Category Archives: Legion Magazine

By the numbers: Who contributed, and sacrificed, the most in WW II?

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Front Lines

A landing craft sets out with Canadian troops aboard destined for the Normandy beaches. Canadians at Juno penetrated further inland on June 6, 1944, than any Allies at the five D-Day beachheads.[Dennis Sullivan/DND/LAC/PA-132790.]

By the numbers: Who contributed, and sacrificed, the most in WW II?

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

The American president outraged a host of Allied nations recently when he claimed the United States “won World War 2” and should be celebrating the fact.

Donald Trump made the statement after a phone call with French President Emmanuel Macron who, he said, told him France was “celebrating our victory over the Germans.”

“Oh, that’s wonderful,” Trump said a week after VE-Day on May 8. “Now, we don’t take credit for what we do. And I said, what the hell? Every country I’ve spoken to in the last week is celebrating the war but us. Isn’t that terrible?

“Russia was celebrating, France was celebrating, everybody was celebrating but us. And we’re the ones that won the war. We won the war.”

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Notebooks
Veterans Benefit Guide
The Briefing
The Briefing

The final book in Phil Craig’s trilogy, 1945: The Reckoning: War, Empire and Struggle for a New World, follows an Indian family with two boys divided by the opposing side they chose to fight for. [Phil Criag]

Phil Craig confronts colonialism in new book

STORY BY ALEX BOWERS

British author and filmmaker Phil Craig has long anticipated completing his book trilogy on the Second World War. First came Finest Hour: The Battle of Britain in 1999, co-written with Tim Clayton. In 2002, a second collaborative effort—again with Clayton—produced End of the Beginning, retracing the desperate days from May to November 1942 to coincide with what was then the 60th anniversary year.

Now, Craig has rounded off his WW II saga with the recent publication of 1945: The ReckoningWar, Empire and the Struggle for a New World. Brimming with poignant first-hand accounts and untold stories, the already well-received book confronts the realities of Far East colonialism in the war’s final months and the immediate aftermath. Among the topics examined are the “rather shameful and foolish things” carried out by the British in the name of imperial agendas, says Craig himself.

Nuance, however, is a key factor throughout the volume, as the bestselling writer explains after sitting down for a Legion Magazine exclusive.

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Archeologists discover suspected graves of massacred Black Civil War unit

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Front Lines

African-American Union soldiers are shown at Dutch Gap, Virginia, in November 1864 wearing typical Union uniforms and wielding the 1853 Enfield rifles used by U.S. Colored Troops.[U.S. Library of Congress]

Archeologists discover suspected graves of massacred Black Civil War unit

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

In January 1865, just over three months before the U.S. Civil War ended, the 80 men of Company ‘E,’ 5th U.S. Colored Cavalry, were ordered to drive 900 cattle 140 kilometres west from their base at Camp Nelson in Kentucky to Louisville.

Louisville was a Union stronghold and operations base for the war’s western theatre—the centre of planning, supply, recruiting and transportation for numerous campaigns throughout the four-year struggle between the states. The beef was destined to help feed the city and its 100,000 blue-coated troops.

The men, most of whom had escaped slavery to enlist, spread out over a large area, driving the animals across the cold, snow-covered Kentucky countryside. Then, on Jan. 25, those at the rear of the herd—known in cowboy parlance as drag riders, or “drags”—were attacked by Confederate guerrillas just outside Simpsonville.

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Teas
Veterans Benefit Guide
The Briefing
The Briefing

One in Six Million is the third, and most serious, book by author Amy Fish. [https://amyfishwrites.com/]

Author Amy Fish Talks Canadian Altruism for a Holocaust survivor

STORY BY ALEX BOWERS

Canadian author Amy Fish is first to acknowledge “I usually write funny books,” from The Art of Complaining Effectively to I Wanted Fries with That. Her latest tome, however, is seemingly anything but humorous, charting the exploits of a Holocaust survivor as she finally learns the truth behind her lost familial roots.

The newly released book is entitled One in Six Million: The Baby by the Roadside and the Man Who Retraced a Holocaust Survivor’s Lost Identity, while the man it refers to is a Canadian ceiling salesman-turned-genealogist willing to lend a hand.

This is the story of Maria and Stanley, told by their Montreal-based biographer.

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Red Wireless

Bites on Roman gladiator’s skeleton first hard proof of combat with lion

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Front Lines

Lesions identified as lion bite marks are shown on the left iliac spine of the gladiator 6DT19.
[T.J.U. Thompson et al]

Bites on Roman gladiator’s skeleton first hard proof of combat with lion

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

Archeologists say puncture wounds and other bite marks on an 1,800-year-old skeleton discovered in a Roman cemetery in England are the first hard evidence that gladiators fought animals—in this case a lion—in Europe.

The evidence suggests the man was killed during a gladiator show or execution, and that the big cat gnawed on his pelvis or was dragging him across the arena about the time he died. The hapless gladiator was also decapitated, indicating he was put “out of his misery at the point of death.”

His skeleton, found in a roadside cemetery called Driffield Terrace, is believed to have been buried between 200-300 AD near the Roman city of Eboracum, now York. He was 26-35 years old.

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Veterans Benefit Guide
The Briefing
The Briefing

Author Bonnie Sitter was searching through old family photographs when she found a black-and-white image of a group of young women, with the caption, “Farmerettes 1946.” [welendahand.ca/]

Documentary highlights Canada’s WW II farmerettes

STORY BY ALEX BOWERS

For Bonnie Sitter, it began with two old photos; for Colin Field, a banjo.

After her husband passed away in 2016, Sitter had been sifting through items when she unearthed black-and-white images of three girls. Scrawled on the back of each was “Farmerettes,” the name bestowed upon Canadian teenagers who, throughout much of the Second World War and beyond, worked in market gardens, orchards and canneries to help maintain food production for the broader Allied war effort.

The pictured farmerettes, three of an estimated 40,000 in Ontario alone, had served on her late spouse’s family farm. Inspired to uncover more, Sitter collaborated on a book with Shirleyan English—herself a postwar-era farmerette—leading to Onion Skins and Peach Fuzz: Memories of Ontario Farmerettes, published in 2019.

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