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Post by Forcell Thu 14 Feb 2019, 1:06 pm

Commemorating 100 years of Canadian military in the Rhine Valley



History - Topics & Posted Articles  - Page 31 Wwi_postwar-photos-crossing-the-rhine-canada-and-the-first-world-war
The 2nd Canadian Infantry Battalion crossing the Bridge at Bonn. The Canadian Corps Commander is taking the salute on the left. December 12, 1918. Photographer Unknown. Photo taken from Report of the Ministry: Overseas Military Forces of Canada 1918.






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Post by Phrampton Thu 14 Feb 2019, 4:22 pm

Recruits of quality

Posted on February 14, 2019 by Maj Mathias Joost

History - Topics & Posted Articles  - Page 31 Leonard-braithwaite
Leonard Braithwaite became the first Black member of a provincial legislature in Canada, being elected to the Ontario legislature in 1963. He served as groundcrew in the RCAF’s No. 6 Bomber Group during the Second World War. In this photo, he poses in front of a war memorial in London, England, shortly after V-E Day. The Memory Project Photo






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Post by Cypher Thu 14 Feb 2019, 7:30 pm

World’s BIGGEST / MOST POWERFUL GUN ever built! (Heavy Gustav Railway Gun.)



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Post by Zapper Thu 14 Feb 2019, 9:05 pm

World War One



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Post by kodiak Fri 15 Feb 2019, 8:24 am

The Hidden Truth of World War 2



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Post by Cool~Way Tue 19 Feb 2019, 7:37 am

February 19, 2019

On 75th anniversary of D-Day, Canadians know little about key WWII battle: Ipsos poll

By Mike Drolet Global News





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Post by Hammercore Wed 27 Feb 2019, 7:43 am

History - Topics & Posted Articles  - Page 31 15628111_web1_copy_TST-terrace-mutiny1
Mutineers carried banners like this to protest being forced into service overseas. (Terrace Standard archive)



Zombies in Terrace: Uncovering Canada’s most significant mutiny

The Terrace Mutiny, a book 35-years in the making, was unveiled this month

BRITTANY GERVAIS / Feb. 26, 2019

In 1944, hundreds and then thousands of soldiers stationed in Terrace during the Second World War, took up arms for five days to protest the Canadian government’s decision to send them overseas.

Although the event from Nov. 24 to Nov. 29, 1944 was the longest lasting mutiny in Canadian history, there was still little known and even less discussed over what happened, Heritage Park Museum curator Kelsey Wiebe says.

“We have so many people tell us that they had no idea that a mutiny had ever happened in Terrace, people who had lived in Terrace all their lives,” Wiebe says.

That led to the Terrace and District Museum Society’s decision to tell the story in the Terrace Mutiny, a book unveiled to city council on Feb. 11. In 2015, the society received a one-time $33,000 grant from the federal government’s World War Commemorations Community Fund to complete the project and create a website (terracemutiny.com) with more information on the book and lesson plans.

“The book will lead to further understanding of the mutiny and Terrace’s place in this very significant episode in Canadian history,” Wiebe says.

With a population of fewer than 500 people at the time, Terrace saw 3,000 soldiers from the 15th Canadian Infantry Brigade move in almost overnight during the summer of 1942, putting a strain on the small town’s resources and services.

Two years later on Nov. 25, 1944, the book’s preface reads, more than 1,500 men marched down from their camp on one of the bench areas into Terrace, carrying protest banners and chanting “Down with conscription!”

This was in response to a change made to the 1940 National Resources Mobilization Act (NRMA) that drafted eligible men for home defence only. But by 1942, pressure for conscription to include mandatory service overseas mounted, and efforts by active servicemen to encourage NRMA men to go overseas only inspired discrimination against the ‘zombies’ — the term given to men who were drafted but who had not volunteered to go overseas.

In Terrace and camps across the province, recruitment numbers had been declining, except right after D-Day, with many NRMA men feeling “no real desire or connection to fight a war on European soil for a government they felt abandoned them during the Depression,” the book notes. The remote geographical isolation of Terrace also affected morale.

But on Nov. 23, 1944 the federal government ordered 16,000 men to replenish the Canadian Army, depleted after heavy fighting in Italy and the D-Day landing in Normandy. Growing concern turned to anger over the decision, and soldiers in Terrace decided they would begin an official protest.

While there were other demonstrations in Vernon, Prince George, Courtenay, Chilliwack, Nanaimo and Port Alberni, Terrace was the only place where protests went further to a full-scale mutiny, with mass disobedience to military orders to protesters arming themselves to threats against officers.

