by Mark Zuehlke
   There are a lot of tour guides in Normandy, mostly helping Canadian, British, and American tourists visit the beach areas and understand the experiences of the soldiers who landed on June 6. A French friend of mine, whose family farm was near Carpiquet, often volunteers to show Canadian visitors around the beaches, sharing his great knowledge of the battle for no charge. He tells me that likely no more than one in a hundred visitors to the Normandy battlefield ever venture inland more than a mile. Carpiquet, the Abbaye d’Ardenne, Verrières Ridge, Point 111 where Worthington Force met disaster, Falaise, and Saint-Lambert-sur-Dives are seldom visited. Even the Canadian War Cemetery at Bretteville-sur-Laize draws fewer visitors than the closer-to-the-coast Bény-sur-Mer Canadian Cemetery.
   Yet all these sites are within a couple of hours’ drive of the beaches and readily accessible with the help of the many guidebooks published in recent years. At each site there are monuments, commemorative plaques, and interpretive panels that explain the course of battle. To see the ground, surprisingly little changed over the course of time in many places, is to better appreciate what the soldiers faced.
   Verrières Ridge is a case in point. Standing on its summit, looking north to the route that the Black Watch took during their ascent on July 25, it is impossible not to see how that attack was doomed to fail. Verrières is not a ridge in the way most Canadians imagine. Its northern slope rises only 121 feet over a distance of 3,280 feet. So, contrary to what Brian McKenna claimed in a November 11,2002, Maclean’s article, the problem was not that the Black Watch had to scale this great height. Instead, they faced a long, futile hike into the face of German fire from well-sited positions along the ridge’s crest. Heroism here, to be sure, but also fatal errors of judgement from the corps commander, Lieutenant General Guy Simonds, down to the acting battalion commander, Major Philip Griffin.
   Verrières Ridge is a grim place for Canadians—a place of tears, for so many of the nation’s youth perished here during the series of attacks. Each line of approach is as poor as any other. The Germans on the crestheld all the advantages. Yet Canadians did ultimately prevail. The ridge fell, and the way was opened for Totalize, Tractable, and the closing of the Falaise Gap.
   Today, at points along the ridge there are various monuments recognizing the battalions that seized or attempted to seize that particular section of it. All are worth visiting. This is also true for the many other monuments and battle sites scattered from Carpiquet to Chambois.
   One, however, is unique. In Verrières village there is a small, dark chapel—really all that is left of the village. Facing it, a monument honours the Royal Hamilton Light Infantry for being the only fighting unit in the battle for the ridge to win its objective on July 25. Having visited several times, I’ve invariably found the chapel’s door unlocked. Unheated, thick walled, it is chilly inside. Where once there was likely a small window, today there is inset a wooden-framed glass case. Within the case is a photograph of a young Canadian soldier, wearing a beret and standing in a snowy field that is probably in Quebec. He is a smiling, handsome lad. Beneath the photo is a newspaper clipping in French.
   On July 23, 1944, Gérard Doré was just fifteen years and nine months old. He was a soldier in Les Fusiliers Mont-Royal, and he died at nearby Beauvoir Farm. Doré came from the small village of Roberval. He used falsified documents to enlist. According to the newspaper report, he joined the regiment in England in 1943 and was inspired to fight for the liberation of France. This small shrine to Doré’s memory is touching, but not just because of its presence in this chapel. Each time I have visited, set on the ledge before his picture has been a bouquet of fresh flowers in a brass vase. A Royal Canadian Legion poppy is pinned to the right-hand side of the wooden frame, a small Canadian flag leans against the left. Someone nearby ensures that the memory of this young man is lovingly preserved. I wonder who?
   During my visits to Normandy and travels across the battlefields where Canadians, like Gérard Doré, fought and died for the freedom of others, I am repeatedly struck by the care and attention local people give to the maintenance of the many monuments recognizing this sacrifice. There are skeptics who say that it is only the old French people, those alive when the liberation came, who remember, and that the time of remembrance in Normandy will pass with their deaths. I am optimistic, however, that this will not be the case. During my journeys I encounter many younger French people, who do care and do remember. The schoolchildren coming in and out of the Juno Beach Centre seem genuinely interested and moved by the experience of their visit.
