Lt-Col. C. McKerron

Lieutenant-Colonel C. McKerron
Saskatoon Light Infantry

From the very beginning, McKerron adhered to a policy that earned him a great deal of resentment. He boasted of the efficiency of the Battalion. To maintain that efficiency he refused to allow any of his officers to be seconded for staff work. He commanded the Battalion for nearly two years. We were almost under peace time conditions throughout that time. That meant the almost complete stagnation of promotion in the Battalion.

(Maj. H.C. Mitchell, Wartime Exploits, 37)

Born on 3 October 1897 in Aberdeen, Scotland, Charles McKerron was a First World War veteran and trained machine gun officer in the prewar Saskatoon Light Infantry. In England, he succeeded Lieutenant-Colonel A.E. Potts on his promotion to brigadier in July 1940. According to the recollections of then Lieutenant H.C. Mitchell, the new CO immediately faced opposition from the battalion company commanders: “McKerron had an inferiority complex to begin with. He had only one recourse. That was the bottle. As time went on it was his only solace. Because of that he was continually getting into further predicaments.”

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