Tag Archives: Legion Magazine

Too young—and too old—to join the fight

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Legion Magazine
Front Lines
Too young—and too old— to join the fight

Too young—and too old— to join the fight

Story by Stephen J. Thorne

Clifford Robinson Oulton was just 14 years old and baby-faced when he walked into a recruiting office in Moncton, N.B., on Feb. 1, 1916. The Great War was raging in France, Belgium and beyond and young Clifford wanted to be a part of it.

His father George, a railroad pipefitter, had died. He’d lost a brother in 1909. His mother Dora and four sisters lived just outside of town, in Bridgedale. Times were tough, no doubt.

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Military Milestones
Thayendanegea’s legacy

Thayendanegea’s legacy

Story by Sharon Adams

This week, between Indigenous Veterans Day on Nov. 8 and Remembrance Day on Nov. 11, and after observance of the first Truth and Reconciliation Day, it seems fitting to remember one of the country’s first Indigenous military heroes, a man honoured by his own people, colonial allies and Europeans in the 18th century.

His traditional name translates to “he who places two bets” or “two sticks bound together for strength”—but his tree of life has so many branches it’s difficult to know which two character traits combined to give him such a strong personality.

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Arbor Alliance
Canvet Publication Ltd.

Viking settlement predates latest discovery: archeologist

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Legion Magazine
Front Lines
Vikings settled Newfoundland centuries before Columbus sailed:

Viking settlement predates latest discovery: archeologist

Story by Stephen J. Thorne

A co-author of a groundbreaking study that pinpointed Viking activity in North America to the summer of 1021 AD says Norse explorers likely arrived at the Newfoundland site years before they cut the wood on which the finding was based.

Longtime Parks Canada archeologist Birgitta Wallace, one of the world’s foremost experts on Vikings (Norse) on this continent, said the finding using a new form of radiocarbon dating may well represent the last year the Norse explorers spent at L’Anse aux Meadows on Newfoundland’s Great Northern Peninsula.

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Liberation Trio
Military Milestones
The U.S. invasion of Grenada

Setting an exact border

Story by Sharon Adams

Canada and the United States famously share the longest undefended border in the world—but the exact location of that border has been in dispute many times.

One of those disputes ended with Yukon being cut off from sea access by the Alaska Panhandle. It’s a border dispute that Canada lost more than a century ago that has ramifications reverberating to this day.

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Arbor Alliance
Canvet Publication Ltd.