Brave Battalion

Home > Other > Brave Battalion > Page 34
Brave Battalion Page 34

by Mark Zuehlke

recruitment activities. See mobilization

  Red Lodge

  Rees, Cpl. Hugh Arthur

  Reichstag

  Reid, Lt. Max

  Reid, Sgt. Alexander

  Reims

  Reith, Sgt. William

  Render, Maj. McKenzie

  Rhine

  Richardson, Piper James

  Ridge, Sgt. Murdo

  Riehl, Pte. J.H.

  Rietchel, Capt. Ernest Otto

  Roberts, Maj. Henry Lucas

  Robertson, Capt. Robert

  Rodgers, Lt. James

  Ross (rifle)

  Ross, Capt. George

  Ross, Maj. Lorne

  Ross, Pte. Jack

  Ross, Sir Charles

  Rouvroy-en-Santerre

  Roye

  Rudkin House

  Rue de l’Epinette

  Rue La Quinque

  Rupprecht, Crown Prince (Bavaria)

  Russell, Jas

  S

  Sailly-en-Ostrevent

  St. Armand

  St. Eloi

  St. Jean

  St. Julien

  Saint-les-Marquion

  St. Mihiel

  St. Nazaire

  St. Quentin

  Salisbury Plain

  Sallumines Hills

  Sancourt

  Sanctuary Woods

  Sarajevo

  Sauchy-Lestrée

  Sausage Valley

  Scarpe River

  Schwetz Wood

  Scott, Canon Frederick

  Scroggie, Maj. James

  Sensée River

  Slessor, Sgt. George

  Smith-Dorrien, Gen. Horace

  Soignies

  Soissons

  Somain

  Somme

  “Somme Patches”

  Somme River

  Sophie, Archduchess (Austria)

  Stant d’Avril

  Stark, Lt. William

  Souchez River

  Station Wood

  Steele, Sgt. John

  Steenbeek River

  Steenstraat

  Stewart/Cpl. Duncan

  Strang, Lt. Harold

  Stroombeek River

  Sugar Trench

  Sugar Valley

  Sumner, Pte. Frederich

  T

  Thélus

  Thiepval

  Tidworth

  Tilloy

  Trigger Copse

  Thompson Lt. Edward Payson

  Thompson, Pte. Tommy

  Tor Top (Hill 62)

  Triple Alliance

  Tupper, Sir Charles

  Tupper, Sir Charles Hibbert

  Tupper, George

  Tupper, Maj. Gordon

  Tupper, Maj. Reginald

  Turner, Maj. Gen. Richard E.W.

  Turner, Brig. Gen. Robert

  Tuxford, Brig. George

  Twidale, Pte. Percy

  U

  Urquhart, Maj. Hugh MacIntyre

  Ushant

  V

  Valcartier

  Valenciennes

  Verdun

  Vicoigne

  Victoria Cross ,

  Vierstraat

  Vimy (village of)

  Vimy Ridge

  Virty-en-Artois

  Vis-en Artois Switch

  von Bismarck, Chancellor Otto

  von Falkenhayn, Gen. Erich

  W

  War Office (Britain)

  War Office (Canada)

  Warloy-Baillon

  Warvillers

  Wasmuel

  Watson, Maj. Gen. David

  Webber, Brig. N.W.

  Wieltje

  Williams, Brig. Victor

  Wilson, Woodrow

  Winnipeg Free Press

  Wood, Capt. Stanley

  Worral, Lt. Col. Dick

  Wulverghem

  Wytschaete

  Y

  Ypres

  Ypres-Comines Canal

  Ypres Salient

  Yser, Canal

  Z

  Zillebeke

  Zivy Cave

  Zollern Graben

  Zouave Valley

  Zwischen-Stellung

  Zwölfer-Stellung

  10th Canadian Infantry Brigade

  Canadian Cavalry Brigade

  Canadian Light Horse

  About the Author

  Mark Zuehlke has been hailed by Jack Granatstein as Canada’s most popular military historian. Of his twenty books, nine have been works of military history. For Honour’s Sake: The War of 1812 and the Brokering of an Uneasy Peace won the Canadian Authors Association 2007 Lela Common Award for Canadian History. In 2006, Holding Juno: Canada’s Heroic Defence of the D-Day Beaches, June 7-12, 1944 was awarded the City of Victoria Butler Book Prize. Also a novelist, Zuehlke is known for the acclaimed Elias McCann mystery series, which chronicles the misadventures of a coroner in British Columbia’s Tofino. Hands Like Clouds garnered a Crime Writers of Canada Arthur Ellis Best First Novel award in 2000, and Sweep Lotus was a finalist for the Arthur Ellis Best Novel in 2004. Zuehlke lives in Victoria, BC. He can be found on the web at www.zuehlke.ca.

