Lieutenant-Colonel Bill Cromb
Lincoln and Welland Regiment
Loyal Edmonton Regiment

My biggest day in the army came on Aug. 17, the day we closed the Falaise gap. I had just taken command of the Lincoln and Welland Regiment five days previously and we were ordered to take the town of Trun. We got into it without any trouble and captured more than 2,000 prisoners including a German major-general and his complete staff. Only one of our men was hurt … I wish the entire war had been that easy.
(Cromb in Edmonton Bulletin, 6 Oct 1945, 3)
Born in Glasgow, Scotland on 5 November 1903, William Taylor Cromb was an Edmonton vice-principal, president of the public school teachers association, and a popular tenor. A junior militia officer since 1937, he mobilized with the Edmonton Regiment in September 1939. He led a platoon in the Spitzbergen Raid in 1941 and commanded a company during the invasion of Sicily in July 1943.







