It won't likely help you, but it might help somebody who can't find a
WWI draft-age male relation in the US someday.
There were quite a lot of citizens and residents of the US who came
to Canada to join up early in WWI. (I assume the US was late getting
into that one as well as II.)
Canadian WWI enrolment forms are searchable and viewable on line.
The Books of Remembrance, where the names of Canadian war dead
since WWI are recorded, are also searchable.
Here's the direct link to the search page:
http://www.collectionscanada.ca/archivianet/cef/001042-100.01-e.htmlIf you don't find who you're looking for but want to see how it works,
search for some common name so you'll get a list of results, and then
you can click on an image to see the form (back and front) and the info
it contains -- usually date and place of birth, name and address of next
of kin, occupation, plus other bits and bobs. The database is only
searchable by first/last names (plus regimental number, should one have it).
Or aha, here's an easier way:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=190&topic_id=19846I copied the enrolment form of one of Canada's last surviving WWI veterans
in that thread. (He had lied about his age to get in, and died recently.)
... So heck, I'll just copy it here. ;)
In doing research in that database, I've really been surprised to see how
many men born in the US or resident in the US enrolled in Canada, so maybe
it will be a useful resource for someone here.
ps -- you can search by given name only, and there are a slew of Lorenzos. ;)