Category Archives: Legion Magazine

Passchendaele Museum locates sites where unknown WW I soldiers died

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Front Lines

RICHARD JACK/CWM/19710261-0161

Passchendaele Museum locates sites where unknown WW I soldiers died

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

Edwin John Davis, 37, left his job as a glass worker to sign up with the Canadian Expeditionary Force in Valcartier, Que, on Sept. 22, 1914.

He was among the 70 per cent British-born war volunteers in the first contingent of Canadians—from Wales, to be exact. He had served six years in the 41st Infantry Regiment, based in Cardiff, Wales, before emigrating to Canada, though it appears he may have been living south of the border in Virginia and came north when the First World War broke out.

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Military Milestones
Military Milestones

DND PHOTO PL 41719, STEVE SAUVE.

The five-minute flying ace

STORY BY PAIGE JASMINE GILMAR

Becoming an ace was a feat many Royal Canadian Air Force pilots strived for during the Second World War. Some attained the minimum five enemy aircraft shot down to became an ace in a week, while it took others only a day. But an ace in just minutes?

Flight Lieutenant Richard (Dick) Joseph Audet did just that on Dec. 29, 1944, while flying over Osnabrück, Germany—he took down three Fw 190s and two Me 109s.

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Stalemate: How the First World War reached a four-year impasse

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Front Lines

FRANK HURLEY/AUSTRALIAN WAR MEMORIAL COLLECTION/E01220

Stalemate: How the First World War reached a four-year impasse

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

Red piping or blue adorn cages surrounding elm saplings at seemingly random points alongside roadways around the town of Ieper in western Belgium.

A centennial project of the In Flanders Fields Museum, they trace the near-encirclement of the town and delineate the furthest point of advance by invading German forces (red) and the corresponding Allied (blue) front lines through five major battles around what was then known, and is forever remembered, as Ypres.

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Military Milestones
Military Milestones

CWM/20110129-002

Painting the Battle of Ortona

STORY BY PAIGE JASMINE GILMAR

“The price of Peace, borne by the brave—

Is priceless…”

So goes part of the final stanza of George Elliott Clarke’s “At Ortona: An oratorio,” a poetic memorial of the blood, guts and glory of the Second World War’s Battle of Ortona. While lauded by CBC war correspondents as an example of Canadian heroism in the 1940s, the battle was largely forgotten.

The fight to push Nazi forces from the Italian town in December 1943 left more than 500 dead and nearly 2,000 more casualties, and featured dramatic house-to-house urban combat. It was Canada’s first stand-alone victory of the war. But as its 80th anniversary nears, Ortona remains for many people an obscure moment in Canadian history.

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