Vimy Ridge: Birth of a Nation, Cost of a Generation

April 9th, 1917.

Dawn breaks over Vimy Ridge, and with it, a nation steps forward.

For the first time, all four divisions of the Canadian Expeditionary Force fight together.
What follows becomes legend; built on precision, planning, and unshakable courage.

This is the moment Canada came of age.

🎧 Listen now to my latest episode and experience Vimy like never before.

👉 Follow Memory and Valour because where memory endures, valour lives on.

#VimyRidge #April9 #WW1History #CanadianHistory #MemoryAndValour

Wilfred Chapman was born on April 25, 1898 in Peterborough, England. He came to Canada when he was about 14 years old. He moved to Toronto to live with his brother who had preceded him to this country. He enlisted in the Canadian Army when he was about 16 years old. On his arrival in England, he was assigned to a field engineers company. Mr. Chapman died in Peterborough, Ontario on October 29, 1997. ++++ When asked if it was very bloody being the 1st wave over the top, he drifts and evades the actual question.

Roy Henley was born in London, Ontario on September 29, 1898. After enlisting in Toronto in 1916 with the 166th Queens Own Rifles, he was discharged with suspected tuberculosis. Mr. Henley re-enlisted, sailed to England aboard the horse transport SS Welshman, and joined the Quebec Regiment. Mr. Henley’s recollections are detailed, sometimes graphic and occasionally humorous. His experiences spanned many battles; the Somme, Vimy Ridge, Passchendaele, Cambrai and Arras.

Alfred Mason was born in Tangier, Nova Scotia on January 4, 1895. After completing his schooling, he worked in the Tangier gold mines before moving to a job at the car works in Trenton, Nova Scotia when he was 17 years old. He would also spend some time at the steel works there and in the coal mines of northern Nova Scotia before going to Halifax in 1915 to enlist. He joined the 66th Battalion and then transferred to the 40th. He spent some time in Quebec in basic training and was then sent to England and, almost immediately, on to France. He arrived there in the Spring of 1916 as reinforcement for the 3rd Division, 8th Brigade of the 5th Battalion of the Canadian Mounted Rifles. He gives a good description of his time in the trenches and then goes on to describe the planning for the Canadian taking of Vimy Ridge.

Whitfield Ganong was born August 1, 1895 at Snider Mountain, New Brunswick. A second cousin to the Ganong chocolatiers of nearby Saint Stephen, he and his family lived on a mixed farm. Mr. Ganong enlisted in the 64th New Brunswick Battalion, having been accepted despite a bad leg and transferred to the 104th Battalion. He then joined the 26th Battalion as a Private and Lance-Corporal, and saw action in three major battles: Vimy, Hill 70 and Passchendaele. Mr. Ganong later worked as a teacher, shopkeeper and accountant, and married Katherine Ellen Herbert in 1924. He took part in a pilgrimage to France, and was shocked by the number of graves, yet awed by the work of the War Graves Commission. Mr. Ganong died on January 5th, 1989.  He gives a good account of the weather and the barrage at zero hour.

Mr. Boyce describes the value of tunnels to the eventual success of the Canadian assault on Vimy, and discusses the demoralization of the defeated German prisoners.

Harry Boyce

Harry Boyce was born in Bonshaw, Prince Edward Island on September 4, 1893. After moving to Regina to work as an architect, he returned to P.E.I. to enlist with the 8th Canadian Siege Battery. He trained in Charlottetown then went overseas and continued his training at Aldershot, England, where he specialized on the 8-inch siege gun, which fired a 200 pound shell. In the autumn of 1915 he was sent to France and served during the Somme, Vimy Ridge and Le Preol. He was gassed and repatriated to Canada.

Mr. Smith describes the retaking of Vimy Ridge, and being wounded by shrapnel after reaching the Chalk Pit.

Allan A ‘Spike’ Smith

Allan A ‘Spike’ Smith was born in Minto, Manitoba on May 7, 1894. Mr. Smith enlisted while attending the University of Saskatchewan, joining the 196th Battalion. He did his basic training at Camp Hughes, Manitoba. Once overseas, he was at Camp Seaford in England when he was selected to reinforce the 46th Battalion. He saw his first action just prior to Vimy, and was wounded by shrapnel at the Chalk Pits. He returned to action at Drocourt-Queant, and was again wounded by shrapnel. He later returned to Passchendaele. He received a Military Medal for bravery. After the war, Mr. Smith became a farmer, coached a women’s volleyball team, and became an agriculture inspector. He died on August 12, 1981.

