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Fallen Comrades (retired members)

A friend of mine has been, over the past number of years, photographing war graves in just about every place except Europe. If anybody has any questions of graves, graveyards, you might want to email him. He may have photographed them.

Ralph McLean  shankland_the_dog@hotmail.com
 
Great post Edward. Thanks for the pics. I took this one at the Adelaide River CWGC Cemetery in the town of Adelaide River, south of Darwin in the Northern Territory. He is the only Canadian there. Then I found a marker for a Australian MN Deck Cadet, only 16 years old. He was KIA at the 19 Feb 42 first air raid by the Japs on Darwin Harbour. Others from the UK, and even some civilians who were killed in that first air aid on 19 Feb. The cemetery in the tradition of all CWGC cemeteries is well kept, neat and tidy. Guest register at the main gate, with signatures from all over the world. Many from the UK visiting their fallen relative for the first time, and so noted in the book.
 
Captain Vernon Murray, (Ret'd) Royal Montreal Regiment (WW II)

It is with deep regret and much sadness that I must announce the passing of Captain Vernon Murray on Friday, 27 October 2006. He underwent surgery on his foot two weeks ago and complications set in.

Vern was an Honourary member and long time supporter of OMMC. He served with the Royal Montreal Regiment during the Second World and for many years served as the curator of the Regimental Museum.

Condolences may be sent to his daughter Kathy Stewart and his son Scott at:    17219 - 172 Street NW
                                                                                                                    Edmonton, Alberta
                                                                                                                    T5T 3K7

                          telephone numbers :  (780) 486-5833, (780) 490-8583 and (780) 489-9939

Kathy and Scott are planning a small service in Point Claire, Montreal in the spring.

 
CWO Dean Dunlop

I regret to inform you that CWO Dean Dunlop passed away peacefully at
home on Sunday morning, December 3rd. Dean was pre-deceased by his
parents and leaves behind his spouse Cathy Cannon, sons William Jeffrey,
Christopher and daughter Andrea, 4 grand-children and brother Ian. Dean
was a proud member of the Airborne Association and one of the most
highly respected leader of the Intelligence Branch. His courage,
devotion, leadership and sense of humour will be sorely missed.

A Memorial service will take place at the Beechwood Cemetery, (280
Beechwood) on Thursday, December 7th, 2006 at 1430hrs (seating by
1400hrs please). Friends and colleagues are invited to attend. Dress for
military members is Service dress 3 (DEU) with medals. Interment will
take place in the Spring of 2007.

Please distribute to all those I have missed.

J.R.F. Bouchard
Intelligence Branch Chief



A further note.

For those that were on the Rememberance Day Parade, at Beechwood Cemetery, last month he was the gentleman in the wheelchair who talked to many after the parade. CWO Dunlop was the Army Chief for the Intelligence Branch and who fought for its members at every occaison.
 
Its my sad duty to inform of the death of:


COLONEL William (Bill) Chesley Wilton, CD Ret

WILTON, William (Bill) Chesley (Col. CD Ret.)– Passed peacefully away on 29 January 2007, at the Health Sciences Centre, in the presence of his family, William Wilton at the age of 86 years. Bill served with the 59th Royal Artillery during WWII. He attended UNB and obtained a degree in Forestry Engineering. Bill worked with the Canadian Forestry Services until his retirement, subsequently he was awarded a Lifetime Achievement Award by the Canadian Institute of Forestry. Bill joined the militia after the war, and served in various positions including Commanding Officer and Honorary Colonel of the 56th Field Squadron Engineers and Commander Newfoundland District. Bill was also very involved with the Army Cadets and served as President of the Army Cadet League of Canada, Newfoundland and Labrador Branch. Predeceased by his daughter Doran (1954); his wife Elizabeth (2001) and his son Ches (2006). Also predeceased by brothers-in-law Ted Trenchard and Robert Pretty and sister-in-law Amy Wilton. Left with fond and loving memories his son Derek, wife Susan and grandchildren Felicie Young (husband Andrew), Kimberley and Peter, daughter Judy Caul, husband Tony and granddaughter Andrea (fiance Liam McNamara); and son Gary, wife Joan Cranston and grandchildren Rebecca Wilton and Peter Cranston; sisters: Georgina Trenchard, Winifred Pretty and Mima Penney (Phonse) and brothers: Robert and Claude (Ulah); nieces and nephews; other relatives and many friends; and the many friends he made at Elizabeth Towers. Resting at Carnell’s Funeral Home, 329 Freshwater Road. Visitation from 2:00 pm to 4:00 pm and 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm on Tuesday, 30 January 2007; from 10:00 am to 12:00 noon, 2:00 pm to 4:00 pm and 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm on Wednesday, 31 January 2007; and from 10:00 am to 12:00 noon on Thursday, 1 February 2007. Funeral services will take place on Thursday, 1 February 2007 at 2:00 pm from Carnell’s Chapel. Interment to follow at Mount Pleasant Cemetery. Flowers gratefully accepted or donations in Bill’s memory may be made to a charity of one’s choice. To send a message of condolence or sign the memorial guest book please visit www.carnells.com
 