  On September 28, 1914, less than two months after Canada’s declaration of war against the Axis powers, 16th Battalion shipped out from Quebec aboard Adania. This rare but underexposed image, taken from the ship deck, shows members of both the 14th Battalion (in caps) and 16th Battalion (glengarries) looking back toward Quebec.

  The dilemma over how to merge four Highland regiments into one is clearly illustrated in this photo taken on the Salisbury Plain in 1915. Although the distinctive tartans are hard to make out, the differences in glengarries are plain to see.

  Although his shyness led to a seemingly aloof manner, Robert Leckie’s experience leading Canadian troops in the Boer War helped him to bind the Canadian Scottish into a cohesive battalion ready for its first experience of combat. This photo was taken after Leckie’s promotion to Brigadier.

  King George V (next to officer waving arm and carrying cane) reviews the 16th Battalion on November 5, 1914.

  The Canadian Scottish raise their headgear in a salute to the King as he departs Salisbury Plain by car.

  Canadian Scottish move toward the front lines in Flanders. Note the use of handcarts to move supplies.

  Canadian Scottish having lunch on a section of front line where the digging of trenches was impossible, so sandbagged emplacements were created instead.

  Canadian Scottish examine a crater created by a 17-inch shell fired in the Ypres Salient.

  16th Battalion retake the guns in the orchard during the Second Battle of Ypres.

  In July 1916, John Leckie was promoted to the command of the Canadian Scottish. More gregarious than his brother, he proved a popular commander.

  Ploegstreet Church in the Ypres Salient during the summer of 1915.

  Emplacements captured by Canadian Scottish in Sanctuary Wood.

  Canadian Scottish soldier examines No Man’s Land from an observation post.

  Even when the front was stalemated during the early months of 1916, units were still sent over the top on raids and limited attacks that yielded only more casualties.

  No Man’s Land on the Somme, a landscape so devastated and exposed that collection of the dead proved impossible.

  By June 1916, Armagh Wood had been reduced to a wasteland.

  A trench on the Somme.

  A tank lumbers forward during an advance in the Somme.

  The first of four Canadian Scottish Victoria Cross winners, Piper James Cleland Richardson.

  Lance Corporal William Metcalf ’s courage at the Drocourt-Quéant Line garnered him a posthumous Victoria Cross.

  Pozières Ridge.

  By 1916, it was hard for wounded soldiers like these ones not to grin if their “blighty” meant a long, or even permanent, escape from the battle lines.

  In the lead up to the Canadian Corps assault on Vimy Ridge, powerful naval guns were used to batter the German defences.

  April
9, 1917. Canadian troops advance under fire toward Vimy Ridge.

  William Johnstone Milne’s bravery at Vimy Ridge resulted in a posthumous Victoria Cross.

  Machine-gun posts in the muddy quagmire of Passchendaele.

  Major James Scroggie was also one of the most indomitable Canadian Scottish officers.

  The Canadian Scottish Pipe Band, February 1918.

  Officers of the Canadian Scottish, February 1918.

  The portly Lieutenant Colonel Cyrus Peck proved a brave and agile battalion commander, who led the Canadian Scottish through many of its hardest battles. His fearless actions at the Drocourt-QuéantLine were recognized by a Victoria Cross in 1919.

  Minister of Militia Major General S. C. Mewburn shakes Pipe Major James Groat’s hand during an inspection in July 1918.

  On October 1, 1918, Major Roderick Ogle Bell-Irving went missing while serving as acting commander of the 16th Battalion during the advance on Cuvillers.

  Some days after the battle, Bell-Irving’s body was discovered in No Man’s Land, and he was buried by the regiment with full honours on October 17 at Eterpigny cemetery.

  Heavy artillery laid down a heavy barrage at the Drocourt-Quéant Line on October 2, 1918, which helped shatter the German defences.

  Highlanders stand amid the ruins of Arras.

  Canadian Scottish advance on Cambrai.

  The end of a long march, 1st Canadian Division crosses the Rhine at Cologne on December 13, 1918.

 

 

 


‹ Prev