Lt-Col. G.F. Clingan

Lieutenant-Colonel G.F. Clingan
Cameron Highlanders of Ottawa

Under very heavy shell fire, this Officer reconnoitered the ground for advantageous positions, and showed great skill and judgement in his selection, as all positions later proved tactically sound. During the operations, when his crews were suffering from very heavy shell fire, he went from gun to gun, helping with the wounded, and greatly encouraged the men by his fine example. Although wounded, he refused to leave his command and continued to carry on until relieved, a period of several hours.

(M.C. citation, 1 Jan 1918)

Born in Virden, Manitoba on 1 July 1894, George Francis Clingan was a decorated veteran of the First World War and the Siberia Expeditionary Force. His uncle, Liberal MLA and doctor Lieutenant Colonel George Clingan, raised the 79th Battalion, which the twenty-year old Clingan joined in October 1915. He was commissioned the next year in England and went to France as a reinforcement officer for the 4th Brigade, Canadian Machine Gun Company.

Continue reading

Lt-Col. G.H. Rogers

Lieutenant-Colonel G.H. Rogers
Cameron Highlanders of Ottawa

We have had a couple of visits from Fritz planes and some of our boys got into action against him on one visit as he came down very low. They claim to have got the rear gunner as they put it out of action but we have no confirmation. It certainly broke the monotony for them and they are anxiously awaiting for a return visit.

(Ottawa Citizen, 8 Apr 1941, 19)

Born in Ottawa on 28 July 1895, George Harold Rogers was a funeral director, First World War veteran, and commanding officer the Cameron Highlanders of Ottawa since 1936. He had enlisted in the 38th Battalion as a private in May 1915, served garrison duty in Bermuda and arrived in England with the unit in June 1916. Promoted to regimental company sergeant-major, he deployed to France two months later. A year later he was recommended for a commission and by 1918 was seconded to the Royal Air Force.

Continue reading

Lt-Col. W.C. Bowen

Lieutenant-Colonel Bill Bowen
7th Reconnaissance Regiment (17th Hussars)

A man of considerable charm, Colonel Bowen spoke in the distinct accent of the English Montreal elite. It is an accent that is disappearing with his generation. Colonel was still a handsome man in his eighties. He was a mixture of the conventional and the eccentric. In the last decade of his life, he still wore jackets and a cravat at home, but also sported a small earring in his left ear lobe.

(National Post, 5 Apr 1999, 20)

Born on 12 August 1913 in Winnipeg, William Charles Bowen was a McGill University graduate had been commissioned in the 17th Duke of York’s Royal Canadian Hussars in 1935. With the redesignated 7th Reconnaissance Regiment, he was promoted to captain in October 1941 then made major a year later. He landed on with the invasion force on D-Day and then commanded “A” Squadron during the Battle of the Scheldt.

Continue reading

Lt-Col. C.A. Baerman

Lieutenant-Colonel C.A. Baerman
7th Reconnaissance Regiment (17th Hussars)

As far as the regiment is concerned, I think I can justly claim that it has done a very fine job. That dash up the coast alone is an achievement of which any unit might well have been proud … I had taken over command in October, and in November we received our first rest–four days in Ghent. Then we took charge of the Nijmegen bridges, where we did a lot of damage to the Germans with the colossal fire power we had at hand.

(Montreal Star, 3 Sep 1945, 3)

Born on 21 March 1910 in Lambhill, Scotland, Charles Alexander Baerman, was a broker in Montreal. He had enlisted as a trooper in the 17th Duke of York’s Royal Canadian Hussars and served as sergeant-major since 1937. He received a commission in February 1940 and would be promoted again to captain by the time the now redesignated 7th Reconnaissance Regiment embarked for the United Kingdom in August 1941. He was promoted again to major the next year.

Continue reading

Lt-Col. T.C. Lewis

Lieutenant-Colonel T.C. Lewis
32nd Reconnaissance Regiment (RMR)
7th Reconnaissance Regiment (17th Hussars)

Colonel Lewis was absolutely outstanding as a commander, and, had he lived, would have undoubtedly have proved one of Canada’s foremost military leaders … His name will always have a high place in the annals of both Regiments which he commanded, as well as in the hearts of all who served with him.

(Gen. C.B. Price, Montreal Star, 7 Nov 1944, 3)

Born in Montreal on 9 February 1911, Thomas Cripps Lewis was a Sun Life insurance statistician and junior officer in the Royal Montreal Regiment (RMR). He had joined in 1925, rose to regimental sergeant major and was commissioned a lieutenant before it embarked for the United Kingdom with the 1st Division in December 1939. When he returned to Canada for instructional purposes at RMC, he had risen to the rank of major. He returned overseas in May 1943 and took command of the RMR, now redesignated from a machine gun battalion to the 32nd Reconnaissance Regiment.

