Archive for May, 2011

In this issue 22

Posted by rmcclub on 29th May 2011

HELP US TO CONTACT SHARP CANADIAN REALTORS.

We need your help contacting Realtors across Canada.

We have made the decision to expand our advertising in e-Veritas. Our first foray will be in the Real Estate Business looking for partners – Note: the provincial flags on the left margin. We expect to have a number of Realtors listed with us from most Provinces (BY PROVINCE / Area).

We ask all our readers who have dealt with Realtors over the past 24 months or so – buying and / or selling to provide us with:

Name of Realtors and their Online Web site info.

Sharp Realtors will welcome the opportunity to be our business partner. oliver-b@rmc.ca

AIDEZ-NOUS À TROUVER DES AGENTS IMMOBILIERS PERFORMANTS

Nous sollicitons votre aide pour communiquer avec des agents immobiliers à travers le Canada.

Nous avons décidé d’augmenter les annonces publicitaires dans e-Veritas. Notre première expansion vise la mise en place de partenaires dans l’immobilier — Note : drapeaux provinciaux dans la marge de gauche. Nous prévoyons avoir une liste d’un certain nombre d’agents dans les prochaines semaines, PAR PROVINCE/VILLE.

Nous demandons à nos lecteurs qui ont fait affaire avec un agent immobilier dans les vingt-quatre derniers mois ou à peu près — soit pour acheter ou vendre — de bien vouloir nous faire parvenir : le nom et l’adresse du site Web de l’agent immobilier.

Nous croyons que des agents immobiliers performants seront intéressés à devenir nos partenaires. oliver-b@rmc.ca

 

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WHAT “THE MAJOR” HAS TO SAY ABOUT THE RESUMPTION OF THE RMCC / USMA HOCKEY SERIES…

 

“When Commandant Truelove whispered in my ear, at the RMC Branch Mess Dinner, that the RMC Westpoint Weekend would be back on, I was delighted. This is the longest running International Hockey Competition in Canada and the USA started by 151 Lt-General General Archibald Macdonell and General Douglas MacArthur. When one participated in this event for 12 years, as I did, it was an experience of a lifetime. In those days, the Westpoint players hosted their opposite numbers, or vice versa, and this also meant finding dates for the Ball after the game. Coach Jack Riley and I hosted each other many times and to this day Jack and I have remained great friends. The opportunity for our players to visit West Point is a most inspiring event and it gives both sides the opportunity to revue each others approach to the developement of officers. Both institutions have strengths to offer one another and career long friends are made.

This Westpoint / RMC game, held at the Memorial Centre in Kingston every second year, was always a sellout and was held in a colorful setting. The manager of the Memorial Centre stated that it was the most competative game of the year.

It makes one extremely happy to know the game is back on, especially when it is considered the biggest game of the year for both teams. Many of the contestants go on to high ranking military careers.

My hat is off to all involved in getting this great event back on the rails, especially Comandant Truelove and former Commandant Lawson who persued this issue until it was a fait accompli. Extremely well done!!!

I can’t wait for the puck to drop, lets all make it work better than ever.”

Danny McLeod

 

In this issue 22:

West Point / RMC Hockey Back On!

‘Club’ Executive Committee and General Council Meet in Kingston

Ex-Cadets in the News

After losing one son, Dawe family sees off another

I Corps chief Headed to RMCC

La Chasse-Galerie & 8725 Fergus McLaughlin

BRANCH NEWS: Vancouver Military Ball

Peter Dawe Retirement Bar BQ – Last Call

McNaughton-Vanier scholar brings worldly experience to RMCC

Catching Up With the News

Careers | Carrières

Did You Know Asks Victoria Edwards

First Penalties…The Dr. Stanley Connection To War on Ice & More

West Point / RMC Hockey Memories in Photos


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West Point / RMC Hockey Back On!