Syd Shulemson,  Hero fighter pilot


http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/capress/070203/national/obit_shulemson
Hero fighter pilot Syd Shulemson, recruiter for Israeli air force, dead at 91
Sat Feb 3, 1:26 PM



By Steve Mertl


VANCOUVER (CP) - Syd Shulemson never lost the fighter pilot's dash he displayed as Canada's most highly decorated Jewish soldier of the Second World War.


Shulemson, who died in Florida last week at 91 following a heart attack, helped pioneer techniques for low-level rocket attacks on Axis powers' shipping in the North Atlantic. The tactics were used for decades until smart weapons and long-range missiles supplanted unguided rockets.


After the war, he was part of the group that helped equip the embryonic Israeli armed forces for its War of Independence.


And he recruited veteran pilots, including famed Canadian ace George (Buzz) Beurling, to fly for the new Jewish state.


Plans are underway for a memorial service in his hometown of Montreal but arrangements have not been finalized.


Shulemson's Clark Gable moustache might have been white when he settled into 404 Squadron's flight simulator at CFB Greenwood, N.S., last October during the 65th anniversary of squadron he flew for during the war.


But the 90-year-old Shulemson, who hadn't flown in 60 years, astounded his hosts by quickly adapting to the four-engine maritime patrol plane's flying characteristics.


Shulemson set off alarms when he took the Aurora below its 30-metre minimum altitude to perform his trademark low-level attack on a simulated ship.


"He kept trying to fly lower than we were allowed to fly because when they flew during the war, they normally flew at 50 to 75 feet off the water," said squadron historian Maj. Chris Larsen.


Sydney Simon Shulemson, born Oct. 22, 1915, in Montreal, was a natural pilot.


He dreamed of becoming an aeronautical engineer and his high school marks were strong enough to win entrance to McGill University despite its quota on Jewish students at the time.


But money was tight in Depression-era Canada so Shulemson was forced to quit and find work, first with a New York advertising firm, then his uncle's Montreal printing business.


The day Canada declared war on Germany, Sept. 10, 1939, the former army cadet signed up with the RCAF.


Shulemson graduated near the top of his pilot-training class in 1942 and was sent to Charlottetown for advanced training.


He was in hospital recovering from minor surgery when the rest of his class was dispatched to India to fight in the Pacific war against the Japanese.


Shulemson instead was sent to RCAF 404 Squadron, then stationed in Wick, Scotland, as part of a Royal Air Force Coastal Command wing whose role was to attack German shipping along the Norwegian and Dutch coasts.


"The result of that of course is that he's thrown really into the deep end of the pool," said aviation author Wayne Ralph, who interviewed Shulemson for his 2005 book Aces, Warriors and Wingmen.

Shulemson quickly made his mark by shooting down a German flying boat and sharing the destruction of a second on his first mission.

The squadron was equipped with twin-engine Bristol Beaufighters, a powerful, snubnosed fighter-bomber.

Though heavily armed with four 20-millimetre cannon and six machine guns, the Beaufighters suffered heavy losses when attacking ships with torpedoes because they had to fly straight and slow.

