Lieutenant-Colonel Bruce Ritchie
Royal Hamilton Light Infantry
South Saskatchewan Regiment
Royal Highlanders of Canada (The Black Watch)

When the battalion went into action after D-Day, they guys had had three or four years’ training. But after the first big slap in the ass at St. Andre, we were never able to get organized with trained troops. Even when we got replacements, the battalion had been knocked down with such strength that they weren’t a fighting entity any more.
(Ritchie quoted in Denis Whitaker, Tug of War, 172)
Born in Regina, Saskatchewan in 1912, Bruce Rowlett Ritchie graduated from RMC and McGill University, and work for Sun Life Insurance in Montreal. He originally served as signals officer with the Black Watch but after the Normandy campaign began, he found himself moved around to several units before finally returning to the Royal Highlanders. While attached to the Algonquin Regiment as second-in-command, Ritchie rejoined his old regiment at the request of Lieutenant-Colonel Frank Mitchell who had taken command after the death of Lieutenant-Colonel S.S.T. Cantlie on 25 July 1944.