pferguson | September 21, 2016
“It has not been all milk and honey…” Originally with the 88th Victoria Fusiliers, Private Kingham served as a sniper with the 16th Battalion C.E.F. (Canadian Scottish). Kingham was with his battalion on the Somme and wrote about this time when half his platoon was killed on their way to the front line. The article entitled, Slaughter […]
Category: Snapshots of the Great War |
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Tags: 14th Battalion CEF (Royal Montreal Regiment), 16th Battalion CEF (Canadian Scottish), 1916, 1st Canadian Division, 88th Victoria Fusiliers, Ambulance, Australian Imperial Forces, Boulogne, Dug-out, Head Wound, Hill 60, Hospital Train, Joshua Rowland Kingham, Kingham-Gillespie Coal Co., Moquet Farm, Slaughter on the Somme, Sniper, Somme, Star Shells, The Daily Colonist, Transport, Traveling, Trenches, Underage, Ypres
pferguson | April 21, 2015
Lieutenant George Samuel Ager, 16th Battalion CEF As time advances from one Great War anniversary to the next, I engage my grey cells in an exercise to find connection with the Canadian Expeditionary Force of April 22 – 24, 1915. Specifically I search for something personal, a familar name to speak to the area northeast […]
Category: Our Thoughts |
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Tags: 16th Battalion CEF, 1915, 22 April 1915, 50th Regimnet (Gordon Highlanders), Beaumont Boggs, Belgium, Canada Mosaic Tile Co. Ltd, Flanders, George Samuel Ager, Herbert Beaumont Boggs, Ieper, Kitcheners' Wood, Life in the Trenches, Lord Strathcona's Horse, Maud Ager, Ploegsteert Churchayard, Second Boer War, Trenches, Victoria BC, Ypres (Menin Gate) Memorial