The book’s publication was a project 35-years in the making, and started when the District of Terrace (now the City of Terrace) hired summer student Karen Kuechle (Goetz) to do research and write about the mutiny over two summers in 1983 and 1984. This was after the event piqued the interest of a film company in Hollywood. Wiebe says there are still requests from documentary filmmakers about the story.

However, Kuechle’s manuscript was never published and was left in the city’s collection for years until the original copy was given to Wiebe. This was mostly because multiple book and magazine publications declined to publish it, either because of length or lack of interest.

“Everyone said it was not an interesting enough story and it was not historical, and it was too close to the event itself,” Wiebe says of the correspondence.

In 2014, when interviews were conducted for the society’s oral history publication Preserving the Past for the Present: An Oral History Project, Wiebe realized many of the interviews contained stories of the war years and the mutiny, which prompted the museum curator to pursue publication of Kuechle’s manuscript supplemented with new information that had become uncensored since the 1980s.

“Censorship, a federal government badly wanting to suppress news of the mutiny to avoid more trouble elsewhere and perhaps even a desire that the whole affair should just be forgotten combined to sweep the event under the carpet,” the book reads.

The process wasn’t necessarily straight forward — there was still hostility to the Terrace Mutiny project from some older veterans who were reluctant to talk about the story, which had previously been “shrouded in shame, secrecy and guilt,” Wiebe says.

“We had World War II veterans who had been in the trenches and said when you talk about this story and give this story coverage, you’re glorifying a shameful chapter of our history,” she says. “A lot of times that sense of shamefulness comes from close community connection and wanting to be proud of your community.”

The book contains accounts from witnesses from when the army first arrived in Terrace, when the mutiny began, the federal government’s censorship of coverage of the event, and the point when the mutiny began to wane after the military regained control.

Most ‘zombies’ were then shipped out of Terrace beginning in late 1944, and the military left “almost as quickly as it arrived” in 1945.

When the Secrecy Act ended for the archived material for the mutiny, Goetz, the manuscript’s original writer, was the first person to look at the first wave of documents after they were kept censored for 40 years.

She says Jim Fulton, who was the MP at the time, gathered all the material from Ottawa and sent it to her, revealing an important side of the story that was previously unknown.

“When I got back to the city in the summer [1984] I had boxes of archived material from Ottawa, the court documents word for word, the transcripts, what went on…that was fascinating, and it made a huge difference in the story,” Goetz says.

However, the book notes, it is difficult to prove that any of the soldiers actually served jail time for participating in the mutiny.

“Some of these guys, if not all of them, were put on trains headed back east. I think some of them even jumped off at various points and blind eyes were turned to that,” Goetz says.

“Mutiny is huge, and when your country is just getting out of a war or finishing a war, you don’t need bad press.”

Goetz received a copy of the Terrace Mutiny this week, and says she was “pleasantly surprised” to see it finally published. She now lives in Merritt, B.C. and is a school principal. Over the years she has spoken about the Terrace mutiny to her social studies classes.

“It hasn’t been out of my mind that’s for sure,” Goetz says. “I know some people are going to be disappointed or maybe upset that it went as far as it did, but it’s a moment in Canadian history that’s worth remembering, if not for the lessons that come out of it, but how people and their opinions, who they are and where they come from, matter when we make these big decisions.”

The mutiny left a lasting impact on Terrace, and Wiebe says she agrees that there are still lessons to learn from this chapter of Terrace history.

“It’s interesting always to try and understand how we have dealt with large projects like the military installation, the development of Alcan, and European people settling in the area, and how that has been understood by local people,” she says.

“There’s probably more [information] that still hasn’t been released, but we found quite a bit of material and were able to understand a fuller picture of what happened.”

The Terrace Mutiny will be provided to schools within CMSD82, non-profit organizations and is available for sale at Misty River Books.




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Post by Stealth Sun 03 Mar 2019, 4:05 pm

Kinmel Park flu pandemic and riot death soldiers remembered March 3, 2019



History - Topics & Posted Articles  - Page 31 _105866621_mediaitem105866620
There were no direct descendents at the event but members of Rhuddlan History Society filmed it to send copies to Canada



The deaths of 83 Canadian servicemen and two nurses in north Wales have been marked 100 years on.

Most died of a flu pandemic at the Kinmel Park camp near Abergele, Conwy county.

But a handful were shot in riots that broke out, with veterans angry at the long wait for repatriation home after World War One.

