An item from one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay Area.
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An item from one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay Area.
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A rich part of the history of the Royal Canadian Legion has been its pipe bands. Below are a brief description and some images from two of the Legion pipe bands that used to exist in the Bay Area.
Taken from Northern California Pipe Bands That Have Faded Into History.
Tartan: 1) Royal Stewart
2) Hunting MacPherson
No idea when this was formed. It was operating in the early 50’s though as the dates on the photos show. The band met in the basement of the Berkeley Veteran’s Memorial Building on Center Street and was loosely sponsored by the Legion. No (or little) funds but the occasional job or recommendation for a job. They were poor – so was the band. Old, Royal Stewart kilts, ancient drums and that was about it for equipment. Everything else you bought yourself. The main source of income was a dinner that the band put on once a year in the dining room of the Vet’s Building. Perhaps two or three performances.
The band was, as the photos show, tiny. It never got any bigger as I recall. It neither played or drilled well but no one seemed to care about that much at the time. Eventually enough money was on hand to buy new “Hunting” MacPherson kilts which were the flimsiest material ever seen on the face of the earth. Grey and ugly too.
John Short and Don Fiddes quit the band in 1956 or so to join the Caledonian Band in San Francisco and I followed them about six months later when it became clear that the Berkeley band was soon to collapse and there would be a chance to continue playing at a higher level.
The first drum instructor was an old WWI Scottish vet named Gordon Muir, who may well have played with the MacFarlane Band along with “Brick” Johnson and Archie MacLennon (both eventually at Piedmont High) who later became the organizer/promoter and piping instructor (respectively) there. [by Rick Coffee]

Photo courtesy of Rick Coffee
Phelan Stewart Boyd
Schwan Short McPherson Fiddes
Berkeley Post No. 113 Canadian Legion Pipe Band (1950). Antioch Fair Parade

Photo courtesy of Rick Coffee
Short McPherson Schwan Fiddes Stewart
Coffee Unknown Boyd
Berkeley Post No. 113 Canadian Legion Pipe Band (1951)
Tartan: 1) Grey/Hunting MacPherson
2) Nova Scotia

Photo courtesy of Phil Lenihan
Front Rank (L to R): Dick Boyd Phil Lenihan Guy Bennett PMaj John McPhee. In front: DMaj Russ Sholl
Royal Canadian Legion (1970 approx.) Shopping

Photo courtesy of Phil Lenihan
L to R: PMaj John McPhee Calum Logan Dick Boyd Phil Lenihan David More David More’s daughter
Royal Canadian Legion (1971 approx.) Northwest YMCA, Cupertino, CA

Photo courtesy of Phil Lenihan
DMaj Bill Irwin David Laird Robert Witten Guy Bennett David Bennett Unknown Rich Peterson Callum Logan Archie Kelly Phil Lenihan Dan Dempsey PMaj John McPhee
Dave Maich Tony Fuentes Unknown James Brown
Royal Canadian Legion (1972 approx.)

Photo courtesy of Phil Lenihan
L to R: Dick Boyd Guy Bennett David More (back) Neil Serkland PMaj John McPhee David Maiche (bass)
Royal Canadian Legion (1970 approx.) Shopping Center
Originally available from https://siliconvalleypipeband.org/read-me
An item from the folks formerly known as There But Not There.
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An item from the Legion Magazine.
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Over the past few weeks we have been searching various archives to locate more of the history of the branches that formed the Royal Canadian Legion in Northern California. For example…
A California Business Search for “Canadian Legion” yields articles of incorporation for 17 different organization in the state that have had those words in their name – two of which are still active.
A search of the images contained at Calisphere for “Canadian Legion” reveals 13 images in 9 different collections.
A search of the Online Archive of California for “Canadian Legion” yields eight results – and the first one we already spoke about yesterday in Bancroft Library Collection – Canadian Legion of the British Empire Service League records : San Francisco, Calif., 1939-1943.
A more general search of the California Digital Archives for “Canadian Legion” generates almost 500 results, while a query of the subscription service Newspapers.com for “Canadian Legion” in California sources returns over 18,000 items.
What branch history might you have in your possession? Or what branch history have you been able to find?