pferguson | April 24, 2020
All the Following Days The tale of two soldiers…both runners (messengers) with the 72nd Canadian Infantry Battalion (Seaforth Highlanders of Canada). Some days prior to the famed attack, whilst in the line near Vimy Ridge, Privates Alexander Broadfoot (130245) and James Mucklow (160827) stood near. Private Mucklow was on duty this day, 1 April 1917, […]
Category: Inspired By a True Story, Remember Them Well |
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Tags: 1 April 1917, 420 (Snowy Owl) Squadron, 72nd Canadian Infantry Battalion, 82nd Canadian Infantry Battalion, Alexander Broadbent, American Army, Asthma, Bergen-op-Zoom Canadian War Cemetery (Netherlands), Bronchitis, Burnsland Cemetery (Calgary), Camp Funston (Kansas), Chat Hunting, Chats, Chatting, COVID-19, Eric Kennington, Etaples Military Cemetery, Film History, Gallipoli, Hastings Park, Hotel Lotus, Influenza, James Mucklow, James Mucklow Jr., John Mucklow, Joseph Acheson, László Mednyánszky, Lice, Married Man, Measles, Military Medal, Mucklow Family, No. 56 General Hospital, Passchendaele, Peter Weir, Pyrexia of Unknown Origin (P.U.O.), Rose Mucklow, Roy Mucklow, Royal Canadian Air Force, Runner (Messenger), Soldiers Hunting for Lice, Souchez, Trench Fever
pferguson | November 5, 2018
Great War Armistice at 100 Soon the day of the Great War Armistice will turn 100 – 11 November 2018. Some will travel at this time to London, the Somme, the Salient. Others will remain at home in Australia, New Zealand, Canada, wherever. The ceremonies will be well attended…special events…special art installations such as Weeping […]
Category: Remember Them Well |
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Tags: 11 November 1918, 908 Fatalities, Armistice, Belgium, Canada, Circumstances of Death, Died of Wounds, Diphtheria, Drafted Men, England, France, Imperial War Museum, In Memoriam, Inflammation of the Brain, Influenza, Insanity, Killed in Action, Last Soldiers Killed Great War All Nations, Matilda Landsky, Military Service Act 1917, Paralysis, Pneumonia, Remembrance, Russia, Scotland, Tuberculosis, United Kingdom
pferguson | April 10, 2017
They did not waiver. This was Canada at its best. The Canadians at Vimy embodied the true north, strong and free. Extract from Prince Charles’ speech, Vimy, April 9, 2017 Within these few lines some words from Canada’s national anthem, …the true north, strong and free. Words to ponder upon a ridge or to feel […]
Category: Remember Them Well |
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Tags: 12 November 1918, Canadian Army Service Corps, Canadian Forestry Corps, Canadian National Anthem, Disease, Douglas Weir, Influenza, Margaret "Gerite" Alexander Weir, Mourning Figures, Pneumonia, Remembrance, Robert Stanley Weir, The true north strong and free, They did not waver