Category Archives: Legion Magazine

The summer of ’44: Canadians from Normandy to the Dutch border

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Front Lines

Eighty-one years on, a child frolics in the shadows of the Mulberry harbours deposited along Gold Beach at Arromanches, France, after June 6, 1944. [Stephen J. Thorne/LM]

The summer of ’44: Canadians from Normandy to the Dutch border

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

Eighty-one years after Allied forces hit the beaches of Normandy and launched the campaign to liberate Europe from six years of Nazi tyranny, the history still lives.

The bunkers and fortifications that formed Hitler’s Atlantikwall still cast a weary yet ominous presence over the English Channel. The wind, rain and ominous skies that clouded the beaches on June 6, 1944, still rage. The walls of courtyards, houses and 1,000-year-old churches still bear the scars of WW II battles.

And, of course, the cemeteries are sobering testament to the cost.

The history is not all visual, either.

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Big summer sale on Legion Magazine shop
The Briefing
The Briefing

HMCS Trentonian was sunk by U-1004 on Feb. 22, 1945, near Falmouth, England. Divers have since removed many artifacts from the vessel. [CFB Esquimalt Naval and Military Museum]

Canadian naval historian speaks out about retrieving shipwreck artifacts

STORY BY ALEX BOWERS

More than 80 years after HMCS Trentonian sank in U.K. waters resulting in six deaths, a British diver has recovered—or removed—its bell from the wreck site.

Not everyone, suffice it to say, is happy about it.

The Canadian Flower-class corvette, launched in 1943, had an arguably short yet nevertheless storied wartime career, contributing to the 1944 Normandy invasion and additional Allied convoy escort duties before it was torpedoed and sank on Feb. 22, 1945.

Five went down with the ship, a sixth later succumbed to his wounds.

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Half of Canadians say they would go to war for their country; youth, not so much

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Front Lines

A First World War-era illustration depicts a Canadian soldier in action. [Canada in Khaki]

Half of Canadians say they would go to war for their country; youth, not so much

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

With the U.S. president threatening to economically bludgeon Canada into submission as the 51st state, just under half of surveyed Canadians (49 per cent) say they would go to war for their country.

Those most willing to lay it on the line, 55 per cent of whom said they were willing to fight, were over 54 years old. Among the 1,619 Canadians surveyed, those of fighting age—18- to 34-year-olds—were far less inclined to enlist.

In response to the question, “Could you ever foresee an armed conflict that would compel you to volunteer for military service in a combat role?,” just 43 per cent of the youngest group told the Angus Reid Institute they would.

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The Sacred Canadian Sites of the World Wars
The Briefing
The Briefing

Sculptor Tyler Fauvelle poses with his monument of Fern Blodgett Sunde in Farsund, Norway, during its unveiling on May 8, 2025. [courtesy Tyler Fauvelle]

A duplicate of a Canadian war memorial at home in Norway

STORY BY ALEX BOWERS

No one expected her to return from her initial voyage across the Atlantic. To make the crossing during the Second World War meant navigating mined waters in treacherous weather, knowing full well U-boats may lurk below.

But with a bucket nearby, Fern Blodgett Sunde made the trip 77 more times aboard the Norwegian merchant vessel Mosdale. Sunde was the first Canadian woman to earn a second class wireless operator’s certificate, and the first women to be a deep sea radio operator. She served until the war’s end, and 75 years later, her life and legacy was captured in a bronze public memorial in her hometown of Cobourg, Ont.

The same place she “watched the Great Lake ships go by, and dreamed of a career at sea, even though it would have been impossible for a young woman born at the end of the First World War.”

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Rules-based order not working, says British field marshal

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Front Lines

Retired general Walt Natynczyk is a former vice-chief of Canada’s defence staff. He served on peacekeeping missions in Cyprus, Bosnia & Herzegovina, and as deputy commanding general of III (US) Armored Corps, with which he deployed to Baghdad in 1998-99.[Stephen J. Thorne]

Rules-based order not working, says British field marshal

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

The rules-based system of international order that has existed since the end of the Second World War has not been a great success, marked by a series of recent mishaps that could usher in a return to the great power system of the past, says Britain’s former defence chief.

Speaking at a fireside chat ahead of the 35th conference of the Royal Commonwealth Ex-Services League (RCEL), Field Marshal The Lord Richards of Herstmonceux said the United States, Russia and China are steering the world order away from the system of political, legal and economic rules and institutions established by the Americans and their allies after 1945.

The rules-based order has been based on principles such as sovereignty, territorial integrity and dispute resolution through diplomacy. It aimed to promote stability, co-operation and predictability in international relations.

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Small Batch Teas
The Briefing
The Briefing

The award winning book, The Taste of Longing by Suzanne Evans, has been optioned by acclaimed documentary filmmaker Noura Kevorkian. [BTLBooks]

The Taste of Longing: A novelistic biography of WW II PoW Ethel Mulvany

STORY BY ALEX BOWERS

“I wrongly thought the last thing you would want to think about,” admits author Suzanne Evans, “is food when you’re starving.”

But having discovered the Second World War story of Canadian Ethel Mulvany, her understanding of hunger changed.

On Feb. 15, 1942, the Imperial Japanese Forces landed on Singapore island and forced the surrender of an Allied garrison of 90,000. In what Prime Minister Winston Churchill considered the “worst disaster and largest capitulation in British history,” thousands of captured civilians, including Mulvany, were among those to be rounded up, separated between men and women—the latter with children—and imprisoned at Changi Jail. The ensuing years would be ones of misery and longing.

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