A service took place on Sunday at their war graves at St Margaret's Church, Bodelwyddan.

It was attended by soldiers from 203 Field Hospital and nurses from Glan Clwyd Hospital, who have links to Canada.

Wreaths were then laid on behalf of the Queen, the Canadian High Commission and the Royal British Legion.



History - Topics & Posted Articles  - Page 31 _105866623_mediaitem105866622
The event was organised by a local branch of the Royal British Legion





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Post by Thunder Thu 07 Mar 2019, 5:04 pm

Blake Stilwell
Mar. 07, 2019


Civil War vets wanted to invade Canada to liberate Ireland

In the years following the American Civil War, Canada was still very much a possession of the British Empire. As such, it had a number of official fortifications and other important areas along its border with the United States. One of those was Fort Erie, directly across the Niagara from the American city of Buffalo, New York. In June 1866, some 850 men crossed the Niagara from Buffalo, intent on capturing the fort.

They were Irishmen, and they were going to conquer Canada to free their home country.


History - Topics & Posted Articles  - Page 31 980x

Irish immigrants flowed into the United States in droves following the Acts of Union that saw British domination of Ireland since the early 1800s. The Great Irish Famine of the late 1840s also saw a huge emigration of Irish people to the United States. By 1860, there were more than 1.6 million people of Irish descent who called themselves American – and upwards of 175,000 of them were about to serve in the Union Army.

The Irish made-up 40 percent of foreign-born enlistments in the Civil War, and were 17 percent of the overall Union force. When these battle-hardened veterans returned home after the war, many of them were headed to New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New England. It was there that Irish National leaders were waiting to use the veterans' new talent for combat.


History - Topics & Posted Articles  - Page 31 980x
To be fair, when this plan was hatched, there were upwards of 10,000 Fenians.


Called the Fenian Brotherhood, its original aim was to send money, arms, and supplies to Irish rebels in Ireland via Irish émigrés living in the U.S. Many in the movement were soon convinced that liberating Ireland through a direct uprising was impossible, so they decided to step up their game a bit. If the Irish couldn't mount an invasion of Ireland, then they would mount an invasion of Canada, the nearest British-held country and trade it for Irish independence.

T.W. Sweeny a former Union general who also served in the Mexican War hatched a three-pronged plan to invade Canada, set up an Irish government-in-exile, and pressure Britain to release Ireland to the Irish. It called for multiple incursions into Ontario in an effort to draw the main British force out of Quebec. With that done, the main Fenian force would invade Quebec, cutting off lines of communication and supply.


History - Topics & Posted Articles  - Page 31 980x
Noncommissioned officers of the 10th Royal Regiment of Toronto Volunteers, circa 1870.


On June 1, 1850, a force of Irish-American members of the Fenian Brotherhood landed in Ontario and planted the Irish flag. They tore up railroads and cut the telegraph wires, effectively cutting Fort Erie off from the rest of Canada. Then, 600 Fenians marched westward. At the same time, the commander of British forces in Canada activated upwards of 22,000 troops to put the insurrection down. While the larger force formed up, 850 men under Lt. Col. Alfred Booker were dispatched to pin the Irish down and keep them from wreaking any more havoc.

The two forces met at Ridgeway in Ontario, Canada. It was the first time an all-Canadian force was led by a Canadian commander. Unfortunately for the Canadians, the Fenians were well-armed and skilled fighters, having just braved the battlefields of the American Civil War. The Canadians were soon reinforced, and the superior numbers caused the Fenians to retreat.


History - Topics & Posted Articles  - Page 31 980x
No. 5 Company of the Queen's Own Rifles.


The Fenians were repulsed elsewhere along their proposed lines of attack. Having assumed that Irish Canadians would join the uprising, they were surprised at how the Canadians responded to their invasion. By the time British forces mounted a full response, many of the Fenians had retreated back across the river, the United States Navy was stopping Fenian barges from bringing reinforcements, and the U.S. declared total neutrality in Canadian affairs.

There would be more Fenian uprisings in later years, but for the time being, the push to trade Canada for Ireland would not come to pass.








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Post by Thunder Thu 14 Mar 2019, 1:41 pm

History - Topics & Posted Articles  - Page 31 15937987_web1_Bill-Wigley

Veteran Profile: Lacombe veteran recounts time in service, Part One

VVOC Founding Executive Director Allan Cameron profiles a veteran in this monthly column

Mar. 14, 2019


Bill Wigley joined the Calgary Tank Regiment in 1941, and eventually sent across the English Channel to Dieppe on August 19th,1942. This deployment was better known as “Operation Jubilee”. He was taken prisoner and held at Stalag VIII.