The RAF was experimenting with wing-mounted armour-piercing rockets but was on the verge of discarding them because pilots had a hard time making accurate hits with the unguided projectiles.

Shulemson and his British commander, Squadron Leader Ken Gatward, concluded the problem lay in the free-for-all approach to the attacks and pilots' tendency to guess at the right aiming point.

Using his background in aeronautics, Shulemson systematically worked out the proper speeds, angles of attack and release point for the rockets.

He and Gatward also replaced the squadron's cowboy attack style with a methodical approach that quickly paid off.

Rocket-equipped Beaufighters of 404 Squadron - now folded into the RAF's Banff Wing - were not only sinking vital Axis cargo vessels but also powerful warships that protected them, including two 8,000-ton anti-aircraft escort ships during the Normandy invasion.

Shulemson became technical officer in charge of training other pilots on rocket-attack techniques.

"At the end of the war Shulemson was training up to nine squadrons," said historian Stephane Guevremont, who is completing Shulemson's biography.

His expertise was such that even though he was a junior officer, Shulemson led multi-squadron attacks.

"It was quite clear to me that he was leading combat missions as though he were a wing commander," said Ralph.

Eventually he was barred from any more missions, his knowledge deemed to valuable to risk in operations.

Only a few months into his combat tour in 1943, Shulemson earned a Distinguished Service Order, a medal just below the Victoria Cross rarely given to junior officers like him.


After successfully attacking an enemy convoy, he kept a German fighter busy for 18 minutes to allow a damaged wingman to escape.

The more agile Messerschmidt 109 was forced to break off the attack eventually and Shulemson nursed his now-damaged Beaufighter back to base.


Six months later Shulemson won the Distinguished Flying Cross for his work in turning the Banff Wing into a deadly anti-shipping strike force.

Yet Shulemson ended the war as lowly flight lieutenant. It would be 10 years before he was promoted even to squadron leader in the peacetime reserve.

The reasons were probably complicated. Shulemson was never less than candid in stating his views and Guevremont also believes he worried promotion would have meant a desk job.

But there was also a lingering suspicion of anti-Semitism within the higher levels of the British military.

Shulemson told Guevremont of an incident when he was assigned to train some Royal Navy fliers in his rocket-attack techniques.

An admiral called 404 Squadron to find out who he was and what kind of name was Shulemson. The week-long assignment ended after two days.

After the war, Shulemson rejoined his uncle's printing firm but soon became involved in the fight for a Jewish state in Palestine.

Israel's supporters were scrambling to equip and man the infant state's armed forces for the expected Arab onslaught once the UN-mandated partition became final.

Shulemson went to meetings in New York and claimed he persuaded Israel's backers that air power would be crucial to winning the war.

"He said you won't have independence without an air force," said Guevremont. "So he found them airplanes and he found them pilots."

Shulemson was able to acquire 200 surplus British de Havilland Mosquito fighter-bombers originally purchased by China and divert them to Israel.

He also began recruiting veteran pilots.

The work had a cloak-and-dagger quality because Canada was treading a fine diplomatic line at the United Nations.

Shulemson claimed then-external affairs minister Lester Pearson warned him to keep his efforts under the radar.

"You had this strange situation where there's no question a lot of the activity was under RCMP surveillance," said David Bercuson, director of the University of Calgary's Centre for Military and Strategic Studies, whose 1984 book The Secret Army tells the story of Israel's foreign volunteers.

Shulemson's most famous recruit was George (Buzz) Beurling, Canada's highest-scoring ace of the war with 32 confirmed victories, most during the siege of Malta in 1942.

But Shulemson was leery of Beurling, a maverick loner who he suspected was a mercenary at best or even an agent of the British, who were backing the Arabs.

Worse, Beurling could not resist shooting off his mouth.

"He was meeting Beurling at secret places and trying to hide him, and Beurling was going to the press (saying) 'hey. I'm going to Israel,' " said Guevremont.

Beurling never made it, dying along with copilot Leonard Cohen when a Canadian-built Norseman bushplane he was test flying caught fire and crashed outside Rome in May 1948.

Many, including Shulemson, suspected a British agent sabotaged the plane.

