Monday, July 26, 2021

Comox, BC: The Comox District Free Press 1944 - 45, Parts 1 - 6

Comox News Recalls Aspects of RCNVR Service, WWII

HMCS Givenchy III, Vancouver Island ("It was Heaven!")

Members of RCNVR in Combined Ops had healthy routines,
played baseball, and raised money for Victory-Loan bonds.
Photo from Comox Free Press, April 19, 1945

Introduction:

The news clippings, of course, only provide part of the story related to the service of Canadian sailors - volunteer members of Combined Operations as well - while they were stationed at a small but mighty navy base on Vancouver Island during 1944 - 45. More information can be found in books, memoirs and photographs (some provided on this site; one more link provided at bottom of this entry). Readers who can provide more details re Canadians in Combined Ops are encouraged to contact me at gordh7700@gmail,com, and I will gladly create a space for material that is not already listed.

I have shared many news clippings from The Comox District Free Press (from microfiche, courtesy of Courtenay Library), as well as photographs and supportive materials in six entries that can be found via the links provided below. Happy hunting, I say.



At least four ball players in the back row (L - R, 3rd - 6th)served in up to four
raids and invasions during two years of overseas' service from 1942 - 43.
I.e., Chuck Rose, 3rd left; Doug Harrison, Jim Malone, Bill Grycan (6th)
Photo - Navy No. 1 ball team, at Powell River, 1944 or ' 45 



The Comox District Free Press Part 6

For more information about Canadians in Combined Ops serving at HMCS Givenchy III, Canadian Navy base on The Spit at Comox during WWII, please link to Editor's Research: In Comox and Courtenay, Parts 1 - 10

Unattributed Photos GH

Thursday, July 22, 2021

Comox, BC: The Comox District Free Press (6)

Zombies Hit the News, Harrison and Rose Hit the Ball, V-E Day! 

News Clippings - Comox District Free Press, Oct. 1944 - May 1945

Sailors visited Tree Island w friends via landing crafts 1944 and '45
Photo Credit - Michael Foort, Vancouver Island Postcards, No. 91

Introduction:

My father said in memoirs that he trained zombies on navy cutters, completed a lot of 'regular duties' and played a lot of baseball while at HMCS Givenchy III (described as home to a Combined Operations School by the Comox newspaper) from Jan. 1944 - summer 1945. He describes efforts to make rowing practice/training a bit of fun for new sailors, says he learned a good deal from good baseball coaches (e.g., George Hobson, later to become mayor of Courtenay), and he shares a few details about celebrations related to V-E Day ('Victory in Europe'), early May 1945.   

The Comox newspaper also shared information about many events that related in some way to a good-sized group of navy boys (RCNVR, and volunteers for Combined Operations) who served at the navy base on "The Spit" after two years of service overseas related to the Dieppe Raid and operations re the invasions of North Africa, Sicily and Italy. A good deal of information about those events can be found on this blog/website by visiting 'Dieppe, North Africa' etc., as found via "click on Headings" in right hand margin. 

Questions and comments re the activities of Canadians in Combined Ops can be addressed to me in the comment section at the bottom of each post, or by email at gordh7700@gmail.com

Some of the news clippings arranged below will be accompanied by additional details from navy memoirs or other sources. The following is from Oct. 12, 1944:


Regarding the point mentioned above (#2) that those who served overseas should not be asked to serve in Japan, I read in my father's memoirs that during the time he and mates were getting ready to return to Ontario after V-E Day, someone did raise the question about Canadian sailors going to Japan. Doug Harrison writes that soon after the war in Europe ended "we went to H.M.C.S. Naden (in Esquimalt, next door to Victoria, BC) with none of us volunteering for the Japanese theatre of war, although we were all asked by a recruiting officer." (Page 43, "Dad, Well Done")

Sillence Studio burned down at a later date but many of their photographs
can still be accessed (and bought) at the Courtenay Museum/Archive

Besides training zombies, playing baseball and doing regular duties, it seems the sailors were involved in bond drives:

November 2, 1944, Comox Free Press

Chuck Rose appears in many baseball and personal photos with my father Doug Harrison. They remained friends for many years after the war ended. Below we read that Chuck was a pretty good bowler:

February 1, 1945. Winter time sports, Comox Free Press

Doug and Chuck at a Navy Reunion, year unknown

While Doug and Chuck had a bit of fun on Vancouver Island, thousands of Canadian soldiers were involved in a tough slog in Italy. A cartoon by Bing, 1944, follows:

March 8, 1945. More about Bing Coughlin - Wikipedia

More cartoons by and information about Bing Coughlin can be found at "Progress is Fine:


More details about the Navy bowling team:


Chuck Rose is no longer in "The Big Seven". The Navy is now represented by Jim Malone, another ball player connected to Chuck and Doug... and other sailors that have appeared in previous photos:


My father, fourth in back row is flanked by Chuck Rose (left)
and Jim Malone (right). Photo - Powell River, BC, 1944 - 45

The Navy No. 1 baseball team was well-coached by George Hobson. George's wedding is reported below and the wedding picture appears in the previous post:


Men serving overseas loved getting letters from home. If you're thinking about writing - and you really should - here's a bit of good advice:


News from overseas hits hard at times:


News about a new road between Courtenay and Comox does not hold much historical value re WWII but it was likely well-travelled by sailors from HMCS Givenchy III when they wanted to get to the Riverside Hotel for a pint, the Bickle Theatre for a movie and Native Sons Hall for a dance. Yes, the sailors could travel on landing craft right to the heart of Courtenay (e.g., to Courtenay Slough, adjacent to Simms Park at present, a short walk to the main entertainment centre; maps to follow)... and they did so on many occasions


Get your wallets ready, another bond drive is around the corner!

From The Comox District Free Press, April 19, 1945

I was delighted to find this piece naming Doug Harrison and Chuck Rose at the centre of action, i.e., they helped the Navy baseball team that "severely whipped the Circle F Cardinals. It was only an exhibition game but I bet the boys remembered that game for awhile!


"Heavy hitting" Doug Harrison and Chuck Rose, 
one week before V-E Day - May 3, 1945

From May 10, 1945 - The Comox District Free Press

My father adds the following re V-E Day in memoirs:

Then one day, the day we had been waiting for came -- V.E. day -- and what a celebration. They poured beer in my hair, there was no routine, but nothing untoward happened. 

The fellows were just so glad, that it gave us time to think back and count our blessings. No, I cannot recall anything unusual happening to write about. It had a sobering effect on most of us who had been in Combined Operations under the White Ensign. Page 42 - 43 "Dad, Well Done"

Wait just a minute. Truth be told, my Dad scribbled out a few words in his notes about the day. It's worth a second look : )

"Everything went mad, and uncontrolled": Oh, I see!!
But I won't tell anyone. Your secret is safe with me, Dad.

Photo Gallery - A few odds and ends from Vancouver Island

A map given to me by my host. The STAR is the location of my AirBnB lodgings; M is the Courtenay Museum (copies of WW2 newspapers, photographs) ; LIB is the Courtenay Library (microfiche newspapers); P is a Combined Ops plaque in Simms Park; darkened lines - lots of hiking/biking trails in the region:


Emails I sent home during my second trip reveal a few details about the available resources I had access to in various locations. They remind me that there are still a few stones left unturned so chances are I will be thinking of another trip to the west coast and the spit in the not-so-distant future:

"Whatever happens, I will have... rewarding times." And that was true.

I scattered some of my father's ashes near the end of The Spit.
On a 2012 trip to Halifax I threw some ashes into the Atlantic

I addressed Legion members and high school students re Combined Ops
on different days as well as collected information about the same

"but will likely be microfiche get daily" ?? What the heck does that mean?
I did spend a couple of days scanning microfiche as I recall : )

Paddling to and from the Spit was a breeze, the weather was gorgeous.
However, I never did get to Tree Island; it was too far for this old guy.
And what about those sharks??!!*

Dave Kelly and Terry Smith greeted me and helped answer
a few questions re the Spit, baseball diamond and more

Tree Island : ) Excellent postcard from a thrift store opposite Courtenay Library

*There were no sharks near the Spit (!!) when I was there and the waters around Tree Island seem pretty calm as well. 

Another postcard from the thrift store in Courtenay:

A year earlier I'd visited London; came home with no postcards. I stayed
east of Buckingham Palace, Houses of Parliament, Westminster Bridge...

My AirBnB was near Southwark St., south of Thames R., and I walked to
Tower Bridge, The Tower, and HMS Belfast (depicted on the river above).

I biked safely on Comox Rd., scenic route to Goose Spit, formerly known
as Dyke Rd. I suspect. I cycled as far as Kye Bay (east of airport)

Canadian sailors would have loved plying the waters of Comox Harbour
in Canadian-made landing crafts during World War II. "It was heaven."

There is definitely more to learn about the Canadians in Combined Ops who served at HMCS Givenchy III during the Second World War. I will share more items from my Courtenay/Comox files in the future.

For more information from the Comox newspaper (1944 - 45), please link to The Comox District Free Press (5).

