I am planting for my uncle Edward Crowther Jones from Saskatchewan, and Joyce (nee) Ashton from Lincoln. On May 2 1944 , they were a happily engaged couple celebrating their birthdays. On May 3/4 my uncle was in a Lancaster flying towards Mailly-Le-Camp France when it was shot down and he is now buried in...Read More
i am planting for my dad Gabriel Sourisseau and his brothers Eugene Alexandre and Georges who were all in the canadian military during world war 2Read More
Dad joined up voluntarily to fight overseas when he was a young lad of 16, living in NB. As both the airforce and navy had long waiting lists, when the chance came to become a member of Canada’s 1st Can Paras, he leapt at the opportunity. Dad first saw action in 1944 and remained with...Read More
D’Arcy Shaughnessy was my husband’s uncle. He died in Holland in April,1945, at the age of 20, during the Liberation. He is buried at Holten Canadian War Cemetery in Holland. The uncle we never knew.Read More
He was a paratrooper, in the First Canadian Paratroop Battalion and fought in Europe towards the end of the WWII. He was born in Barrie Ont., and when he joined the war effort he lied about his age. He had 2 older brothers, who had already joined up. He was stationed in Shilo Manitoba, became...Read More
My mother was young during the war and lived in Hilversum as the youngest of 14 children. She would sometimes tell my siblings and I stories of her “collecting coal” along the railway to keep warm especially during the Hongerwinter of 1944-45. Her older brothers were in POW camps so it was left to her...Read More
Both of my parents joined up when they were teenagers. My father lived in London, Ontario and my mother had moved to London, England (from Belfast, Northern Ireland) Both heard the call to serve for their countries. My father served in the Atlantic and England, my mother in England and then Singapore after the war....Read More