Monthly Archives: July 2020

[REMINDER] Royal Canadian Legion – US Branch 25 August Meeting

As we are still unable to meet in person, but also have business that we need to attend to, we will be holding an August business meeting for the membership of US Branch #25 representing the San Francisco Bay Area. The meeting will be held online using Zoom on Tuesday, 04 August at 7pm. The dress for the meeting is casual (i.e., Legion attire is not required).

The details on how to join the meeting can be obtained by e-mailing mkbarbour@gmail.com

The agenda, minutes from the previous meeting, and various written reports will be e-mailed prior to the event.

If you have not used Zoom, you can download the program to your computer by visiting https://zoom.us/support/download (there are also links on that page to download it to your phone or tablet). To join the meeting follow the steps outlined in this video – https://youtu.be/9isp3qPeQ0E – or the instructions under the “How do I join a Zoom session?” portion of this website https://www.aarp.org/home-family/personal-technology/info-2020/how-to-use-zoom.html

We hope to see everyone there…

Michael Barbour
Vice President, US Branch #25
Royal Canadian Legion

The Doughboy Foundation Requests Your Input: Dispatch Readers

As our branch regular reposts items from the World War One Centennial Commission, it is important for our readers to join in with their opinions.


Dough Foundation with WWI Commission logo

Dear Michael:

Thank you for your participation in commemorating the Centennial of WWI.

You helped change the national narrative of the “Forgotten War” to WWI being remembered as “the War That Changed the World”.

Some of the highlights of the U.S. World War One Centennial Commission’s programs and activities commemorating the centennial of WWI include:

  • Establishing volunteer chapters in 42 states to run commemorative events across the country;
  • Distributing the weekly WWI Centennial Dispatch, highlighting WWI history relevant to current events, war heroes, and commemorative activities, to 87,000 subscribers;
  • Producing an award-winning podcast with nearly 2.25 million downloads; and
  • Partnering with the National Archives, the Library of Congress, the HISTORY Channel, and the Andrew Mellon Foundation to provide educational materials to more than 20 million students and teachers.

The capstone project of the U.S. WWI Centennial is the National WWI Memorial in Washington, D.C., which has been developed and created in record time. The Memorial will open to the public starting this December, 2020. It will be fully completed and formally dedicated in 2024. At that time, the U.S. World War One Centennial Commission’s work will draw to a close and the Commission will be disbanded.

So who will keep faith with the American Doughboys and those who served in WWI?

The Doughboy Foundation, the program’s long associated 501(c)(3) non-profit, will continue the work of honoring our WWI veterans. The Foundation will do this with inspiring programs, events, activities, and remembrances that ensure WWI will never fade back into the mists of obscurity.  

The foundation will rely on donations to fund these programs and activities including the long-term maintenance and programming related to the National WWI Memorial in Washington, D.C..

Over these past years, your interest, participation and support have been the foundation of our success. As we look ahead, you continue as the bedrock on which The Doughboy Foundation will build the perpetual commemoration of America’s achievements and sacrifice in WWI.

To understand the interests of our existing family of supporters as we prepare for this transition, we are asking you to please give us five minutes of your precious time to complete a short survey.


CLICK HERE FOR SURVEY


With your participation and support we have come so incredibly far; with your advice we will continue into a future where the 4.7 million who served in WWI will be remembered for all the generations to come. I thank you for your help and support.

Sincerely,

Dans Signature

Daniel S. Dayton

Executive Director
U.S. World War One Centennial Commission

Chairman
The Doughboy Foundation

Discover the CWGC’s new look website

An item from the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.


Take a first look at our new and improved website

Our new improved website, designed using our new visual identity, has been created to make it easier than ever for you to discover the stories of the world wars with us.
Today, we’re using increasingly creative ways to welcome people to our cemeteries and memorials and engage with people on a wide variety of digital platforms. With this in mind, we are embracing our evolving task with a more contemporary website and identity, but one that still reflects our heritage.

If you haven’t already, click below to take a first look at our new website and discover the stories of the world wars.

Explore the new website

What’s new on the website?

Alongside the new look, we’ve improved the search function to allow you to discover and research the 1.7 million casualties we commemorate more easily. You can now get better results from partial details, and visitors will benefit from improved mobile functionality for using the website while out and about.

Our new logo

Our new logo draws inspiration from the Commonwealth Nations icon, with each of the pillars representing our six funding member nations standing together in a common cause. The curved top is reminiscent of the headstone shape we’re known for, yet it is interrupted in the middle, just as two generations were during the world wars. It is reflective, in that the top matches the bottom, representing the past and present, and is stately, reflecting the importance placed on design in those early days of the Commission. Our new logo will co-exist with, rather than replace, the Blomfield design which will remain our official seal.