Posted by rmcclub on 29th May 2011

Paladins Have a Date With Black Knights, 10 Days Before Valentine’s Day at West Point

 

 

Click, click for better viewing

 

Key years in the history of the series

 

1923     First game – played at West Point

1926     No game – Sudden death of Officer Cadet Campbell at RMC a few days before the scheduled game caused the cancellation

1939     First win by West Point

1940 – 1941 – No games because Canada was at war

1942     Both countries at war. RMC travelled to West Point, two months following the attack on Pearl Harbour

1943 – 1948 – RMC closed

1949     Series resumed with the arrival on the New 100 in the summer of 1948

1987     Last win by RMC at West Point

2000    First win by RMC in 13 years

2006     Last game – played at Kingston

 


 

Royal Military College – West Point Hockey Classic Returns in 2012

By: WJO

The historic hockey rivalry between the Royal Military College of Canada (RMC) and the U.S. Military Academy (USMA) will be back on the ice at West Point, N.Y. February 4, 2012.

This will resume a series that started in 1923 and “stood down” following a 2006 – 3-3 tie in Kingston. It was inaugurated by U.S. General Douglas McArthur, then Superintendent of the USMA, and Lieutenant General Sir Archibald Macdonnell, then Commandant of RMC, to foster greater bonds of friendship and understanding between the two institutions.

The hockey game will be held at West Point in 2013 too. RMC will host the classic competition in 2014. Some time between now and 2014 the leadership from both institutions will look at working out a long term commitment.

The Director of Athletics at RMC, Darren Cates, says that bond remains strong today.

“There is a lot of tradition between our two institutions and this international hockey game in particular is a tremendous experience,” said Cates. “Not only are the players representing their College, they are representing their country.”

Brian Riley – the third Riley to coach the Army Black Knights over the past 62 years. His dad, Jack Riley coached at West Point from 1950 – 1986; older brother, Rob continued the family tradition for 18 years until 2004; Brian has been behind the Army bench ever since.

“We are very excited to renew the series with RMC. For our Cadets to have the opportunity to be a part of this series in the coming years is something that they will never forget and there is no doubt they will have memories from the games that will last a lifetime.”

Brian also added, “On a personal note this game means a great deal to me. As a kid growing up watching my Dad’s teams’ play this was the game that the Riley family had circled on the calendar. My brothers and sister were always very excited for the game but I think just as important we were excited because we knew Danny McLeod would be coming to stay at our house!”

The soft spoken hockey coach speaking from the heart concluded: “The Riley family over the last 60 years has built many great relationships with so many wonderful people from RMC to include coaches, players, and administrators. Names like McLeod, Laliberte, Scott, and Oliver are the first to come to mind but there are so many more. I’m looking forward to seeing old friends and making new friends as the series hopefully moves forward.”

The West Point – RMC hockey rivalry became very intense sometime in the 1950s. Read the Al Roberts article about the story behind the story of the – ‘First Penalty’ elsewhere in this edition.

In conversations with former hockey Redmen from the ‘50s well into the ‘00s will always involve a “story” of the West Point game. We attended most of the games over the last 25 years in which the series was played. There were a lot of thrillers especially in Kingston. In particular, we recall the 2-2 tie in ’98; 3-0 shutout by Tom Connerty in 2000; Shannon Goudie, scored the overtime goal in a thrilling 3-2 win in 2002. Great memories!

“Army’s hockey program is formidable and the game will provide a great opportunity and challenge for our team,” said Adam Shell, Head Coach of the RMC Paladins. “To be able to participate in this historic rivalry will be a highlight of their careers at RMC and something they will remember long past graduation.”

When Cadets stopped sharing rooms and socializing with each other appeared to start in the early part of the 1980s. At West Point around that time hockey became a legitimate varsity program – on par with their football & basketball programs. Prior to that hockey only had Recreation Club status. NCAA Division 1 athletes are not in the habit of sharing rooms with the opposition or even socializing with the opponents.