“We actually joined as a militia, knowing from the first that would be a Tank Corp. And so, I was probably wearing a uniform in the militia maybe eight months prior to mobilizing. I wanted to get married first and I did. Some went in the fall to Calgary and I went in the spring. I didn’t seem to think there was any big hurry to get to Europe.

We left Canada on the ship Louis Pasteur. It was a very top-heavy boat. It was meant for the south seas, not for the Atlantic. And then of course we had to go slow as the slowest boat, which was an old tub freighter and very slow. It took us 11 days to get to England, keeping out of the traffic from the German submarines. We had no problems.

War is war, and if you know your machine and you know your troops and know your order, you should know what to do. You see I was fortunate enough to be able to drive the tank, run the radio, load the gun, shoot the gun. I had all those qualifications and so it didn’t matter to me, I’ll drive if you like, I can be gunner. My main position was tank commander.

When I found out I was going to Dieppe, I knew one thing. That they didn’t play with rubber bullets, I knew that. And even though I didn’t have a lot of faith in the tank, it’s all you had and we were highly trained in what we had and we could use what we had to great advantage. And so, no I had really no concerns. I don’t think any of us appreciated landing in town. Why didn’t we land out in the country somewhere where we could buzz around? Once you sign that paper you do as you’re told. Whether you like it or not.

Coming up to landing in Dieppe, well, you know in some belts of ammunition for machine guns there is one in three that is a tracer, or one in five is a tracer. Now when you looked at Dieppe, all you could see, of course it was kind of dark. You could see the tracers. And it was just thick, it was just thick. A lot like that Christmas tree there, that’s what it looked like, only tracer bullets. And so, it was a hot landing, there was no question about that.

They dropped some kind of shell into where the controls were on our ship, on this landing craft, and wounded our skipper. He probably knew this was his last run because he went full steam ahead and ran it right up on shore because our LCT (Landing Craft Tank) was burning. So, we came out on dry ground, there was nothing to it. The skipper died, I wouldn’t say immediately, but might as well have been. He was a hero.

We were second tank out. One had already gone out and we would follow. He had like a snow fence on each track that would fall down so we could crawl up onto the promenade. They were to start bombing that town at midnight and quit just before 6. At six o’clock we were to land and don’t move any farther than 100 yards every five minutes because they (our fighter aircraft) are strafing to keep everybody down as we are moving in. That makes sense doesn’t it? But this town, it seemed they never dropped a bomb. The air force was called off at 11 o’clock at night.”

Bill lived in Lacombe, and passed away on May 10, 2012.





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Post by Victor Thu 14 Mar 2019, 3:33 pm

MAR 14, 2019

When Irish-Americans Attacked Canada—With the White House's Blessing

Christopher Klein


These Civil War veterans orchestrated one of the most audacious acts of the Fenian Brotherhood in the Americas.

In the spring of 1866, a band of Irish-Americans who fought on both sides of the Civil War united to undertake one of the most fantastical missions in military history: invade the British province of Canada, seize the territory and ransom it back to the British for Ireland's independence.

It may sound like complete blarney, but it actually happened. And not just once, but five times between 1866 and 1871, in what are collectively known as the Fenian Raids.

While the United States and its northern neighbor currently share the longest peaceful international border in the world, that wasn’t always the case. During America’s first century, the U.S. and Canada were uneasy neighbors. Armed conflicts erupted periodically along the boundary line, which was a no-man’s land frequented by counterfeiters and smugglers. American anger toward Canada surged during the Civil War when it became a haven for draft dodgers, escaped prisoners of war and Confederate agents who plotted hostile covert operations—including raids on border towns, the firebombing of New York City and the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln.


Fenians like John O’Neill imported their anti-British fervor across the pond.
To the Irish-American members of the Fenian Brotherhood, which sought to end 700 years of colonial rule by England in Ireland, Canada was a natural target. Why? Because it was the nearest parcel of the British Empire to the U.S.

Like many Fenians, John O’Neill could never forgive the British for the horrors he had witnessed as a boy coming of age during the Great Hunger. After the Emerald Isle had endured seven centuries of attempts by its occupying neighbor to exterminate its culture, many Irish saw the lackluster British response to their catastrophic potato crop failure in 1845 as nothing less than an endeavor to eradicate them altogether.