Pearson sent a letter of condolence to Beurling's family in Quebec but declined to pay to bring the legendary flier's body home to Canada.

He was buried in Rome but in 1950, Shulemson arranged for an Israeli navy destroyer to take Beurling's body to Israel. He was buried in Haifa military cemetery and given a posthumous commission in Israel's air force.

Israel honoured Shulemson with a citation as a Fighter for the State of Israel.

Shulemson was also deeply involved in the Canadian Jewish Congress until the early 1990s. He sat on its community relations committee, which dealt with interfaith relations, anti-Semitism and the pursue of Nazi war criminals living in Canada.

"He didn't speak on everything but when he did speak, especially on the issues that he cared passionately for, it came out with such gravitas that you couldn't help but not take into account what he had to say," said Bernie Farber, the congress's regional executive director for Ontario.

Shulemson is survived by his wife Ella, whom he married at age 74 after a lifetime of "playing the field," and stepsons Rick and Jerry Lozoff.

He had a credo, said Guevremont.

" 'I can prove with my life that I can be totally loyal to two nations.' He gave himself to Canada during the war . . . then he devoted his post-war career to the building of the state of Israel."

Copyright © 2007 Canadian Press
 
From today’s Ottawa Citizen.

Roger Rowley

ROWLEY, Major General (ret'd) Roger Rowley, DSO, ED, CD, GCLJ, GOMLJ – Soldier

Roger Rowley, born in Ottawa, 12 June 1914; died peacefully in his sleep February 14, 2007 at the age of 92.

He was predeceased by his brother John, who died in battle in Holland in 1945.

Roger had a distinguished military career. During WW II he served with the Cameron Highlanders of Ottawa and the Stormont Dundas & Glengary Highlanders. After the war he attended the Camberley Staff College and later the Imperial Defence College. Over the following years Roger served as Director of Military Operations and Plans, Director of Infantry, and Director of Military Training. He was Commander of 2 Canadian Infantry Brigade Group in Germany, Commandant of the Canadian Army Staff College, Commander of the Army Tactics and Organization Board, and Deputy Commander Operations at Mobile Command.

He received an Honorary Doctorate of Military Science from The Royal Military College of Canada; in recognition of his contribution of the Rowley Report, as Chairman of the Officer Development Board. Roger retired in 1968. Following his retirement Roger gave much of his time to The Military and Hospitaller Oder of Saint Lazarus of Jerusalem. He was at the time of his passing; Colonel of the Regiment of Canadian Guards, Honourary Colonel of the Cameron Highlanders of Ottawa and Knight Grand Cross and a Member of the Senate Order of Saint Lazarus.

Roger is survived by his wife Barbara, daughter Andrea Panet (Charles), son Roger (Chris), stepsons Michael Stephenson (Barbara) and John Stephenson (Greta), nieces Shirley Gobeil-Gravelle (Camille), Lee Wright (David), Jane McDougall (John Lorn), nephew J. William Rowley, QC (Janet); granddaughters Deirdre Panet Francis (Derrick) and Margot Panet Ward (Christopher), great grandson Jack Ward and step grandchildren Andrew, John, Rebecca, Tyler, Derek, Alexa and Jessica Stephenson.

He will be remembered by all who knew him for his dignity, his respect for others and his wonderful sense of humour. His family would like to thank the wonderful staff of New Edinburgh Square and the extraordinary caregivers from Retire At Home; particularly: Sarah, Samone, Remy and Kirk for their exceptional care and kindness. In lieu of flowers, a donation to the charity of your choice would be appreciated. Funeral services will be held on Tuesday, February 20, 2007 at Christ Church Cathedral, Sparks & Bronson, Ottawa at 10 am.

 
Thank you for your service, you will be missed.

:salute:

They went with songs to the battle, they were young,
Straight of limb, true of eye, steady and aglow.
They were staunch to the end against odds uncounted;
They fell with their faces to the foe.

They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them, nor the years contemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them.

 
If you do, sad news....

