Lieutenant-Colonel Ray Hodgins
Highland Light Infantry of Canada
I came to, lying on the side of the ramp. Young Sparks was dead on the other side, a cigarette hanging from his mouth. I had shrapnel wounds in my buttocks which is the best place you can get hit. They just seared through the flesh. I didn’t even realize I had a lacerated rear end.
(Quoted in Snowie, Bloody Buron, 73)
Born on 1 June 1913 in Preston, Ontario, Raymond Dent Hodgins was commissioned in the Highland Light Infantry in 1936 and mobilized as a lieutenant in 1940. He served as a “C” Company commander on D-Day and during the Normandy campaign. During the “Blood Buron” attack of 8 July 1944, he was part of the battalion command group that was struck was an enemy shell. A lieutenant and three signallers were killed while Lieutenant-Colonel F.M. Griffiths was wounded. Hodgins suffered a shrapnel wound to the buttocks, “the best place to get hit.”