Radicalized by the Great Hunger and his grandfather’s tales of 17th-century ancestors who dared to take up arms against the Crown, the teenaged O’Neill joined hundreds of thousands of Irishmen fleeing to the United States. When the Civil War broke out, he joined the Union Army, sustained serious injuries during the siege of Knoxville and had a horse shot out from under him during the Peninsular Campaign.

That conflict, however, served as a training ground for the real war he wished to wage—a revolution to overthrow British rule in Ireland.

The simple logic of attacking the British just over the American border—rather than an ocean away in Ireland—seduced O’Neill to join the Fenian Brotherhood. “Canada is a province of Great Britain; the English flag floats over it and English soldiers protect it,” he wrote. “Wherever the English flag and English soldiers are found, Irishmen have a right to attack.”



History - Topics & Posted Articles  - Page 31 Irish-canada-gettyimages-71088933
Fenians take possession of St. Armand in Canada during the Fenian Invasions, June 1866.


The White House wasn’t opposed to the plan.
Far from some whiskey-fueled daydream, the Irish-American plan to invade Canada was carefully crafted for months by veteran Civil War officers, including the one-armed general Thomas William Sweeny. Although an attack on a foreign country with which the United States maintained peaceful relations ran afoul of American neutrality laws, the plan also had the tacit approval of the White House.

Indeed, President Andrew Johnson proved more than willing to let the Fenian Brotherhood twist the tail of the British lion as he sought to pressure Great Britain to pay reparations for the damage caused by Confederate warships, such as the CSS Alabama, that had been built in British ports. In addition, many Americans hoped Canada would become the next territory to be absorbed by the United States as it fulfilled its expansionist Manifest Destiny. The U.S. govern­ment sold surplus weapons to the Irish militants, and Johnson met personally with their leaders, reportedly giving them his implicit backing. The Irishmen were free to establish their own state in exile—complete with their own president, constitution, currency and capital in the heart of New York City.


First forays across the border were victorious.
Summoned to the battlefront in late May 1866, O’Neill left behind his wife, two-month old son and business worth $50,000 in Nashville to attack Canada. When the invasion’s commanders failed to show in Buffalo, New York, O’Neill was given the reins to the 800-man attack force, which called itself the Irish Republican Army.

In the early morning hours of June 1, 1866, O’Neill fulfilled a lifelong dream by leading his men across the Niagara River and the international border. “The governing passion of my life apart from my duty to my God is to be at the head of an Irish Army battling against England for Ireland’s rights,” he declared. “For this I live, and for this if necessary I am willing to die.”

O’Neill proved to be a talented commander and tactician when he confronted a combined British and Canadian force the following day outside the village of Ridgeway, 20 miles south of Niagara Falls. Although outnumbered, the grizzled army of Civil War veterans used its experience to rout a makeshift defense force that included farm boys and University of Toronto students who had never once fired a gun. O’Neill followed that up with another triumph in a guerilla fight through the streets of Fort Erie.

It marked the first Irish military victory over forces from the British Empire since 1745.



History - Topics & Posted Articles  - Page 31 Irish-canada-gettyimages-463929299
A cartoon illustrating a Canadian kicking a representative of the Irish Fenian movement out of Canada and back to America where President Grant is waiting.


Failures followed.
The attack made front-page news across the country, and Irish-Americans poured into Buffalo to join the fight. The American government, however, severed the Fenian supply lines in what the Irishmen saw as a betrayal by Johnson. Forced to retreat, O’Neill shook hands with nearly two dozen prisoners of war, informed them they were again free men and vowed to return to Canada soon.

He would be a man of his word. After assuming the leadership of the Fenian Brotherhood, O’Neill launched further attacks on Canada in 1870 and 1871. They failed utterly and in one instance comically, when O’Neill seized two buildings he thought to be in Canada that turned out to be firmly in the United States.

O’Neill and the Fenian Brotherhood may not have delivered independence to Ireland, but they left a lasting legacy. They made the United States a player in Anglo-Irish relations—a role that continues to this day in Northern Ireland. And they demonstrated that America could provide Irish republicans with a base of operations beyond the legal reach of the British government from which they could raise money, ship arms and plot military operations. The transatlantic revolutionary structure established by the Fenians would prove vital more than 50 years later when Ireland eventually gained its freedom.

The Fenian Brotherhood did succeed, however, in forging the creation of a new nation—just not the one it intended. Concerned about the inability of the British government to defend its border from an invasion from the south, Canada gained the right to self-government in 1867, pointing it toward its ultimate independence.









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Post by Maxstar Mon 18 Mar 2019, 9:35 pm

The strange death of Fred Tucker
It will never be known whether it was an accident, suicide or just plain indifference that killed Fred Tucker.

