The Signallers Club of Canada
"Old Signallers Battlefield Tour - 2008"
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5 June 2008.
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On the eve of the 64th anniversary of D Day, I wanted to give you a
brief report on the recent “Old Signallers Battlefield Tour” in Europe. Four
members of the Signallers Club decided to visit France and Belgium to honour
Canadians, particularly members of the Royal Canadian Corps of Signals, who
fought in WWI and WWII. The participants were Don
Strong, Jack Thomson, Jim Holsworth and Bill Richard. I will write a more
detailed report with photos for the Club web site at a later date. I will
also leave some info in the Museum on our itinerary, background reading and
hotels. The information may be useful to Club members who would wish to
embark on a similar venture in the future.
After
flying to Paris, we had a full program for 8 days that took us to Canadian WW I
sites at Battle of Somme, Courcelette, Beaumont Hamel, Arras, Vimy Ridge, Ypres,
Menin Gate, Passchendaele, Saint Julian, Saint Georges Chapel, Tyne Cot, and
John MacRae’s Memorial and then onto WWII sites at Dieppe, Pegasus Bridge,
Juno Beach, Arromanches, Omaha Beach, and the Normandy Caen
– Falaise Gap battlefield area. Although several of us had visited the areas
before, features such as the young Canadian university students at Vimy,
Beaumont Hamel and Juno Beach and new museums at Arras, Passchendaele, and
Pegasus Bridge made the tour most enjoyable and educational.
We arranged
for a Canadian wreath with a Signallers Club banner to be available to honour
the members of the Corps buried at the Commonwealth War Graves cemeteries at
Dieppe, Beny-sur Mer, and Bretteville-sur- Laize. We had completed research
before the trip and had the details to visit the graves of the 3 signallers
buried at Dieppe (at least 4 others have no known grave), 29 signallers buried at
Beny-sur-Mer (Juno Beach) and 30 signallers buried at Bretteville –sur-Laize
(Normandy) . There are 9 signallers buried at Bayeau - Normandy and 8 signallers’
names on the Memorial at Bayeau, with no known grave.
The signallers’ names on the Bayeau Memorial with no known grave include
Corporal Norman Haulk killed on D Day and Lance Corporal E. Peters from
Charlottetown, PEI.and Lance Corporal Elmer Swan from Prescott, ON; both 23
years of age and both killed in the advance from the Normandy beach head
soon after D Day. Lance Corporal Francis Trainor from Charlottetown, PEI
was also killed on 6 June 1944 and is buried at Beny-sur-Mer.
There is little doubt that ‘old signallers’ memories on D Day - 6 June 2008
will be of those 76 + signallers and more than 5000 Canadians who gave their
lives in the battle for Normandy.
Bill
William S. Richard
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