
Canadian military photographers: The silent witnesses of war
[caption id="attachment_2945" align="alignnone" width="300"] Airwoman E.F. Nightingale, served as a Canadian military photographer during the Second World War.[/caption] More than 70 years ago, during the height of the Second World War, Canadian military photographers were silent witnesses to a nation at war, all with the aim of capturing the moment on film, however grim.But many of the pictures of Canadian military personnel from the Second World War were staged for the media to use back home, shot by former press photographers who signed up to chronicle Canada’s involvement in the conflict.According to Collections Canada, late in 1939, Frank Badgley, commissioner of the Canadian Government Motion Picture Bureau, prepared a report recommending the Canadian Army organize a special film and photographic unit.The purposes of this unit, he wrote, would be:“… to record in motion pictures and photographs the day by day activities and achievements of…those units actively engaged in the combat zones, not only to provide an historical record, but to provide informational and inspirational material for…the maintenance of public morale and the stimulation of recruiting… [and]…to provide material for world wide distribution through the newsreels, news photo organizations, the press and other outlets… that will serve to keep Canada’s war efforts vividly before not only our own people but the rest of the world.”In 1940, a public relations photographic section was formed at Canadian Military Headquarters in London, England. It was the forerunner of the Canadian Army Film and Photo Unit set up in September 1941. Back in Canada, the photographic section of the Army’s Directorate of Public Relations was organized at Ottawa in 1942.In March 1940, Flying Officer Fergus Grant, the air press liaison officer of the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF), asked that the RCAF’s Photographic Establishment to create a “Press Photographic Section” for the purposes of “securing...


