Bruce died following a short, sudden illness on March 8, 2007 in Thunder Bay.  A former member of the Lake Superior Scottish Regiment in Thunder Bay, Bruce was also active in the newly-revived Lake Superior Scottish Regiment Association.  He'll be deeply missed.

If you have any memories to share with the family, or would like to send condolences, please respond to this thread, or post "Comments" here:
http://milnewstbay.pbwiki.com/Bruce%20Reith

The family would like to collect these for both a eulogy, as well as for a keepsake for the kids and especially the grandkids.

Thanks!
 
A friend at work pointed this out to me, the yellow highlighted part I found fascinating,

Bertram George Day   
BERTRAM GEORGE DAY 1918 - 2007 After the death of his beloved wife of 66 years, Marguerite, from pneumonia on February 18, 2007, Bert lost his own life 2 weeks later on March 3, 2007 in a catastrophic electrical fire which destroyed their home. Because of his short term memory loss, Bert could not remember that his beloved Marg had died only days before, and he was therefore constantly asking after her, only to be told repeatedly - and each time as if for the first time - that she had just died. At 88, Bert was still very security minded, making sure the doors were locked, the lights off, the alarms on, and since he was on the ground floor and had built the house with several means of emergency egress, he could easily have escaped the fire. But, when the alarms went off, he woke to find that Marg was not in bed with him and, of course, he would not leave the house without her. Consequently he lost his own life in a family tragedy of Shakespearean proportions while looking to rescue her. His wonderful Tibetan caregiver, Sonam Tso, risked her own life trying to save him but was beaten back by heat, smoke and flames. She then ran down the laneway to the neighbours in her pyjamas, cutting her bare feet on the ice, to make the 911 call at approximately 4:15 a.m. The Milton Fire Department were actually in action at the fire only 7 ? minutes later. The first firefighters on the scene found the house engulfed, but also risked their lives and breached protocol by fog-streaming their way into Bert's bedroom - but he had gone looking for his Marg and was not there. Although he was born in Toronto, Bert's parents were both Newfoundlanders - his father, Reverend William Goddard Day of Old Perlican, a Methodist and then United Church Minister, died in 1919 shortly after Bert's birth, and his mother, Lena Elizabeth Day (nee Follett), was a schoolteacher from Western Bay. She died when Bert was 12 years old and he was raised by his strict, but devoted aunt, Pamela Ann Follett, a home missionary for the Methodists. While he had no brothers or sisters himself, his cousins from the other Day and Loveys clans became part of his own family. He became close friends with Marg's sister, Bernice, and her husband, Keith Huff, and their children, of Edmonton and later, Denver. After marrying Marguerite Gladys Bricker in 1941 and graduating from Forestry Engineering at University of Toronto, Bert spent his war years as a bomb disposal officer for Army Intelligence in charge of Western Canada against the Imperial Japanese campaign, which bombed Western North America from ingenious solar-powered hydrogen balloons. These hot-air type balloons were launched into the jet stream from Tokyo by the Bacterial Warfare Division of the Japanese Army, who were known to have used germ warfare in China by dropping bubonic plague-infected rice and fleas to the rats of several major Chinese cities. Because of the spying which preceded Pearl Harbour, the Japanese Balloon Theatre was successfully kept top secret even though hundreds of balloons (and their bombs) hit Western North America from 1944 - 46. Only normal soil bacteria from the Tokyo area were found in the ballast sandbags and other paraphernalia that made it across the Pacific, out of reach of all aircraft of the day, and invisible to early radar because the balloons had no metal structure. Bert called this campaign his "private war against Japan": "private" because he was sent out completely on his own with written authority from Brigadier Harvey in Ottawa to commandeer whatever transport or service or manpower he required from any of our armed forces in order to carry out his mission - without explanation to any higher ranks, even though he was only a Lieutenant. For these services to our country, Bert was made a Member of the British Empire, with a citation for his "initiative, ingenuity and energy in recovering Japanese balloons and bombs from extremely isolated and most inaccessible locations". Post-war Japanese publications confirm that Tokyo never did find out that so many balloons had made the flight successfully. After the war, Bert taught Dendrology and Silvaculture at the University of New Brunswick until the Abitibi hired him as a Logging Superintendent, and he and Marg moved into a bush camp near Timmins with 200 other men. He soon opened his own mining timber business, which he operated in Timmins until 1967. He and Marg then built the Mohawk Inn in Campbellville which they ran together until 1974. During the Mohawk years, Bert became an antique expert, with formidable knowledge of pine furniture and all collectors' lines of glass and china. Losing the home that they had built together and turned into a museum of Canadiana antiques means the loss of countless sentimental treasures. Spiritual without being religious, our Bertram was ever the student, especially of the history of mankind, and of the accountability of the world's great religions. He would also quote extensively from the Bible and Shakespeare to illustrate a point, or just to appreciate their beautiful language, and he would go about his business all day singing or whistling to himself. Very few people would play cards with Bert because, given enough time, he would always win at poker or bridge. He had other "supernatural" abilities as a fisherman, and as a water witch - able to tell from an apple twig how deep the water was, how many gallons a minute, how pure, and so on. And he was never wrong! Marg and Bert were predeceased by their best friends, Loretta and Keith Stirling and Ann and Henry Kelneck, and they loved the Stirling girls and the Kelneck children and their families as their own. They are survived by three children and nine grandchildren, who strive to attain the high standards Marg and Bert set through their own attitudes and achievements:
 
