Tag Archives: National Legion Week

National Legion Week: Branch 25 (San Francisco) Summary

This story is a part of Branch 25’s on-going National Legion Week campaign.

As the National Legion Week comes to an end, we wanted to highlight all of the contributions from Branch 25 (San Francisco) over the past week.

11 September 2023

17 September

18 September

 19 September

20 September

21 September

 22 September

National Legion Week: How You Can Join Branch 25 (San Francisco) of the Royal Canadian Legion

This story is a part of Branch 25’s on-going National Legion Week campaign.

You don’t have to be a veteran or even the relative of a veteran to join the Royal Canadian Legion.  Any Canadian citizen or citizen of a Commonwealth or an Allied nation over the age of 18 is welcome to become a member of the Legion. There are three main categories of membership:

Ordinary membership
Includes still serving and retired military, reservists, RCMP, police officers, Canadian Coast Guard, and others listed in the General By-Laws.

Associate membership
Includes parents, spouses, widows, widowers, children, grandchildren, siblings, nieces as well as nephews of a person who is or was eligible for Ordinary membership.

Affiliate membership
Includes Canadian citizens or Commonwealth subjects from an Allied nation who support The Royal Canadian Legion’s aims and objectives and are not eligible for ordinary or associate membership.

There are two ways that you can join Branch 25 (San Francisco) of the Royal Canadian Legion.  The first way is to visit https://legion.ca/join-us and click on the red “Join Now” button.  Complete the online form and near the bottom use the Branch Locator to find and “18-025 SAN FRANCISCO.”  The online system includes a payment gateway for your membership dues, and if you join online you will be charged in Canadian dollars.  The second way is to download, print, and complete this membership form and mail it and your US$40 membership dues to:

The Royal Canadian Legion
Branch 25 (San Francisco Bay Area)
P.O. Box 2295
Los Gatos, CA   95031-2295

National Legion Week: The Role of Royal Canadian Legion Pipe Bands in California

This story is a part of Branch 25’s on-going National Legion Week campaign.

It may come as a surprise to some that California is the location of one of the oldest Scottish gatherings/games in the world.  With the forming of the Caledonian Club of San Francisco in November of 1866, a “games” has been held continuously to this date.  This is testament to the strength of the Scottish community in the region.  It should be no surprise then, to find that this Scottish community plays a big role in the Canadian and greater British Empire Veteran’s community.  With this in mind, I’ll take a look at the presence of bagpipe bands in the Canadian Legion, and the vis-à-vis, the role of the Canadian Legion in piping in California.

With a large influx of Canadians and British heading to California, Royal Canadian Legion (then British Empire Service League, Canadian Legion) branches began forming in the early 1930s.  San Francisco Branch 25 was chartered in 1931 with branches forming across California throughout the 1930s. The earliest note of a Royal Canadian Legion pipe band I could find is for Inglewood, California Post 13 in 1931.  Marin Post 30 held a parade of officer’s lead by a Royal Canadian Legion band in 1932. This indicates pipe bands were a staple of the Legion life in California from the very beginning and likely represent some of the earliest pipe bands in the state. Looking through pictures and news clippings, pipe bands were a common staple of branch and civic functions.

By 1939, Berkeley Post 113 was voting to form a pipe band (see National Legion Week: The Old Berkeley Branch 113 for more information).  News articles mention pipe bands associated with branches up and down the state.  Los Angeles Post 88 apparently had a large benefactor as they wore the Douglas tartan of the Donald Douglas aircraft firm. From the 1930s through the World War II years, piping was noted in newspaper articles whenever the Canadian Legion was mentioned.

Following the war, and with another influx of Canadian/Commonwealth service members, pipe bands came and went with the Royal Canadian Legion but some stayed the course.  Berkeley Branch 113’s band is often noted in parades and events around the San Francisco Bay Area into the 1970s with Branch 25 Comrade Roger Weed noting they existed to the early 1980s.  Sacramento’s Branch 19’s band is shown in a photo from 1947 and a news article mentions the Pipe Major as William Wallace.  Southern California’s Palo Verde’s band shows up into the 1950s. The 1980 Festival of Canada at Disneyland notes the performance of the Royal Canadian Legion Pipe Band.

The Royal Canadian Legion Pipe Band of San Jose appears as one of the earliest Legion bands and longest running, by the 1960s the band seemed to shift around the Bay Area (likely Pleasant Hill, Concord, and Fremont) and was Royal Canadian Legion in name only from late 1970s into the late 1980s. The last mention I can find of Royal Canadian Legion pipers is of members playing for a wedding in Southern California in 1987.  It seems about the time Royal Canadian Legion bands in California folded.

With so many bands, and reaching into the earliest bands in California, it is without a doubt that Royal Canadian Legion members played a big role in the development and teaching of piping and drumming in California. Descriptions of bands of the San Francisco Bay area often note members who were veterans. One name of a particular note came up of great interest to me. A 1939 picture of the Annual Convention in Stockton shows San Francisco Post 25 with a pipe band.