Unattributed Photos GH

Tuesday, July 13, 2021

Editor's Research: Canadians in Combined Ops Return Home, Parts 1 - 21

The Search for Details About WWII Canadian Sailors Continues

Some Returned Home in December 1943. What Happened Next?

"En route to Canada together on... leave": Had "engaged in combined operations"
Photo Credit: The Ottawa Citizen, February, 1944

Introduction:

The story related to the return home to Canada of some members of RCNVR (who had also volunteered to join Combined Operations beginning in December 1941) has been told in part in this lengthy series of entries.

For example, AB Lloyd Evans ((Able Bodied Seaman, above left) was interviewed by The Ottawa Evening Citizen upon his return and most of the details are provided in the offerings below; some details are missing, i.e., a news clipping provided to me had been cut short. However, when Covid-19 is finished and the University of Western Ontario (London ONT) allows me to enter its library and search its cache of microfilm, I will be able to find the actual news article and add to this bit of research provided here. 

Stoker (M) Thomas Fawdry (above center) was also interviewed by a newspaper reporter (likely from The Windsor Star, Jan. - Feb. 1944); the news clip provided to me - shared below in one of the early entries) was also cut short and I will track it down soon (I hope) and add it to the appropriate post.

The subsequent path of AB Jean Kroon (above right) is not known. Help wanted! 

That being said, the 21 posts below cover a lot of ground (research from The Winnipeg Tribune - and other valuable sources - with many informative links provided), i.e., from January and February, 1944. Readers will learn more about the overseas role (Jan. 1942 - Dec. 1943) of some of the Canadians sailors who had joined Combined Operations as well as what their subsequent responsibilities were once settled into new Navy routines, e.g., at HMCS Givenchy III on Vancouver Island.

Links to the 21 entries are provided below. Questions or comments can be addressed to Editor (G. Harrison) at gordh7700@gmail.com



Canadian sailors served at HMCS Givenchy III (1944 - 45), aka The Spit
Photo Credit - The Crowsnest








Experience with landing crafts at Dieppe, North Africa, Sicily and Italy helped
some Canadian sailors as they instructed troops preparing for D-Day France
Photo Credit - The Crowsnest








I hope readers will enjoy some happy hunting with the above entries.

For more information about the role some Canadians in Combined Operations filled (volunteered for, or, were assigned to) once their leave at home was finished, please link to Editor's Research: In Comox and Courtenay (Parts 1 - 10).

Unattributed Photos GH

Monday, July 12, 2021

Comox, BC: The Comox District Free Press 1944 (5)

Still Lots of Baseball for Navy Team and a Rare Letter Home

Clippings from the Comox Newspaper, July 20 - Sept. 28, 1944 

Doug Harrison (front) and Bill Grycan, RCNVR and Combined Ops
Lots of baseball practice at The Spit in 1944 - 45 

Back of photo is stamped "Silvertone Photo Service, Courtenay B. C."

Introduction:

Though I cannot recall saving much from microfilm about D-Day Normandy (June 6, 1944) as found in the Comox newspaper, I'm sure it was well-covered by the District Free Press and other news outlets, including radio. I bet my eyes were peeled almost exclusively for news items related to the navy base at Comox, i.e., HMCS Givenchy III.

The clippings I share on this post relate to baseball, baseball, and more baseball, with a few other lovely items that connect us with the action overseas, e.g., an informative letter home, from the war front. Until we get to it, here is an item about baseball:


Navy No. 1 - in seventh place - will fill the last playoff position:


Mr. Ed Corson, a police officer and one known to my father (they had a wee disagreement one evening after Dad had a few pints)


The Navy No. 1 team will make the playoffs, thanks to "fast, crowd-pleasing" action, perhaps thanks to good pitching, some by "Navy's Arnie." I don't know if that was a misspell; I have a photo of someone by that name:


Don Arney (farthest left) sits on the back of an old car on The Spit, Comox.
On another photo D. Arney is listed as a Centre Fielder. (Dad is far right)
Chuck Rose, back centre, will be seen in an upcoming wedding photo

Two wins and a loss are recorded in quick succession in the August 10th newspaper, and Jim Malone is mentioned "on the mound." He appears in the above photo as well,  big smile, fourth from left (at the back): 


The newspaper has its eye on Ed Corson, this time because of a black one:


The Silverstone stamp that marked the top photo has lasted for almost 80 years. However, when in Courtenay Museum I learned the photo studio did not last that long. The store burnt down many years ago but many photos were saved. A ledger exists so that folks can look for old photos that might have something to do with family members, etc.


The following two photographs are from the Silvertone Studio collection:

Bill Grycan (RCNVR) marries Gladys Murray (sitting), Feb. 25, 1945
Bill G. is also in the very top photo, as well as the baseball team photo.
He is sitting in the passenger seat w someone on his lap! Gladys?

