Tag Archives: Legion Magazine

The first casualty: Media independence in war

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Front Lines

Legendary American correspondent Ernie Pyle (centre left) with a U.S. Marine patrol during the Pacific campaign in World War II.  (U.S. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE)

The first casualty: Media independence

in war

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

It was March 12, 2002, and I was about to embark on my first major combat operation as a war correspondent for The Canadian Press news service in Afghanistan.

Lieutenant-Colonel Pat Stogran, commanding the 3rd Battalion, Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry (3 PPCLI) Battle Group, had assembled his troops for a final briefing prior to Canada’s first-ever helicopter-borne assault.

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Warbirds Mug
Military Milestones
Military Milestones

HMCS Victoria arrives at Naval Submarine Base Bangor in October 2004.[WIKIMEDIA]

The last barrier broken

STORY BY PAIGE JASMINE GILMAR

When Canadian women were finally allowed to serve on submarines in March 2001, Vice-Admiral Greg Maddison made it clear that the Canadian navy was just looking for “the right people.”

Even though most positions in the Canadian Armed Forces had been open to women since 1989, submarines had remained operated by only males due to the “cramped conditions” on Oberon-class boats. However, when the CAF acquired four Victoria-class subs in 2001, the more spacious and private vessels allowed Canada to join Norway, Sweden and Australia as one of the first countries to allow women as submariners.

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The Canadian Press distributes wartime news for troops overseas

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Front Lines

Munro’s account is topped by a picture of Fulford and Purcell putting the first edition of The Canadian Press News together in the wee hours of April 27, 1942 after the national plebiscite on compulsory military service.    (CP FILES)                   

The Canadian Press distributes wartime news for troops overseas

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

It seemed an assignment more suited to a cub reporter, not the intrepid journalist who would become the national news service’s most celebrated war correspondent.

But then, this was The Canadian Press, for which no story was too small or too big, and there he was, Ross Munro, a man for all seasons, asking troops how they liked the first edition of The Canadian Press News, a weekly newsletter for Canadian servicemen and women overseas.

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Custom 5-Volume Set
Military Milestones
Military Milestones

Royal Canadian Regiment preparing an assault on the Boer Fortifications at the Modder River.[WIKIMEDIA]

The Battle of Paardeberg: a landmark engagement

STORY BY PAIGE JASMINE GILMAR

It’s the 124th anniversary of the Boer War’s Battle of Paardeberg. Not only was it a major British victory in what is also known as the South African War, but it was a landmark engagement for Canadian forces. It was the first time the country participated in a foreign conflict.

In 1899, the British called on the Canadians for reinforcements in the Boer War. Though Prime Minister Wilfrid Laurier opposed the request, English Canada was resoundingly in favour, so a thousand volunteer soldiers were sent as part of the 2nd (Special Service) Battalion, The Royal Canadian Regiment.

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Lost and found: High-flying CP warco survives shoot down

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Front Lines

The Sept. 21, 1944, message from SHAEF informing The Canadian Press that Charlie Bruce’s plane was overdue. [CP]

Lost and found: High-flying CP warco survives shoot down

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

The army message, marked CONFIDENTIAL, arrived in the London bureau of The Canadian Press shortly after lunch on Sept. 21, 1944.

It bore troubling news from General Dwight D. Eisenhower’s Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Force: a plane carrying the superintendent of the wire service’s overseas operations, Charlie Bruce, was 18 hours overdue.

Bruce had been covering a resupply mission over the German-occupied Netherlands during the Allies’ ill-fated attempt to bring the war to an early end—an airborne invasion called Operation Market Garden, later to be memorialized in the star-studded 1977 Hollywood film A Bridge Too Far.

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RCAF 100
Military Milestones
Military Milestones

The Silver Dart in flight. [Wikimedia]

The Silver Dart: Canada’s first successful plane and the RCAF

STORY BY PAIGE JASMINE GILMAR

On Feb. 23, 1909, the Royal Canadian Air Force’s pathway to the stars first began to take shape; the first flight of a powered, heavier-than-air, controlled airplane in Canada—the Silver Dart—was a success. Marking its 115th anniversary this year, the Silver Dart held the promise of a new future for Canada’s military: the possibility of an air force.

In 1907, Alexander Graham Bell, along with engineers J.A.D. (Douglas) McCurdy and Frederick Baldwin and two Americans, formed the Aerial Experiment Association with the financial support of Bell’s wife, Mabel. Their goal was “to get a man into the air.” Two years later, one of their creations was ready.

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Rebuilding bodies after WW I

Military Milestones

COURTESY OF GOOSE LANE EDITIONS

Rebuilding bodies after WW I

STORY BY KRISTEN DEN HARTOG

This exclusive excerpt from the new book The Roosting Box: Rebuilding the Body After the First World War by Kristen den Hartog explores some of the fascinating work of Toronto’s Christie Street Hospital in supporting wounded Canadian veterans after the conflict. Reprinted with permission of the publisher, Goose Lane Editions.

The roof ward was one of the marvels of the Christie Street Hospital, and came under the direction of a young doctor named Robert Inkerman Harris, who arrived at the facility with a gaggle of “war wrecks” wasting away from tuberculosis. Harris had suffered from tuberculosis as a child, and that old memory apparently fuelled his curiosity about the disease.

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