The pipe band is pictured again in a 1947 picture of the Annual Convention in Sacramento .

A 1948 news article mentions the band’s Pipe Major as J. Bigger. This would be John Bigger.  John, and his brother Calvin, began their piping lives in the Boy Scout Troop 119 in 1935; a band in which my father, Keith Martin played snare drum.  John and Calvin became staples of piping in California, serving in leadership roles in the best bands the state has fielded and the Western United States Pipe Band Association. John also founded and taught San Francisco Boy Scout Troup 90 where I got my own piping start. In 1963 John moved to British Columbia and retired from piping. In 1983, he began playing again with the Royal Canadian Legion South Burnaby Branch 83.  The Bigger legacy continues through John’s nephew, also John, who is a leader in the Western United States Pipe Band Association and the San Francisco Caledonian Club. Another notable is Dr. A. McPherson who played with Berkeley Post 113 and started a small, but thriving piping hub in the Nevada City area.

While piping in California seemed to be well established within 16 years of its statehood, the post-World War I and World War II eras saw a boom in the growth of pipe bands.  Through organizations such as the British Empire Service League, Canadian Legion, former military pipers found an outlet to practice their art and pass on their knowledge.  This tradition continues today with players of my age group benefitting directly from these World War vets and now passing on that knowledge to the next generation of pipers.

Charles Martin, Pipe Major
Branch 25 (San Francisco)

National Legion Week: Affiliate Member – Bart McLeroy

This story is a part of Branch 25’s on-going National Legion Week campaign.

Bart McLeroy
Affiliate Member since 2012

McLeroy-2Both of Bart’s grandfathers were veterans of the United States Army (i.e., one serving in World War II and the other during the Korean War). However, he didn’t have a big history of military service or remembrance in our family.  Growing up in Texas, Bart had an interest in military history (thanks to his father) and in Canada (thanks to his parents taking him to Expo 86 in Vancouver at a very impressionable age). He deepened the latter interest over the years with frequent trips to Canada and eventually graduating from the University of British Columbia.

McLeroy-1Bart recalls sitting in a coffee shop in Vancouver in 2010, and a specific conversation with a friend about how the Royal Canadian Legion combined both of his interests.  As an affiliate member, Bart enjoys reading The Legion Magazine, which allows him to learn all manner of interesting things, and being a small part of helping the Legion achieve its mission.  Simply put, Bart joined the Legion because of an initial interest in military history and Canada, and he has maintained his membership because the people and activities of the branch – even if he is physically distant from my “home” branch in San Francisco.

Affiliate voting membership is open to any Canadian citizen or Commonwealth subject (or citizen of a NATO country in the case of non-Canadian branches) who is of federal voting age and who is not eligible for ordinary or associate membership.

 

National Legion Week: Branch 25 (San Francisco) Today – Sponsoring Cadets

This story is a part of Branch 25’s on-going National Legion Week campaign.

The Royal Canadian Legion has a long and valued partnership with Cadets Canada, and branches from all across the country regularly sponsor cadet programs. The Cadet program fosters youth leadership, citizenship, and volunteerism and promotes Canadian and military values.  Cadets volunteer to help the Legion with the Poppy Campaign, support our Veterans and take active roles in commemorative ceremonies across Canada. These young men and women play a vital role in supporting Legion activities and promoting Remembrance. In return, Legion branches provide financial support to help them grow.  The Royal Canadian Legion also sponsors the Cadet Medal of Excellence, which honours outstanding Cadets. It is awarded in recognition of individual endeavors in citizenship which enhance the aims and objectives of the cadet movement.

Branch 25 (San Francisco) is the ONLY branch of the Royal Canadian Legion outside of Canada who sponsors a cadet program.  With the two letters below from 1995, Branch 25 of the Royal Canadian Legion began its sponsorship of  the U.S. Naval Sea Cadet Corps (USNSCC) Arkansas Division.


Click on either image to access a PDF of these letters.

In his initial proposal to the branch, Comrade Rutledge wrote that the relationship between the two organizations was natural, as it was quite common for Legion branches in Canada to sponsor a local cadet corps. At the time, then Commanding Officer Lt. Lee Smith wrote that this affiliation would assist the cadets in participating to the fullest in the many training opportunities available to them.

Over the past three decades the USNSCC Arkansas Division has been a vital source of human resources for the various services and activities of the Branch 25.


Similarly, Branch 25 has continued to provide annual funding for the USNSCC Arkansas Division, as well as present the Royal Canadian Legion’s Cadet Medal of Excellence each year to a deserving cadet.

Finally, each year our USNSCC Arkansas Division participate in the Wreaths Across America ceremony held at the National Cemetery at the Presidio of San Francisco to remember and honor our veterans through the laying of remembrance wreaths on the graves of our country’s fallen heroes and the act of saying the name of each and every veteran aloud.  Each year Branch 25 supports the cadet’s efforts to sponsor individual wreaths and Branch 25 members also attend the event to show our appreciation for all of the times the cadets help support the branch’s services.