The Canadian connection to Victoria Cross recipient Edmund De Wind
STORY BY PAIGE JASMINE GILMAR
When Wally Floody was commissioned as a pilot officer in the Royal Canadian Air Force in 1940, he didn’t realize he was going to earn the moniker “The Tunnel King.” Formerly working in the northern Ontario gold mines, Floody’s mining skills were tested when he was taken prisoner and sent to the infamous German Stalag Luft III. There, he became an architect of the Great Escape, one of history’s more iconic prison breaks, in which 76 Allied airmen fleed the facility 80 years ago.
Born in Chatham, Ont., in 1918, Floody enlisted in the RCAF at the outset of the Second World War and was put on the waiting list for the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan. After some persuading—since the RCAF was looking for single men and Floody was married—he was ordered to report to No. 2 Manning Depot in Brandon, Man., on Thanksgiving weekend 1940.
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