Lieutenant-Colonel J. Craske
6th Bn., Leinster Regiment (Royal Canadians)

“When I am sniped, I always sit down,” and did so—still in the open, while the remainder wasted little time in taking advantage of some convenient rocks. More sniping—then a volley of oaths from Craske whose staccato imprecation “Mygod, mygod. Damnfellowsgotme. Damnitall. Damnitall,” was characteristic. Fortunately the wound was a slight one in the left arm.
(Whwhiitton, The History of the Prince of Wales’s Leinster Regiment, vol. 2, 334)
Born in Somerset, England on 7 November 1869, John Craske was commissioned with the Leinster Regiment in 1890 and fought in the Boer War, for which he received the Distinguished Service Order. Unlike many officers of the “Royal Canadians,” he had a personal connection to the Dominion. In 1899, he married Grace Oliver of Halifax, Nova Scotia, daughter of William Silver Oliver, former Canadian deputy surgeon general.








