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- Essex Scottish Regiment, Canadian Army during the Second World War -


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World War 2 Two II WW2 WWII 1939 1945

Essex Scottish Regiment, Canadian Army



   Essex Scottish Regiment was a unit of the Canadian Army which saw action in North Western Europe During WW2.

 

1st Oct 1944 Patrols

2nd Oct 1944 In Action

3rd Oct 1944 In Action

3rd Oct 1944 Advance

4th Oct 1944 Advance

6th Oct 1944 In Action

7th Oct 1944 Under Fire

8th Oct 1944 Prisoners Taken

9th Oct 1944 In Action

10th Oct 1944 Attack Made

11th Oct 1944 Shelling

12th Oct 1944 Enemy Active

13th Oct 1944 Attack Made


If you can provide any additional information, especially on actions and locations at specific dates, please add it here.



Those known to have served with

Essex Scottish Regiment, Canadian Army

during the Second World War 1939-1945.

The names on this list have been submitted by relatives, friends, neighbours and others who wish to remember them, if you have any names to add or any recollections or photos of those listed, please Add a Name to this List

Records of Essex Scottish Regiment, Canadian Army from other sources.



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Want to know more about Essex Scottish Regiment, Canadian Army?


There are:13 items tagged Essex Scottish Regiment, Canadian Army available in our Library

  These include information on officers, regimental histories, letters, diary entries, personal accounts and information about actions during the Second World War.


Pte. John Andrew Richard "Irish" Thompson Essex Scottish Regiment

My father, John Thompson, joined the 2nd World War effort through the Canadian armed forces on 20th of May 1940. He had left his home in Limivady Ireland to find work and a better life and had been working as a farm hand in the Leamington area before joining up. He often recalled that his motivation for joining was related to protecting his beloved Ireland and his family still living there. He believed that if England were to fall to the Germans then Ireland would surely follow, but of course not without a fight.

Dad did basic training in Canada and subsequently trained as a commando in Britain before being deployed by ship n the infamous raid on Dieppe. Being one of the first off the boats he was fortunate to make it to the beach wall before the Germans opened up in full force. During the course of the battle that fateful morning he was badly wounded by a mortar blast. He recalled German soldiers walking down the beach taking prisoners and shooting those who death had not yet released from their hell. He tried to feign death amongst other dead soldiers where he lay at the bottom of a mortar crater on the beach. However the Germans, discovered him and took him prisoner.

He spent the remainder of the war as a prisoner being shunted to several different camps, the last being Stalag IIIa in Luckenwalde. He told me of the generally poor living conditions there, with little food, terrible hygiene and rampant disease. Many men were afflicted by lice and dysentery. He noted that he often traded cigarettes or chocolate provided through the Red Cross with German guards or with Italian prisoners of war, for bread and anything else he could get to eat.

He participated in various work parties, under guard outside of the camp. As the war came to an end, he recalled the sight of the Russian army coming in to liberate the camp and through which he was eventually repatriated through England back to Canada. He was awarded the Dieppe medal, the Canadian volunteer service medal and the 1939-45 star defense medal. He received his discharge on 27th of October 1945 from the Wosely Barracks in Windsor, Ontario.

Dad suffered both physically and mentally as the result of the poorly treated wounds and his horrific war experiences. In midlife, he was hospitalized and treated for a nervous breakdown which would now undoubtedly be referred to as post-traumatic stress disorder. Despite this, Dad enjoyed life, particularly in the outdoor and was an avid fisherman and hunter through his entire life. He became a highly successful buyer for the Simccoe Leaf Tobacco Company in Simcoe Ontario, and ultimately a Vice-President of that organization. In 1952, he married Jean Agnes Robertson, who had been in the Women's Air Force, stationed at the bomber training school in Jarvis Ontario. They had two sons, Kevin Richard Thompson and Dean Gordon Thompson who remember, honor and respect him for the many sacrifices he made not only for his immediate family, but for his native country of Ireland and his adopted country of Canada as well.

Dean Thompson









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    The free section of the Wartime Memories Project website is run by volunteers. We have been helping people find out more about their relatives wartime experiences since 1999 by recording and preserving recollections, documents, photographs and small items.

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