It is with great sadness that the passing of Dwight Wilson, age 106 has occurred.  He was the second last World War I veteran left in Canada. 


Lest We Forget

http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/capress/obit_wwi_wilson



 
I won't quote the whole yellow highlight here...but I found that tidbit about Bertram very interesting. 
"At the going down of the sun...we will remember them"
:salute: Rest In Peace Mr. Wison. 
You have done your duty, and I shall do mine.
:cdn:
 
Reprinted under fair dealings thingy


Veteran Percy "Dwight" Wilson died this morning at the age of 106, leaving only one known surviving veteran of the First World War.

Percy Wilson chats with Ontario Lieutenant-Governor James Bartleman at the 90th anniversary of Vimy Ridge commemorative event in April 2007 (Courtesy Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre).
Percy Wilson chats with Ontario Lieutenant-Governor James Bartleman at the 90th anniversary of Vimy Ridge commemorative event in April 2007 (Courtesy Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre).

Wilson passed "peacefully" at Toronto's Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Canada's largest veterans' care facility, where flags were lowered to half-mast in honour of the veteran.

His death leaves John Babcock, who lives in Spokane, Wash., as the only surviving Canadian First World War veteran.

"All these guys who signed up realized there were risks involved, especially by 1916," Wilson's son, Paul, said of the generation of young men who volunteered to serve despite news chronicling horrific battlefield losses.

"I think maybe in 1914, when the war broke out, some of the young boys signing up thought it would be a lark,'' he added. "By 1916, there had been thousands upon thousands of them just killed. They had some horrendous battles."

In 1915, as a young Cadet, Wilson trained as a mounted bugler in the militia. And in July of the following year, at age 15 -- three years shy of the legal minimum -- he enlisted and joined the 69th Artillery Battery in Toronto.

After completing basic training in Camp Niagara and Camp Petawawa, Ont., Dwight ventured overseas as part of the Artillery Battery.

"On the two-week voyage crossing the North Atlantic to England, he entertained the other troops on the R.M.S. Grampian liner with his wonderful singing voice," the veterans' care centre said in a press release.

"He was one of over 600,000 Canadians who fulfilled their sense of duty and volunteered to serve in the Great War."

But upon arrival in England, his superiors realized Wilson was too young, and held him back from the front lines.

Wilson was eventually sent back to Canada and discharged as a minor.

"I don't know if he really lied about his age, or whether someone fudged it," said Paul Wilson. "This is 1916. The best troops in Europe and the Allies had already been cut to pieces. I think they were scrambling."

But war broke out again in 1939, and Wilson, who was working with Bell Telephone, became a Captain in Stratford's 7th Perth Regiment Reserves.

He tried to serve once again, only this time he was too old for active duty.

Wilson worked for Bell Canada from 1919 until his retirement in 1966. He held numerous positions in several Ontario communities, and was promoted to manager of the phone company's Stratford operation.

