Category Archives: Legion Magazine

Wounded at Caen: A survivor describes combat in Normandy

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Front Lines

Major Stewart Hastings Bull commanded ‘A’ company of the Essex Scottish Regiment at Caen until he was wounded and lost an eye. (THE CANADIAN LETTERS AND IMAGES PROJECT)

Wounded at Caen: A survivor describes combat in Normandy

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

It was early July 1944 and Stewart Hastings Bull had just followed the D-Day landings into France when he was promoted and handed ‘A’ company of The Essex Scottish Regiment to lead through the liberation of Nazi-occupied Europe.

The regiment had been gutted at Dieppe. Major Bull’s first taste of war came almost two years later during the battle for Caen. A runner summoned him the night he arrived at their encampment in an orchard just outside the city, 15 kilometres from the D-Day beaches. His second-in-command wanted to see him.

READ MORE

Vintage Warbirds Posters
Military Milestones
Military Milestones

CORB children en route to their new home 1940. (NATIONAL ARCHIVES UK)

A warm reception: Canada’s children of the Blitz

STORY BY ALEX BOWERS

It was around 11 a.m. on Aug. 4, 1940, when Margaret Beal bid farewell to all she had ever known. Departing on a train from Scarborough, U.K., the 14-year-old watched as her parents, standing on the platform, faded into the steam.

Exactly 26 years before, the British teenager’s home country had been mobilizing upon the outbreak of the First World War. Now, she, too, was on the move, although her journey was destined to be markedly different.

READ MORE

Member Benefit Partner

Chip Reverse Mortgage

Canadian homeowners aged 55+ can access up to 55% of their home’s value without having to sell. As a proud partner of the Royal Canadian Legion, HomeEquity Bank offers Legion members $500 cash back* upon funding their CHIP Reverse Mortgage. Learn more at https://bit.ly/3ln5vfo

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