Monthly Archives: June 2024

Vivid: A Canadian pilot describes his bird’s-eye view of D-Day

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Front Lines

A 268 Squadron composite reconnaissance photograph shows the landings by the British 231st Infantry Brigade at Anselles, France, on D-Day. Note the vehicles moving away on the road from the beach. (EYES OF THE INVASION)

Vivid: A Canadian pilot describes his bird’s-eye view of D-Day

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

Tuesday, June 6, 1944, would be forever etched in the memory of Canadian Flight-Lieutenant Gordon Lloyd Gibson, a Mustang fighter pilot who flew operations over the Normandy beaches in support of history’s greatest seaborne invasion.

Attached to 268 Squadron, Royal Air Force, the 24-year-old Toronto native flew 37 tactical missions between May and August 1944, none more memorable than those of that stormy day in June when 160,000 Allied troops began what their supreme commander, General Dwight D. Eisenhower, called The Great Crusade.

READ MORE

Campfire Bear Mug and Sock Set
Military Milestones
Military Milestones

Lyman Carter shooting a wild hog. (Wikipedia)

Hog Hysteria: The U.S.-British confrontation over Canadian livestock

STORY BY ALEX BOWERS

American farmer Lyman Cutlar had a pig problem.

In 1859, having settled on San Juan Island—land contested between the British Empire and the United States near Vancouver Island—he encountered swine eating his vegetables. These weren’t just any old hogs, however, but ones belonging to the ever-influential Hudson’s Bay Company, a British-founded institution that had long acted as the regional powerhouse.

READ MORE

Member Benefit Partner

Red Wireless

[Reminder] Participate in our Commemoration Day Virtual Service

The Commemoration Day Virtual Service began during the first year of the pandemic.  Everything had been shut down, including all of the activities of Royal Canadian Legion US Branch #25.  When the closure began in March our members watched as the annual inspection of our local division of Sea Cadets cancelled. Then March became April, and then May – and the annual ANZAC Day events and our US Memorial Day service were both cancelled.  By June, the branch had cancelled is third monthly membership meetings, and planning to commemorate for the 75th anniversary of the signing of the United Nations charter, which occurred in San Francisco, was postponed indefinitely.

Around that time a Canadian ex-pat organization called the Digital Moose Lounge contacted us to see if the branch wanted to participate in the virtual Canada Day celebration that they were planning.  One of our executive at the time was a native Newfoundlander, and we saw an opportunity.  As Newfoundlanders and Labradorians are aware, in addition to being Canada Day, July 1st is also Memorial Day or Commemoration Day in the province – a day when we remember the tragic events of the Battle of Beaumont Hamel. To honour that tradition, and as a way to begin to engage both the members of our the branch and our local cadets again, we sought to create a virtual sunrise service for Commemoration Day.

The tradition of this virtual service continues as a way to engage our members who are not local to the Bay Area.  Branch 25 is in the process of planning its annual Commemoration Day virtual service.  The virtual service will feature individual videos combined into a single virtual service.  As such, we are asking our members to submit four videos for inclusion in the service:

  • a video where you holds a salute for approximately 30 seconds (as if holding the salute during an anthem or for the Last Post)
  • a video where you say “Lest we forget”
  • a video where you say “We will remember them”
  • a video where you say “Happy Canada Day”

You do not need special equipment to record these videos.  A cell phone or tablet video is fine.  We just ask that videos be taken in landscape format, not in portrait.

If possible, dress in their Legion uniform.  However, any formal attire is appropriate.

Videos can be uploaded to https://tinyurl.com/RCLcommemorationday2024

War Museum exhibits more than two centuries of women’s war art

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Front Lines

In “Sixth Company Battalion,” photographer Anique Jordan cast her mother and two aunts in the uniforms of War of 1812 British forces, for which Black Loyalists from Trinidad fought. The photograph is among 70 works by 52 women artists on exhibit at the Canadian War Museum until Jan. 5. (ANIQUE JORDAN/CWM)

War Museum exhibits more than two centuries of women’s war art

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

Elise Findlay had just graduated with distinction and the Board of Governor’s Award from Alberta University of the Arts when an unprecedented opportunity presented itself. The former cabinet maker from Banff seized the day, applying for and becoming the Canadian War Museum’s first artist in residence.

Now she’s part of a sweeping exhibition featuring more than two centuries of Canadian women’s war art, her fabric-based interpretations of the tools her predecessors used and weapons and accoutrements of war displayed alongside works by the likes of Mary Riter Hamilton, Molly Lamb Bobak and Gertrude Kearns.

READ MORE

Tally Ho! Mug
Military Milestones
Military Milestones

Sonia and Guy d’Artois. (Wikipedia)

Love Behind Enemy Lines: An Anglo-Canadian Couple’s D-Day Exploits

STORY BY ALEX BOWERS

“Tell fourteen the Queen’s terrace is wide,” said the BBC presenter over radio airwaves on June 1, 1944. To most listeners in occupied France, the strange statement would have meant little. To Guy d’Artois, a 27-year-old Canadian agent of the Special Operations Executive (SOE)—together with French resistance fighters of the DITCHER circuit—the cryptic code signified the news they had been waiting for: D-Day would begin within the next 15 days.

There was no time to lose.

READ MORE

Member Benefit Partner

Red Wireless

News & Events for the Bay Area Canadian Community 🇨🇦

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


Can’t see this message? View in a browser
This email was sent from this site.