   And it is children who are the hope of remembrance. Not just in France or the other parts of Europe that the war rolled through with such destructive force, but also here in Canada. It is heartening to see school tours being organized that take young people to Europe to visit the battle sites. It is heartening to see, in conjunction with Remembrance Day, schools inviting veterans in to talk of their experiences—to see other activities designed to make the nation’s children aware of the sacrifices that one generation made to ensure the freedom of those to come. Ultimately, though, children only remember if adults ensure that they are given the opportunity to do so. It falls on our shoulders to keep the stories and the history alive, to pass it on down.
   APPENDIX A :
   PRINCIPAL COMMANDERS IN THE NORMANDY CAMPAIGN
   AMERICAN
   Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF), Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower
   Twelfth U.S. Army Group, Gen. Omar Bradley
   First Army, Gen. Bradley, then Lt. Gen. Courtenay Hodges
   Third Army, Gen. George S. Patton
   BRITISH
   Chief of Imperial General Staff, Gen. Sir Alan Brooke
   Commander Allied Ground Forces and Twenty-First Army Group, Gen. Bernard Law Montgomery
   Second Army, Lt. Gen. Miles Dempsey
   I Corps, Lt. Gen. John Crocker
   VIII Corps, Lt. Gen. Richard N. O’Connor
   CANADIAN
   First Army, Lt. Gen. Harry Crerar
   First Army Chief of Staff, Brig. Church Mann
   II Corps, Lt. Gen. Guy Simonds
   II Corps, General Chief of Staff, Brig. Elliot Rodger
   II Corps, Corps Royal Artillery, Brig. Bruce Matthews
   2nd Division, Maj. Gen. Charles Foulkes
   3rd Division, Maj. Gen. Rod Keller (WIA Aug. 8), then Brig. Ken Blackader, then Maj. Gen. Dan Spry
   4th Division, Maj. Gen. George Kitching, then Maj. Gen. Harry Foster
   2nd Brigade, Brig. Ron Wyman (WIA Aug. 8), then Brig. John Bingham
   4th Armoured Brigade, Brig. Leslie Booth (KIA Aug. 14), then Lt. Col. Bill Halpenny, then Brig. Robert Moncel
   4th Brigade, Brig. Sherwood Lett (WIA July 18), then Brig. Eddy Ganong
   5th Brigade, Brig. W.J. “Bill” Megill
   6th Brigade, Brig. Hugh Young
   7th Brigade, Brig. Harry Foster
   8th Brigade, Brig. Ken Blackader
   9th Brigade, Brig. Ben Cunningham, then Brig. J.M. “Rocky” Rockingham
   10th Brigade, Brig. Jim Jefferson
   GERMAN
   Commander in Chief, West, Gen. Gerd von Rundstedt, then Gen. Günther von Kluge, then Gen. Walter Model
   Army Group B, Gen. Erwin Rommel, then Gen. von Kluge
   Panzer Group West, Gen. Leo Freiherr Geyr von Schweppenburg, then Gen. Hans Eberbach
   Fifth Panzer Army, Gen. Hans Eberbach
   Seventh Army, Oberg. Paul Hausser
   I SS Corps, Oberg. Josef “Sepp” Dietrich
   2nd SS Panzer Division, Grupp. Heinrich von Lüttwitz
   12th SS Panzer Division, Stand. Kurt Meyer
   85th Infantry Division, Gen. Kurt Chill
   89th Infantry Division, Gen. Konrad Heinrichs
   POLISH
   4th Polish Armoured Division Commander, Maj. Gen. Stanislaw Maczek
   APPENDIX B :
   THE CANADIAN ARMY IN THE NORMANDY CAMPAIGN
   (COMBAT UNITS ONLY)
   FIRST CANAD
IAN ARMY TROOPS
   2nd Army Group, Royal Canadian Artillery:
   19th Field Regiment
   3rd Medium Regiment
   4th Medium Regiment
   7th Medium Regiment
   Corps of Royal Canadian Engineers:
   10th Field Park Company
   5th Field Company
   20th Field Company
   23rd Field Company
   II CANADIAN CORPS TROOPS
   18th Armoured Car Regiment (12th Manitoba Dragoons)
   6th Anti-Tank Regiment
   2nd Survey Regiment
   6th Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment
   Corps of Royal Canadian Engineers:
   8th Field Park Company
   29th Field Company
   30th Field Company
   31st Field Company
   2ND CANADIAN INFANTRY DIV ISION
   8th Reconnaissance Regiment (14th Canadian Hussars)
   Toronto Scottish Regiment (MG)
   Royal Canadian Artillery:
   4th Field Regiment
   5th Field Regiment
   6th Field Regiment