Daniel Caudle - Published on: March 18, 2019

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Clinton Great War Veterans fought for veterans’ rights, benefits
DAVID YATES Special to News Record

It will never be known whether it was an accident, suicide or just plain indifference that killed Fred Tucker.

Tucker was a Great War veteran who had returned home shattered in mind and body.His death was a tragic reminder that Great War veterans had to organize to fight for pensions and decent treatment.

Tucker was born in England on Nov. 24, 1872. He was a tailor by trade and had moved to Canada before the war began. In December 1915, Tucker was singled when he enlisted in the Exeter Company of the 161st battalion. At 43, he was one of the oldest men in the Huron battalion when it went overseas in late 1916. In December, Tucker was part of a draft of 100 men transferred to the 58th battalion serving at the front in France.

In 1917, Tucker took part in the fighting at Vimy Ridge and Hill 70. Despite his age, Tucker’s superiors rated his conduct and character ‘good.’ However, in July 1917, a medical board reported that Tucker was unable to carry on because of pain in the legs and back.”

Although Tucker tried to carry on, his legs and knees had swelled, his back was stooped and his complexion had turned ashen grey. One doctor noted that Tucker looked “somewhat older” than his 45 years. Tucker was declared medically unfit and sent to a labour battalion in Canada before he was discharged from service on March 11, 1918.

Even though his service file estimated that he had only a “10% chance of earning a living,” Tucker took a job at the Jackson Manufacturing Company in Clinton.

In February 1919, as returning veterans began the difficult task of reintegrating into civilian life, the Clinton chapter of the Great War Veterans’ Association was formed. The GWVA of Canada was established in 1917 as a trade union for veterans. The GWVA was instrumental in fighting for job retraining, pensions for widows, orphans and the maimed. They were also dedicated to keeping the memory of the war dead alive for future generations. One way they sought to commemorate the dead was by choosing the blood red poppy from Colonel John McCrae’s poem “In Flanders Fields” as the official symbol of remembrance.

Fred Tucker was appointed first secretary of the Clinton branch when it set up its club room on the second floor of the McKay Block. The GWVA held dances, tag days, sporting events and other fundraisers to raise money for veterans’ and community causes. They organized Victoria Day, Dominion Day and Peace Day celebrations in Clinton in 1919.

One unusual event at the Peace Day celebration was the War Baby contest held to choose the most attractive baby born while their father was overseas.

The Clinton GWVA also sent a large contingent to London, Ontario to welcome the Prince of Wales in September 1919.

Yet, despite Tucker’s best attempts to readjust to civilian life, he could not put the demons of his war experience behind him. In July, he voluntarily signed himself into the Soldiers’ Civil Re-establishment Hospital in Guelph for “nervous debility” (a.k.a. shell shock).

Tucker had been a patient for only a few weeks when on Thursday, Aug. 7, 1919, he was spotted by other patients walking away from the hospital grounds. Hospital staff seemed unconcerned when Tucker failed to return for bed check.

It was not until Sunday, Aug. 10, three days after he wandered from the hospital, that a farmer found Tucker’s ‘terribly’ mangled remains at the bottom of a 50-foot quarry. The fall had smashed Tucker’s skull and the Clinton New Era reported that “the full nature of his injuries were not at first discernible owing to the ravages of insects on his face.”

An inquest ruled Tucker’s death ‘accidental’, claiming that he became dizzy and slipped and fell into the quarry pit.

No one dared hint that his death might have been suicide and, certainly, no one asked why it took three days and the discovery of Tucker’s mangled remains before anyone noticed that he was missing.

The only meaningful recommendation to come out of the inquest was to put a fence around the quarry.

The cause of Tucker’s death was all the more infuriating because the Guelph hospital refused to turn the body over to the Clinton GWVA for an autopsy and burial because “the hospital authorities thought it best to bury him in Guelph.” Single and without immediate relatives in Canada, it was easy to sweep under the carpet any embarrassing questions about Tucker’s death. He was buried in Guelph’s Woodlawn Memorial Park. One could be forgiven for mistrusting the hospital’s official account of Tucker’s death.

Certainly, Tucker’s death galvanized the Clinton GWVA to more militant action. In December 1919, another local veteran, J. R. Hall (age 24), died of an illness believed to have been a result of a gas attack in France. Hall, who died at his sister’s house in Holmesville, was given a full military funeral. A large assembly of uniformed veterans followed Hall’s Union Jack draped casket from St Paul’s church to the Clinton cemetery for burial.