Continue reading

Lt-Col. V.W. Hugman

Lieutenant-Colonel V.W. Hugman
7th Reconnaissance Regiment (17th Hussars)

 The Col., an old 17th man, took over control of the unit over two years ago, in this country. He was always regarded as a keen strategist, and highly esteemed by men of the regiment. Security forbids the mention of his new post, but, as he said when he left, “No matter where I am I will always think of the Regiment–I could always count on it in any emergency—a great unit to command.”

(“C” Squadron Freebooter, 25 Mar 1944)

Born in Quebec on 7 January 1907, Victor Wellesley Hugman was a tennis player, horseman, and graduate of McGill University. He had joined the 17th Duke of York’s Royal Canadian Hussars in 1926 and rose to the rank of major. With the promotions of Lieutenant-Colonel C.B. Price and Major C.F. Smith in late 1939, Hugman was named second-in-command. Although the Hussars mobilized in May 1940, Hugman was assigned to staff duties with the 5th Infantry Brigade and later the Canadian Armoured Corps.

Continue reading

Lt-Col. C.F. Smith

Lieutenant-Colonel C.F. Smith
7th Reconnaissance Regiment (17th Hussars)
31st (Alberta) Reconnaissance Regiment

I believe I have received from you that loyalty which all C.O.s desire most earnestly and is expressed by the following words, “I don’t give a damn for your loyalty when you think I am right, but I do want it when you think I am wrong,” and to me your actions have proved that beyond words.

(War diary, 7 Mar 1942)

Born in Quebec on 5 August 1902, Clarence Fisher Smith was a senior militia officer with the 17th Duke of York’s Royal Canadian Hussars. He succeeded Brigadier C.B. Price when he was appointed to command the 3rd Infantry Brigade in November 1939. “I suppose his outstanding characteristic is his loyalty to his subordinates no less than to his superiors,” Price said of his successor, “and it is that same loyalty that I ask you give him.”

Continue reading

Maj-Gen. C.B. Price

Major-General C. Basil Price
3rd Infantry Brigade
3rd Canadian Division

In this ideological struggle we must call upon our physical forces. We must build up our armed forces and industrial potential, we must be prepared for sacrifices, such as high taxes and austerity, if we are to prevent another world conflict.

(Quoted in Montreal Gazette, 10 Nov 1949, 13)

Born on 12 December 1889 in Montreal, Charles Basil Price was a decorated First World War veteran, Canadian Legion spokesman, diary farmer, and former commanding officer of the Royal Montreal Regiment. A member of the Victoria Rifles since 1905, he enlisted with the 14th Battalion in September 1914. While on patrol at St. Julien in May 1915, he earned the Distinguished Conduct Medal for rescuing a comrade: “Company Sgt Major Price went out and shooting the two Germans who had wounded him brought in the man, undoubtedly saving life. His conduct all through the action was of the most meritorious and self-sacrificing kind.”

Continue reading

Lt-Col. F.A. Sparks

Lieutenant-Colonel F. Arthur Sparks
North Nova Scotia Highlanders

Finally the battalion started to run out of lieutenants. In the end we only had one left. This guy had to be shuffled from company to company; he was killed by a blast of machine-gun fire on the [Oct] 15th. Almost every company commander that went into that Breskens battle became a casualty—not wounded, killed.

(Quoted in Whitaker, Tug of War, 298)

Born on 14 June 1912 in Woodstock, Ontario, Frederick Arthur Sparks work for the textile mill Newlands & Co. in Galt and belonged to the Oxford Rifles militia regiment. He mobilized with the Highland Light Infantry  and went into action on D-Day as a company commander. Having been made second-in-command in July 1944, he transferred to the North Nova Scotia Highlanders after the replacement of Lieutenant-Colonel C.C. Petch with Lieutenant-Colonel D.F. Forbes at the beginning of August.

Continue reading

Lt-Col. D.F. Forbes

Lieutenant-Colonel D.F. Forbes
North Nova Scotia Highlanders

We are down here to study Anglo-American tactics in the field in the field in the hope of learning their methods and to take this knowledge back to our boys in England. But right now our biggest trouble consists of being bored stiff for lack of something to do.

(Quoted in Montreal Star, 18 Jan 1943, 2)

Born on 24 October 1906 in Tatamagouche, Nova Scotia, Donald Frederick Forbes belonged to the Colchester and Hants Regiment from 1921 to 1937 and then served as adjutant with the Cape Breton Highlanders. He transferred to the North Nova Scotia Highlanders in 1941 and served as second-in-command during the Normandy campaign. For refusal an order he viewed as a waste of his men, Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Petch was fired and Forbes took over on 3 August 1944.  

Continue reading