   2nd Anti-Tank Regiment
   3rd Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment
   Corps of Royal Canadian Engineers:
   1st Field Park Company
   2nd Field Company
   7th Field Company
   11th Field Company
   4th Canadian Infantry Brigade:
   Royal Regiment of Canada
   Royal Hamilton Light Infantry
   Essex Scottish Regiment
   5th Canadian Infantry Brigade:
   Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment) of Canada
   Le Régiment de Maisonneuve
   Calgary Highlanders
   6th Canadian Infantry Brigade:
   Les Fusiliers Mont-Royal
   Queen’s Own Cameron Highlanders
   South Saskatchewan Regiment
   3RD CANADIAN INFANTRY DIVISION
   7th Reconnaissance Regiment (17th Duke of York’s Royal Canadian Hussars)
   Cameron Highlanders of Ottawa (MG Battalion)
   Royal Canadian Artillery:
   12th Field Regiment
   13th Field Regiment
   14th Field Regiment
   3rd Anti-Tank Regiment
   4th Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment
   Corps of Royal Canadian Engineers:
   3rd Field Park Company
   6th Field Company
   16th Field Company
   18th Field Company
   7th Canadian Infantry Brigade:
   Royal Winnipeg Rifles
   Regina Rifle Regiment
   1st Battalion, Canadian Scottish Regiment
   8th Canadian Infantry Brigade:
   Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada
   Le Régiment de la Chaudière
   North Shore (New Brunswick) Regiment
   9th Canadian Infantry Brigade:
   Highland Light Infantry of Canada
   Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry Highlanders
   North Nova Scotia Highlanders
   4TH CANADIAN ARMOURED DIVISION
   29th Armoured Reconnaissance Regiment (South Alberta Regiment)
   10th Canadian Independent MG Company (New Brunswick Rangers)
   Lake Superior Regiment (Motor)
   Royal Canadian Artillery:
   15th Field Regiment
   23rd Field Regiment (Self-Propelled)
   5th Anti-Tank Regiment
   4th Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment
   Royal Canadian Corps of Engineers:
   6th Field Park Squadron
   8th Field Squadron
   9th Field Squadron
   4th Canadian Armoured Brigade:
   21st Armoured Regiment (Governor General’s Foot Guards)
   22nd Armoured Regiment (Canadian Grenadier Guards)
   28th Armoured Regiment (British Columbia Regiment)
   10th Canadian Armoured Brigade:
   Lincoln and Welland Regiment
   Algonquin Regiment
   Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders of Canada
   2ND CANADIAN ARMOURED BRIGADE
   6th Armoured Regiment (1st Hussars)
   10th Armoured Regiment (Fort Garry Horse)
   27th Armoured Regiment (Sherbrooke Fusiliers Regiment)
   APPENDIX C :
   CANADIAN INFANTRY BATTALION
   (TYPICAL ORGANIZATION)
   HQ COMPANY
   No. 1: Signals Platoon
   No. 2: Administrative Platoon
   SUPPORT COMPANY
   No. 3: Mortar Platoon (3-inch)
   No. 4: Bren Carrier Platoon
   No. 5: Assault Pioneer Platoon
   No. 6: Anti-Tank Platoon (6-pounder)
   ‘A’ COMPANY
   No. 7 Platoon
   No. 8 Platoon
   No. 9 Platoon
   ‘B’ COMPANY
   No. 10 Platoon
   No. 11 Platoon
   No. 12 Platoon
   ‘C’ COMPANY
   No. 13 Platoon
   No. 14 Platoon
   No. 15 Platoon
   ‘D’ COMPANY
   No. 16 Platoon
   No. 17 Platoon
   No. 18 Platoon
   APPENDIX D :
   CANADIAN ARMY, GERMAN ARMY, AND WAFFEN-SS ORDER OF RANKS
   (LOWEST TO HIGHEST)
   Like most Commonwealth armies, the Canadian Army used the British ranking system. Except for the lower ranks, this system differed little from one service arm to another. The German Army system, however, tended to identify service and rank throughout most of its command chain, and the ss ranking system was further complicated by the fact that many of its ranks harked back to the organization’s clandestine paramilitary roots. The translations are roughly based on the Canadian ranking system, although many German ranks have no Canadian equivalent, and there is some differentiation in the responsibility each rank bestowed on its holder.
