Lieutenant-Colonel Jim Swayze
Lincoln and Welland Regiment
All ranks are held together by the fear of having their peers realize that they too are afraid, particularly among those of the social system to which we belong … It’s very, very difficult to have them men come to the situation where you realize that you’re going to say “charge” and they’re going to get up and run across a field and fire their weapons at someone else and; at the same time, there’s a fair chance that they’re going to get hit.
(Swayze quoted in Hayes, “The Friction of War,” 218)
Born on 1 January 1916 in Niagara Falls, Ontario, James Fletcher Swayze was an athlete and graduate of McMaster University. He was commissioned with the Lincoln and Welland Regiment and served as company commander for much of the Northwest Europe campaign. In the final days of the war as the battalion pushed into Germany, Lieutenant-Colonel R.C. Coleman said to him “You put in the first attack of the Lincoln and Welland. Now I want you to put in the last.” As Swayze recalled, “And I took A company and moved forward a thousand yards and stopped and that was the last we made.”