The News-Record reported that it was the first military funeral Clinton had ever seen. It was also a show of the veterans’ strength as an organization.

Just two weeks later, another veteran, Ray Cantelon (age 26), was given a military funeral, as was Edgar Pattison (age 27).

All of these former soldiers died of injuries sustained during the war. Their deaths were a grim reminder that though the war was over the dying was not and that veterans needed to fight for decent treatment and medical care.

In September 1920, local GWVA action paid off for Agnes Currie, the widow of a Bayfield soldier killed in action. The Clinton GWVA helped get her $15 a month pension raised to $60 to allow Mrs. Currie to support herself and raise her children.

The memorial tablets with the names of 40 Clinton and area men who made the Supreme Sacrifice in the Great War were originally placed on the old post office walls by the GWVA in November 1921. Raised with from local patriotic societies, the bronze tablets are now affixed to the outside walls of the Clinton Legion.

The Clinton branch of the GWVA disbanded in 1924. All proceeds were donated to the Clinton Hospital. In 1925, the GWVA merged with other veterans’ groups to form the Canadian Legion of the British Empire Service League now the Royal Canadian Legion.

When Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said veterans are “asking for more than we are able to give” he was uttering a sentiment over a century old. As long as Canadian governments are willing to fight their veterans reasonable requests, there will always be a need for veterans organizations, like the GWVA, to battle their own government that they fought to defend for decent treatment.





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Post by Jumper Thu 21 Mar 2019, 7:53 am

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New book profiles Canadians at World War One military camp

Frank McTighe, MACLEOD GAZETTE EDITOR | Posted on March 20 2019


History - Topics & Posted Articles  - Page 31 Bookcover-500x780
The cover of Riots, Death and Baseball — The Canadians at Kinmel Park Camp 1918-19.