Navy team's coach, George Hobson marries Maudie Urquhart, March 7, 1945
Sailor on far right is Joe "Spenny" Spencer, good friend of my father.
PO John Ward (back left) and PO Doug Zink (front left) also attend.

The following letter "might serve to give local people a good idea of conditions in France" in the weeks following D-Day Normandy:


Another letter from the August 17th issue of The Comox District Free Press follows:


Our Canadian Navy boys, including my father, also visited Glasgow - mentioned above - when they were overseas. One of the fellows that went to Scotland (for early training on landing crafts) from Halifax in Jan. 1942, in the same group as my father, met his wife in Glasgow. Yes, another wedding photo follows, and a very close mate of Dad's stood up with the groom:

Chuck Rose (left), Al Adlington and wife Mary, and Mary's sister. Glasgow, 1942. 
Chuck also appears in the baseball team photo, tallest man in the backrow

Eight Canadians from the first draft of 50 sailors to join Combined Operations
L - R: Al Adlington, Joe Spencer, Chuck Rose, Doug Harrison, Art Bradfield,
Don Linder, Joe Watson, Jake Jacobs. Northney III, Hayling Island. Feb. 1942

And now, back to the Free Press for a few more details about baseball. Hey, Navy's moved up in the standings!


Ed Corson's black eye must have healed up nicely!


Peaceful as it may sound in British Columbia, the war in Europe does hit home at times:


It's a mystery to me! Navy No. 1 team was moving up in the standings and my father was likely having a pretty good time playing third base. But orders are orders. Who made the order? And why? That's the mystery!


More news from overseas is reported in The Comox District Free Press:


When some of the Canadians in Combined Ops practised assault landings on Vancouver Island in 1944, they were joined by some dedicated young men known as Rangers:


More details related to Ranger Units (PCMRs) were found in later newspaper issues, and I will share more items in subsequent entries here. 

Comox RCAF Station was near HMCS Givenchy III and airmen were honoured a few days before the September 21st issue of the Comox paper, below:


Also found in the Sept. 21 issue, a poem dedicated to P.M. Winston Churchill:


One of the members of Canadian Services mentioned in the snip below "saw action on 'D-Day' as one of the crew of a landing barge." If he was later assigned to HMCS Givenchy III he would be in very good company, i.e., with many other Canadian sailors who knew a thing or two about various landing crafts in action at D-Day Dieppe, D-Day North Africa, D-Day Sicily and D-Day Italy:


More news clips from The Comox District Free Press will follow.

Photo Gallery 

(From trips to Comox and Courtenay in 2012, 2014 and 2015).

I enjoyed snapping 100s of photos from the moving train:


I snapped this next one in Edmonton one bright morning:


Stopped in Winnipeg:


Inside Winnipeg train station:


Sunset as we roll west:



Don Westbrook, RCNVR, Combined Operations 1941 - 45

Doug Harrison, RCNVR, Combined Operations, 1941 - 45

"I remember Doug. He had such lovely red hair," says Margaret
(Maudie) Hobson, at Courtenay Museum, 2012

Inside the Courtenay dance hall, Native Sons Hall:


Courtenay sports teams inside the Native Sons Hall

The Riverside Hotel - oft frequented by Canadians in Combined Ops after parking landing crafts in Courtenay Slough - burned down in mid-1960s:


Courtenay Main Street. Upper apartment(?) : )


Cross the bridge and turn left into Lewis Park:


Boats still park in the Courtenay Slough as in the 1940s:



One can stand in Simms Park and look across the street to Lewis Park:


Ball diamonds in background

Concession stand inside Lewis Park: "Git yer Red Hots!!"

Orange building was my hostel for 2 - 3 nights during 2012 trip

During war years, sailors landing at Comox Wharf on Liberty Ships from 'The Spit'.
Please note - Princess Louise was not a Liberty Ship. "Riverboat gambler?"

Aerial view of The Spit; Comox Wharf is visible w a ship docked
Photo credit - Courtenay Library

Views of "The Spit" Navy base taken from the current pier in Comox:



The far (north) end of The Spit, not far from old ball diamond

Entering The Spit by hiking from Comox central:





Had I hiked around the far corner (above) I would have headed toward Kye Bay,
a place where Navy boys vacationed in the '40s, I believe. (To be determined).

Heading toward Vancouver via BC Ferries

On board map depicts my upcoming return home, Vancouver to Toronto


Leaving Vancouver Island via BC Ferries, 2012


Please click here to view Comox, BC: The Comox District Free Press 1944 (4)

Unattributed Photos GH