He also sang in the Bell vocal group, and enjoyed a career in music which included studying at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto, where he met his wife -- singer and pianist Eleanor Dean.

He and Eleanor were married in 1927 and stayed together until she died at the age of 94. They had two sons, Dean and Paul.

There will be a funeral service with military honour for family members and invited guests only.

In a statement, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said he was "deeply saddened" to learn of Wilson's death.

"On behalf of all Canadians, I would like to extend my sincere condolences to Mr. Wilson's family and friends. As a nation, we honour his service and mourn his passing," said Harper.

Ten per cent of the Canadians who enlisted to fight in the First World War died on the battlefields of Europe, and 170,000 more were wounded.

The war would ultimately claim 15 million civilian and military lives on both sides of the conflict.

"In memory of Wilson and all those who served in the Great War, the family has requested that donations be directed to the Veterans' Comfort Fund at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Room KGE39," said the Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre.

http://news.sympatico.msn.ctv.ca/TopStories/ContentPosting.aspx?feedname=CTV-TOPSTORIES_V2&showbyline=True&newsitemid=CTVNews%2f20070509%2fwar_veteran_070509
 
Your torch has been passed on,

Thank you for your service, you will be missed.

  :salute:  :cdn:  :salute:

They went with songs to the battle, they were young,
Straight of limb, true of eye, steady and aglow.
They were staunch to the end against odds uncounted;
They fell with their faces to the foe.

They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them, nor the years contemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them.
 
I regret to advise that Gordon Salzman, who was a member of the West Nova Scotia Regiment during World War 2 has recently passed away at the age of 85 after a battle with cancer.  Gordon is survived by his wife of 60 years Madeline Salzman, son Shilo Salzman (wife: Marj) and 3 grandchildren Josh, Jen and Adam.  He will be greatly missed. 
 
LATHEY, Keith - MMM, CD, RCAF, Ret., OPP, Ret. - Passed . . .

August 24, 2007
THE RECORD

(Aug 24, 2007) -- LATHEY, Keith - MMM, CD, RCAF, Ret., OPP, Ret. - Passed away, suddenly, August 20, 2007, at the age of 79.

Survived by his wife of 58 years, Faye (Wellman); sons, Rob of Kitchener, Geoff (Jude) of Christchurch, New Zealand and Chris (Lynn) of Kitchener; brother, Jack (Bernice) of Kanata; sister, Marlene (Laurie) of Edmonton; step-mother, Florence Slavinski of Langley, B.C.; grandchildren, Adrian and Shannon.

Keith served 29 years with the RCAF as an Armourer and Explosive Disposal Unit expert. He was stationed at various locations in Canada and front line Cold War Fighter bases in Europe. His last millitary posting was at the Department of National Defence Head Quarters, where he was responsible for establishing standards for Bomb Disposal teams for the entire Canadian Military. He was one of the first to be inducted as a recipient of the Order of Military Merit.

Following his retirement from the Armed Services, Keith joined the O.P.P. for 13 years, as co-ordinator of Explosives Disposal for the Province of Ontario. He was one of the original members of the I.A.B.T.I. (International Association of Bomb Technicians and Investigators). The I.A.B.T.I. granted him one of the first and few Life Time Memberships in the Association.

Despite fighting a courageous battle with ALS, Keith never lost his wit and full sense of humour. Keith's passion and knowledge of classical music was illustrated by his extensive collection of CD's. He will be sadly missed for his jokes, spontaneous poems, and his caring and compassionate nature. His multitude of feathered friends will miss him at the bird feeders.

Family and friends will be received at Westmount Funeral Chapel, at 10 a.m. on Saturday, August 25 followed by the funeral service at 11 a.m. Following the service there will be a reception downstairs at Westmount Funeral Chapel. As expression of sympathy, donations can be made to the ALS Society and the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario. Cards are available at the funeral home. Cremation has taken place.
 
Honorary Colonel (Retired) The Honourable William John McKeag, CM,OM,CD,BComm, LL.D

A very enthusiastic and supportive Honourary Colonel  of  The Fort Garry Horse, 1973-1998


 
 
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