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Who is hailed as Canada's greatest soldier and led the Canadian Corps in the last hundred days of WW1?

  1. General Sir Arthur Currie

  2. Lieutenant-Colonel John McCrae

  3. Agnes Macphail

  4. Sir Winston Churchill

The correct answer is: General Sir Arthur Currie

General Sir Arthur Currie is hailed as Canada's greatest soldier because he led the Canadian Corps in the successful last hundred days of WW1. His leadership, strategic thinking, and bravery during this important period played a crucial role in the Allied victory. The other options, while all notable figures in Canadian history, do not fit the criteria of being a soldier or leading the Canadian Corps in the last hundred days of WW1. Lieutenant-Colonel John McCrae, although a respected soldier and author of the famous war poem "In Flanders Fields," was not a commander and did not lead the Canadian Corps. Agnes Macphail was a pioneering politician and one of the first women elected to the Canadian Parliament, but she was not a soldier and did not play a role in WW1. Sir Winston Churchill, while a significant world leader during WW1 and WW2, was not Canadian and therefore could not have led the Canadian Corps. Overall, only General Sir Arthur Currie fits the criteria stated in the question, making him the correct answer.