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In January 1941, the hulking twenty-one thousand ton troopship Edmund B. Alexander docked in St John's harbor, carrying a thousand American soldiers sent to join the thousands of Canadian troops protecting Newfoundland against attack by Germany. France had fallen, Great Britain was fighting for its survival, and Newfoundland - then a dominion of Britain - was North America's first line of defence. Although the German invasion never came, St John's found itself occupied by both Allied Canadian and American forces.
World War, 1939-1945 --- Civil-military relations --- History --- St. John's (N.L.) --- History, Military --- Strategic aspects
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Deindustrializing Montreal challenges the deepening divergence of class and race analysis by recognizing the intimate relationship between capitalism, class struggles, and racial inequality in historically white Point Saint-Charles, and multiracial Little Burgundy, home to the city's English-speaking Black community.
Deindustrialization. --- Economic history. --- 1900-1999 --- Montréal (Québec) --- Economic conditions --- Race relations --- History --- Social conditions --- Black History. --- Gentrification. --- Heritage. --- Industrial Culture. --- Lachine Canal. --- Little Burgundy. --- Montreal. --- Negro Community Centre. --- Neighbourhood. --- Oral. --- Pointe-Saint-Charles. --- Postindustrialism. --- Racial Capitalism. --- Urban Renewal. --- Working-Class.
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