   CANADIAN ARMY GERMAN ARMY SS
   Private, infantry Schütze Schütze
   Rifleman, rifle regiments Schütze Schütze
   Private Grenadier Grenadier
   Gunner (artillery equivalentof private) Kanonier Kanonier
   Trooper (armoured equivalentof private) Panzerschütze Panzerschütze
   Sapper (engineer equivalentof private) Pionier Pionier
   Signaller (signals equivalentof private) Funker Funker
   Lance Corporal Gefreiter Sturmmann
   Corporal Obergefreiter Rottenführer
   Lance Sergeant Unteroffizier Unterscharführer
   Sergeant Unterfeldwebel Scharführer
   Company Sergeant Major Feldwebel Oberscharführer
   Battalion Sergeant Major Oberfeldwebel Hauptscharführer
   Regimental Sergeant Major Stabsfeldwebel Sturmscharführer
   Second Lieutenant Leutnant Untersturmführer
   Lieutenant Oberleutnant Obersturmführer
   Captain Hauptmann Hauptsturmführer
   Major Major Sturmbannführer
   Lieutenant Colonel Oberstleutnant Obersturmbannführer
   Colonel Oberst Standartenführer
   Brigadier Generalmajor Brigadeführer
   Major General Generalleutnant Gruppenführer
   Lieutenant General General der Obergruppenführer
   (service arm)
   (No differentiation) General der Artillerie (No differentiation)
   General der Infanterie
   General der Kavallerie
   General der Pioniere
   General der Panzertruppen
   General Generaloberst Oberstgruppenführer
   Field Marshal Generalfeldmarschall (No differentiation)
   Commander-in-Chief Oberbefehlshaber (No differentiation)
   APPENDIX E :
   ARMY DECORATIONS
   The decoration system that Canada used in World War II, like most other aspects of its military organization and tradition, derived from Britain. Under this class-based system, most military decorations can be awarded eithe
r to officers or to “other ranks” but not to both. The Canadian army, navy, and air force also have distinct decorations. Only the Victoria Cross—the nation’s highest award—can be won by personnel from any arm of the service or of any rank. The decorations and qualifying ranks are as follows.
   VICTORIA CROSS (VC): Awarded for gallantry in the presence of the enemy. Instituted in 1856. Open to all ranks. The only award that can be granted for action in which the recipient was killed, other than Mentioned in Despatches—a less formal honour whereby an act of bravery was given specific credit in a formal report.
   DISTINGUISHED SERVICE ORDER (DSO): Army officers of all ranks, but more commonly awarded to officers with ranks of major or higher.
   MILITARY CROSS (MC): Army officers with a rank normally below major and, rarely, warrantofficers.
   DISTINGUISHED CONDUCT MEDAL (DCM): Army warrantofficers and all lower ranks.
   MILITARY MEDAL (MM): Army warrantofficers and all lower ranks.
   NOTES
   PREFACE
   1 Louis “Studs” Terkel, “The Good War”: An Oral History of World War Two (New York: Pantheon, 1984).
   INTRODUCTION : A FORMIDABLE ARRAY
   1 Jean E. Portugal, We Were There: The Navy, the Army and the rca –A Record for Canada, vol. 6 (Shelburne, ON: Battered Silicon Dispatch Box, 1998), 2923.
   2 J.L. Granatstein and Desmond Morton, Bloody Victory: Canadians and the D-Day Campaign, 1944 (Toronto: Lester & Orpen Dennys, 1984), 70 –71.
   3 David Clark, Angels Eight: Normandy Air War Diary (Bloomington, IN: 1st Books Library, 2003), 70.
   4 “Report No. 58, Canadian Participation in the Operations in North-West Europe, 1944, Part ii: Canadian Operations in July,” Historical Section (G.S.) Army Headquarters, DHH, DND, para. 21.
   5 Ralph Bennett, Ultra in the West: The Normandy Campaign of 1944–45 (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1979), 82–83.
   6 Robin Neillands, The Battle of Normandy, 1944 (London: Cassell, 2002), 163.
   7 Samuel W. Mitcham Jr., Panzers in Normandy: General Hans Eberbach and the German Defense of France, 1944 (Mechanicsburg, pa: Stackpole Books, 2009), 70 –71.
   8 David Patterson, “Outside the Box: A New Perspective on Operation Windsor—The Rationale behind the Attack on Carpiquet, 4 July 1944,” Canadian Milit-1ry History, vol. 17, no. 2 (Spring 2008), 70 –73.