Japanese ship, the "Teista", in Vancouver harbour and began their journey to Siberia.

My grandfather wrote a short story about this trip, titled " Un Noel en mer "  (A Christmas at sea). The story has been posted on a separate page of this website.

Below is a brief description on the Siberian Expeditionary Force from the Canadian War Museum.

Donald Courcy


Siberian Expeditionary Force

As part of an Allied intervention force, Canada sent several contingents of troops to Russia in 1918 to support the government’s "White" forces against the revolutionary "Reds."

Revolution and Civil War in Russia

By the end of 1917, Russian Tsar Nicholas II had been deposed by Bolshevik revolutionaries who then made a separate peace with Germany, plunging Russia into a bloody civil war. The "Reds," led by Vladimir Lenin, fought to hold power against "White" forces representing the recently deposed Romanov dynasty and other conservative and nationalist forces.

Canadians against Bolshevism

In 1918, Tsarist Russia’s former allies sent troops into northern Russia, around Murmansk and Archangel to support the "Whites," to guard supplies previously given on credit to the Tsarist government, and to assist in re-opening an eastern front against the Central Powers. The Canadian government agreed to send another 4,000 troops to assist British and other anti-Bolshevik troops in Siberia. Canada, like most Western countries, viewed Bolshevism as a long-term threat to their own governments but, in the short term, merely wanted Russia back in the war against Germany and Austria.

Short and Unsuccessful Involvement

Allied involvement in Siberia was short-lived and, ultimately, unsuccessful. In most areas, more numerous and highly motivated "Red" forces gradually gained the upper hand over the disorganized, badly led "Whites," while war weary Western governments lost interest in the fighting and brought home their troops. The Siberian Expeditionary Force had returned to Canada by June 1919, having suffered 24 casualties.

.... Canadian War Museum


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