A Welsh author has written a new book about the Canadian presence at Kinmel Park Military Camp — the largest military training camp in World War One in Wales.
Robert H. Griffiths explores the adventures of soldiers, Canadian Nursing Sisters and even war brides in Riots, Death and Baseball — The Canadians at Kinmel Park Camp 1918-19.
“This story of the nearly 12 months presence of the Canadians at Kinmel Park Camp needs to be told,” Griffiths said. “It is the story of great diversity, including ethnically.”
Southern Albertans are featured in the new book, including Mike Mountain Horse from the Blood Tribe, who served in France and Flanders with the 50th (Calgary) Battalion, Canadian Expeditionary Force.
Joseph Crow Chief, also of the Blood Tribe, fought in the trenches in France and Flanders with the 50th Battalions
“In my book I point out how strange it must have been for most of the First Nations Canadian soldiers to wear the restrictive clothing, with restrictive army regulations, in the English language of the almost exclusively white Canadian Expeditionary Force,” Griffiths said. “Also, coming from quiet reserves what must they have thought of the bright lights of Paris, to where many of them went on week or two- week furloughs from the Front. What did they think of Kinmel Park Camp, northern Wales and its surrounding area?”
Griffiths, a former police officer, comes by his interest in World War 1 and Kinmel Park Military Camp through family connections.
Griffiths’ grandfather fought on the Western Front with 4th Battalion, The Royal Welsh Fusiliers. His grandmother rode a white horse near the front in France delivering messages.
Griffiths’ wife’s great uncle, Robert Owen, who enlisted in the Royal Welsh Fusiliers and was sent to Kinmel Park Military Camp for training in January 1915.
Less than three months later the 18-year-old Owen was dead, having contracted spotted fever.
Griffiths’ wife’s paternal grandfather, Thomas Jones, was also trained at Kinmel Park and served with the South Wales Borderers on the Western Front.
Jones was bayoneted in the neck by a German soldier in hand-to-hand fighting but survived the injury.
Griffiths has researched Kinmel Park through local archives, the National Library of Wales, newspaper accounts and on-line military records.
His first book, The Story of Kinmel Park Military Training Camp 1914-1918 was published in June 2014.
“I purposely dated it 1914 to 1918, always intending to have published a second book on Kinmel Park Camp featuring the vast Canadian presence at the camp from September 1918 to late June 1919,” Griffiths said.
Griffiths wrote a second book titled Welsh Soldiers, Civilians and Eisteddfodau in WW1.
That was followed by a third book titled The Enemy Within — German POWs and Civilians in North Wales during WW1.
Hot off the press is Griffiths’ fourth book, Riots, Death and Baseball — The Canadians at Kinmel Park Camp 1918-19.
Griffiths writes about the riots inside Kimmel Park Camp happened March 4-5 1919.
After war’s end Canadian soldiers were being repatriated quickly back to Canada but that slowed due to a number of factors: a shortage of ships; a dock strike at the nearby Port of Liverpool; one or two ship transports on inspection being found unfit to cross the Atlantic.
“Stupidly, some Canadian soldiers who had not fought at the Front, indeed had only just arrived in Europe, were on their way back home before the ‘old sweats’, some of whom had spent three or four years fighting,” Griffiths said. “Many of the Canadian ‘old sweats’ found out about this and were angry.”
Those “old sweats” were also angry about poor conditions at Kinmel Park Camp, including bad food, crowded conditions in the wooden huts in which they lived, and concern there would be no jobs left when they got home.
With a lack of information from military leaders in London, the Canadian soldiers began to feel they were forgotten men. That dissension boiled over, leading to some looting and wrecking messes and bars at the camp and eventually it turned into a riot.
Five people died and many others were injured, and the riot had the desired effect of officials quickly paying attention to the Canadian situation and shipping the men out.
“When I set out writing it I intended it to really be about two things,” Griffiths said. “Firstly, the riots and disturbances at the camp of March 4-5, 1919 and secondly, about the 79 other Canadian Soldiers and one Canadian nursing sister who are buried locally at the now-famous St. Margaret’s Churchyard, Bodelwyddan — better known as ‘The Marble Church,’ who died of influenza, the Spanish Flu pandemic, or through other illnesses and two sadly through suicide.”
As Griffiths researched the military records of those Canadians who died, spending 10 to 12 hours a day for weeks, he realized the story of the Canadians at Kinmel Park camp was about so much more.
“A number of First Nations Canadian soldiers were at Kinmel Park Camp, a number of them decorated war heroes,” Griffiths said. “Sadly, several young First Nations Canadian soldiers are buried at ‘The Marble Church.’ They did not die in battle but from the Spanish Flu which swept through the camp.”
Griffiths also learned about the now iconic No. 2 Construction Battalion — The Black Battalion’ with their now quite famous, fine chaplain, Rev. Captain William Andrew White – the son of slaves who was the first black officer ever in the Canadian or British military.
“Canada’s last known surviving World War One veteran was here — John Henry Foster Babcock — who died aged 109 in 2010,” Griffiths added. “Also, the last of Canada’s ‘old sweats’ who had actually seen battle in World War One was here — Charles Clarence Laking, known as ‘Clare’ who died in 2005, aged 106.”
Canadian Victoria Cross recipients Tommy (Thomas William) Holmes and Alexander Picton Brereton were also at Kinmel Park. Photos of Babcock, Laking, Holmes and Brereton are in the book.
Griffiths included a chapter about Canadian Nursing Sisters who were at Kinmel Camp, as well as a chapter about Canadian war brides.
“The book is a tribute basically to the men and women, white, First Nations and black, who served in the Canadian Expeditionary Force during the First World War, with many, many of them spending time awaiting their repatriation to Canada post-war from Britain and the UK,” Griffiths said.
Riots, Death and Baseball — The Canadians at Kinmel Park Camp 1918-19 is available on Amazon.ca.





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Post by Replica Mon 25 Mar 2019, 9:00 pm

Honouring WWII veteran from Penetanguishene


CTV Barrie
Published Monday, March 25, 2019 7:12PM EDT
A special ceremony held on Monday at Barrie's courthouse honoured a local veteran.

It was 75 years ago that allied soldiers escaped a German POW camp during the Second World War. Among those was Penetanguishene’s Alfred B. Thompson.

Thompson served with Britain's Royal Air Force and was captured after his plane went down over Germany in 1939.

He was the first Canadian to be taken prisoner because Canada hadn’t officially joined the war until the next day.

Thompson was one of 76 prisoners who escaped a German POW camp in Poland through a human-made tunnel only to be recaptured days later. He remained a prisoner, spending nearly every day of the war in captivity until the war ended.

After the war, Thompson returned to Canada, raised eight children and worked at the Barrie courthouse as the assistant to the Crown Attorney until he retired in 1980.

He passed away in 1985.

Today, the courthouse unveiled a framed display with Thompson’s pictures and biography to commemorate the anniversary of the Great Escape.

The Thompson family and court staff hopes that future generations will never forget the contribution of our Canadian soldiers.





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Post by Terrarium Tue 26 Mar 2019, 7:39 pm

Second World War spy shares her tales of heroism March 26, 2019



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