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Website
Copyright 2020 Commonwealth War Graves Commission, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
2 Marlow Road, Maidenhead, Berkshire, SL6 7DX

www.cwgc.org

Announcing C100’s New Board Members | Meet the Founders & Share their Story

A newsletter from one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay Area.


48Hrs in the Valley: “Meet the Founders” Series

We’re excited to launch a new series in connection with our 2020 48Hrs in the Valley program called “Meet the Founders”. Beginning August 3rd until the end of September, we’ll be featuring the 26 founders participating in our flagship program for early-stage entrepreneurs. Follow C100 on Twitter to meet each of the founders, from Whitehorse to Toronto, Hong Kong to NYC.

We look forward to introducing them to you over the coming weeks through this social media series. If you are interested in supporting any of the founders featured, please send us a note at connect@thec100.org.

Announcing C100’s Newest Board Directors!

C100 is pleased to announce three incoming members to the Board of Directors: Angela TranMichael Hershfield and Kim Fennell. They have all led remarkable careers in technology and are excited to support the C100 mission and our future growth. We’re grateful for their commitment and welcome them to the C100 leadership.

Angela Tran

General Partner at Version One Ventures

San Francisco Bay Area

Michael Hershfield

Global Vice President of Inside Sales at WeWork

New York, NY

Kim Fennell

Managing Director at Fleet Hill Ventures

San Francisco Bay Area

Become a Member & Make an Impact

C100’s mission is to support, inspire, and connect the most promising Canadian entrepreneurial leaders through mentorship, investment, partnership, and talent.

Our members form the preeminent, global community of visionary Canadian entreprenenurs, operators and investors. Each brings something rich and unique to our ecosystem and fuels C100’s role in supporting global Canadians as they build high-impact careers and remarkable organizations. 

Play a more active role the C100 ecosystem and benefit from opportunities for personal and professional development. Consider supporting C100’s mission as a member.

Community News & Opportunities

Calling all Life Sciences Professionals: C100’s partner, Silicon Valley Bank, is recruiting volunteers to participate in a Life Sciences Mentorship Program 

Life Sciences professionals are invited to participate in a two-hour virtual networking session this fall to meet with entrepreneurs leading early-stage Life Sciences startups. If you meet a founder or company that you can help, the choice is yours to engage in a more robust relationship thereafter. SVB is leading this initiative with Life Sciences Ontario (LSO) to support its mission of fostering commercial success for Ontario’s life science sector. To participate, RSVP to Anne Woods, Managing Director, Silicon Valley Bank Canada at awoods@svb.com

Members making the news: Toronto-based fintech company Clearbanc (48Hrs ’17) launched a valuation tool that allows e-commerce entrepreneurs to determine the value of their business in 24 hours for freeWatch Clearbanc co-founder & C100 Member Michele Romanow’s interview on Cheddar here.

Thank You to Our Partners

Foundational Partners

Corporate Partners

Remembering the chaos of liberated Europe

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Remembering the chaos of liberated Europe

Remembering the chaos of liberated Europe

Story by Stephen J. Thorne

Pierre Gauthier landed on D-Day with his Régiment de la Chaudière and fought through France, Belgium and into the Netherlands before a second wound ended his war.

His regiment lost 58 men killed on June 6, 1944, and 248 before the fighting ended 11 months later, but among the most unsettling images that remain burned in the veteran’s mind are those of the people they had liberated turning on each other and on those who had defeated them four or five years earlier.

READ MORE

Military Milestones
The fighting after Hill 70

The fighting after Hill 70

Story by Sharon Adams

The Battle for Hill 70 was an important victory for the Canadian Corps in August 1917, though it did not achieve its ultimate objective.

The Canadians had been ordered to capture the German stronghold at Lens, a French coal-mining centre.

But first, Hill 70 had to be taken. Taking the high ground, noted Brigadier-General Percy Radcliffe, would make “the enemy’s position in [Lens] untenable, and [force] him to evacuate it.” It also would take out guns that would otherwise target Canadians from above as they attacked the city.

READ MORE

The Italian Campaign Special Issue Bundle
This week in history
This week in history

July 24, 1927

The Menin Gate Memorial to the Missing is inaugurated in Ypres, Belgium.

READ MORE

IRIS Advantage
Legion Magazine