Arthur Currie: The court battle that put the First World War on trial
OTTAWA — It was known at the time as the Third Battle of Mons, a battle that played out not on the bloody fields of Europe but in a courtroom in the quaint Ontario town of Cobourg nearly a decade after the First World War had officially ended.
On the surface, the battle was a libel trial after Canada’s top general from the war sued the local newspaper for an editorial that had accused Sir Arthur Currie of sending Canadian soldiers to their deaths at the end of the war for his own glory.
But the showdown raised bigger questions: What is the right cost for victory? How many lives are too many? And how does hindsight affect how a country comes to terms with the terrible price of war?
Now, in the very same place the trial was held more than 90 years ago, those questions have resurfaced. The drama that held Canadians in thrall ago has been revived in a moving play entitled “Last Day, Last Hour” — staged in the original courtroom.


