Tuesday 28 April 2015

In Flanders Fields – Part 1

Centennial Anniversary Event - April 1915 - The 1st Canadian Division’s Baptism of Fire at the 2nd Battle of Ypres

By Joe Corrigan

As is the case with many Canadians who can trace their family history in this country back to the 19th century or before, I have an ancestor who fought in the Great War of 1914 to 1918. His name was Charles O’Connor and he is my maternal grandfather. Charles was born in Whitby, Ontario on May 9, 1894. He was a moulder by trade. On May 1st, 1918, at the age 23, Charles O’Connor, serial number 809277, joined the Canadian Army. After initial training at Camp Borden he was sent overseas and assigned to the 15th Battalion of the Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF). He entered the line in October of 1918, about one month before the armistice.
When Minister of Militia Sir Sam Hughes championed the mobilization of the CEF in the late summer of 1914 he was determined to organize the force by creating new numbered battalions rather than sending existing militia regiments overseas. Despite this, regiments that were formed in the 19th and early 20th centuries have become inexorably linked with these numbered battalions. The 15th Battalion’s battle honours are maintained by the 48th Highlanders regiment of Toronto.

Pvt. Charles O'Connor, 15th Battalion CEF 1918
Despite only being in the line for a month before the end of hostilities, Charles O’Connor took part in fierce fighting during a period that came to be known as Canada’s “100 Days”. By this time in the war, Canadian troops had earned a hard won reputation as one of the allied armies’ finest fighting forces. Despised as “colonials” when they first came on the scene in the fall and winter of 1914 / 1915, the Canadian Corps was now revered as “shock troops”. Such was their reputation that, when the Germans learned that the Canadian Corps was moving into a sector, they knew an attack was imminent. During these last few weeks of the fighting, Canadian troops were at the forefront of the advance and the 100 Days produced some of the highest casualty rates of the entire war, a war in which an average of 6,000 people were killed every day! 

As with so many veterans of World War I, we know very little about the experiences of Private Charles O’Connor during the war. He earned the British War Medal and the Victory Medal for his service and received an honourable discharge on July 11, 1919. Apparently was exposed to poison gas, an encounter that would leave him with a cough for the rest of his life. He returned to civilian life, married Maude McCauley a teacher, and settled into life back in Whitby. The couple had three children, one son, Joseph and two daughters, Mary and Theresa.

Officially, Canadian casualties during the four years of the Great War are listed as 62,820 killed and 149,710 wounded for a total of 212,530 out of the 620,000 mobilized. That equates to a casualty rate of 34.3%. All this was endured by a population of just over 7 million. That doesn’t take into account those who died of the Spanish Flu which made its appearance towards the end of the war and took many millions of lives worldwide. These numbers become quite sobering when compared to the casualties experienced by our nation of 35 million during our 12 year mission in Afghanistan. During that campaign the Canadian Forces suffered 158 killed, 615 wounded and 1244 injured in non-combat related incidents. What our experience of Afghanistan has showed us is that the psychological impact of war is much greater than the physical casualty rates reveal. Many hundreds of the 40,000 Canadian veterans who served in Afghanistan face daily challenges struggling with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder or PTSD. Although the science of psychology existed around the time of World War I, an understanding of what was known as “Shell Shock” in the day was not extensive.

My grandfather lost his job during the depression that began in 1929. His wartime experiences came back to haunt him and he had to be hospitalized. Although he lived well into the 1970’s, and despite the fact that I was in my late teens at the time of his death, I never knew him. I saw him once before he died in his nursing home on a visit to western Ontario with my family. I remember he had a full head of white hair and that the nurses said he was a very patient man but he had long since lost the ability to communicate. What I later found out was that my mother, who was born in 1924, never really knew him either as he was hospitalized when she was just 5 or 6 years old. Though you won’t find the name of Charles Joseph O’Connor on the cenotaph in Whitby, the war cost him his life all the same.

The fact that April 22, 2015 was the 100th anniversary of the 2nd Battle of Ypres, the first time Canadian troops were engaged in a major battle of the war, served to bring my grandfather’s experiences to mind. 2nd Ypres was also the first use of poison gas in combat. Despite the lack of gas masks, Canada’s 1st Division fought heroically, improvised protection from the gas and blunted the German advance, preventing a possible war losing breakthrough. It was at a high cost however; our troops suffered over 6,000 casualties during the battle. Steve Guthrie of CHEX Television News produced a two part segment on the 57th Regiment of Militia, Peterborough’s militia regiment prior to World War I, and the participation of local troops in the 2nd Battle of Ypres. The two YouTube videos are posted on Lang Pioneer Village Museum’s Facebook page. Other interesting documentaries on the First World War include historian Norm Christie’s series entitled “For King and Empire” and the BBC documentary entitled “The Great War’ which dates from the 1960’s and includes interviews with people who experienced the events first hand. Canada’s History magazine has published “Canada’s Great War Album” which includes historical perspectives from a number of noted authors along with a collection of personal stories passed down from descendants of the soldiers and others who lived in those times. During the next three years, we will continue to mark notable anniversaries of Canada’s involvement in the Great War.

Painting entitled "Gassed" by Sargent John Singer RA (Royal Artillery) depicting allied troops having been gassed and on their way to the hospital for treatment

Joe Corrigan has been Museum Manager at Lang Pioneer Village since February of 2003. He has been a lifelong student of history. His specific areas of interest are Canadian and world political, military and sports history with a particular focus on biographical works. Joe has been interpreting Sir John A. Macdonald at the Museum's Historic Dominion Day event since 2007.