Mr. Conrad describes the fatal wounding of a fellow signaler in the forward trench at Vimy Ridge.

Frank Benjamin Conrad

Frank Benjamin Conrad was born in Sturgeon, Prince Edward Island on July 25, 1894. He enlisted in November 1914 with the 9th Field Ambulance and trained at Valcartier until June, 1915 when he transferred to the 2nd Canadian Siege Battery at Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. He sailed to England aboard the S.S. Lapland on November 28, 1915, and arrived in France on June 1, 1916 as a signaler with the rank of Gunner. He saw action at the Somme, Vimy Ridge, Hill 70, and Passchendaele. He was wounded twice, was gassed at Hill 70, and won the Military Medal for maintaining communications under fire. After the war, Mr. Conrad married Florence Jessie Lantz on September 22, 1923 and established a wholesale food company in Charlottetown. He joined #6 Signals Company as Lieutenant, and eventually commanded the Company before retiring in 1938 as a Lieutenant-Colonel. He re-enlisted in 1940 as a Major with 3rd Divisional Signal Regiment, and served in England and Italy, commanding the Canadian Brigade Reinforcement Unit as a Lieutenant-Colonel. After the Second World War he was appointed District Administrator, DVA, for Prince Edward Island. Mr. Conrad died on August 13, 1986.

Mr. Close describes the destruction and death at Vimy Ridge, and details his wounding and eventful return to the first aid post.

John Hamilton Close

John Hamilton Close was born in Mitchell, Ontario on July 4, 1896. After the death of both his parents, he went to work on his uncle’s farm in Garrett, Ontario. On March 15, 1916, Mr. Close enlisted with the 114th Battalion in Hagersville, Ontario. He started training immediately and was sent to Camp Borden. After going overseas to England he was quickly deployed to Le Havre. He was wounded at Vimy Ridge, rehabilitated in England, and returned to France to fight at Amiens and Arras where he won a Military Medal for bravery. Mr. Close ended his service with the rank of Corporal. He died in Hagersville, Ontario in February, 1993.

Mr. Peterson discusses the increasing independence of the Canadian Corps at Vimy, followed by his reflections on the likelihood of survival on the Front.

Robert Peterson

Robert Peterson was born in Edmonton, Alberta on January 7, 1899. He was the eldest son. His father was a paper mill worker, but enlisted at the outbreak of international hostilities in 1914. Despite being repatriated in 1915 due to being wounded, Mr. Peterson’s father did not try to discourage his son from enlisting. Robert Peterson eventually joined the 202 Sportsmans Battalion in Edmonton and describes basic training as little more than “route marching and sore feet”. Aged ninety-nine at the time of his interview, Mr. Peterson still remembers several aspects of his service overseas. He discusses Canada’s maturation as a military force at Vimy, describes being partially blinded in a gas attack, and finishes with a compelling reflection on patriotism. War is thankless.

New podcast episode:

‘Once A Patricia, Always A Patricia’:

The origins & a brief history of the PPCLI

Once a Patricia, Always a Patricia explores the legacy, sacrifice, and unbreakable spirit of the Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry; from its birth in the mud of Flanders to its defining stand on a Korean hillside nearly four decades later.

In this episode, we trace the Regiment’s identity back to its earliest days, when French‑ and English‑speaking Canadians fought side by side in the trenches of the First World War, forging a unity the young nation had not yet achieved. We revisit the haunting legacy of Frezenberg; a battle that became a ghost walking with the Regiment for a century, shaping what it meant to be a Patricia: you did not leave your post, you did not yield to fear or fire, and if the world didn’t end, you stood up and prepared to do it again.

The episode then moves to Korea and the desperate night at Kapyong, where 600 Patricias held Hill 677 against overwhelming odds. Here, we tell the extraordinary story of Major Mike Levy: escapee, commando, survivor, whose courage under fire became part of Regimental legend. Through archival voices and vivid storytelling, we bring to life the men who held the line when no one else could.

This is an episode about identity, endurance, and the quiet, stubborn courage that has defined the Patricias for more than a century. It’s about the men who wore the red patch—and why, once you become a Patricia, you remain one for life.

Book Release Announcement — Once a Patricia, Always a Patricia

https://www.amazon.com/author/samanthamccreahistorybooks

Once a Patricia, Always a Patricia is a powerful journey through the history, identity, and enduring spirit of the Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry. From the mud of Flanders to the desperate stand at Kapyong, this book brings to life the soldiers who held the line when no one else could—and shows why being a Patricia is not just a role, but a lifelong bond.