Not even – ‘brothers in arms‘. This approach is hard to accept by many on this side of the border. We will be surprised (no shocked) if Army has changed their socializing varsity sport philosophy in 2012.

Just how intense was this rivalry? We can recall games where things got a little out of hand right from the opening face off. School administrators tried to put the breaks on such behavior, but when the puck drops, next February, we have no doubt that the rivalry will be as hot as ever. And hopefully, just as exciting as most of the previous 75 encounters.

Rolande and I are making plans to attend the game south of the border next February.

INVITATION TO READERS:

What do you think of the West Point / RMC hockey series resuming?  Feel free to leave a comment below…or…contact Darren Cates, RMC Athletic Director at (613) 541-6000 ext 6422; Darren.Cates@rmc.ca

 

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‘Club’ Executive Committee and General Council Meet in Kingston

Posted by rmcclub on 29th May 2011

Photos by: 24487 OCdt Dan Fleming

Photo Left: Commodore Bill Truelove was caught a little bit by surprise when Club President, Dave Benoit presented the soon-to-be former Commandant with a gift from the RMC Club of Canada for the outstanding support provided to the Club during his two year tenure at the helm of the College.

Photo Right: Executive Committee & General Council members were joined by RMCC Commandant prior to the formal meetings. (L-R) 15185 Commodore Bill Truelove; 4976 Reg Watts; 19307 Dave Benoit; 8828 Wayne Kendall; S125 Bill Oliver; 15946 Jill Carelton; 7076 John van Haastrecht; M0058 Marc Drolet; M0157 Bryan Righetti; 9889 Bob Benn; S150 Peter Dawe; 5611 Gerry Stowe; 5276 Digger MacDougall; 24712 Brent Fisher. MIA – 4459 Ed Murray; 15988 Jeff Kearns.

RMC Club of Canada Executive Committee & General Council Meetings were held Friday, 27 May at RMCC.

The Senate Chamber in Mackenzie Buiding at RMCC was the site of the Club EC semi-annual meeting and the annual meeting of the GC – who are comprised of Presidents of Branches across the country.  A number of delegates participated by conference call.

Club President, 19307 Dave Benoit welcomed -  4459 Ed Murray, M0157 Bryan Righetti, and 15946 Jill Carelton to the Executive Committee.   Also: Past President,15988 Jeff Kearns; 1st Vice President, M0058 Marc Drolet; 2nd Vice President, 14559 Steven Gable (conference call); retiring, Executive Director, S150 Peter Dawe; Adjutant Old Brigade, 5611 Gerry Stowe.

Foundation Past President, 7076 John van Haastrecht; Member, 9889 Bob Benn; Member 8120 Bill Gard (conference call); Member, 10263 Don Lovell (conference call); Member, 8828 Wayne Kendall.

Also participating were two of the Group of Five (Past Presidents) – 7943 J. William K. Lye and 10080 Robert T. Booth both by conference call.

Branch Presidents involved were: Toronto, 8034 Michael Gainer; Ottawa, 5276 Digger MacDougall; Edmonton, 21443 Cheng-Hsin Chang (conference call); Kingston, 4976 Reg Watts.

Also on conference call was – Foundation President, 9660 Cameron Diggon24712, Brent Fisher was the Recording Secretary; finally, S125 Bill Oliver was in attendance in the role of transitional Executive Director.

The two groups of hard working volunteers both had heavy agendas covering a number of important topics such as: EC Objectives and Work Plan; Nominations for EC and Officers; Honourary Memberships and Honourary Degrees; Report on Operations and Finances -2010 Financial Report (including Draft Audit) -2011 Financial Statements and Budget – Report on Operations; Transition to new ED and the process for hiring a replacement for the retiring Peter Dawe who has held the position for close to ten years.

The deadline for applicants has past.  No firm dates have been set for the interview process. Applicants can expect to be notified some time soon.

The next Meeting of the EC – is scheduled for 30 September 2011 at the same location – during Reunion Weekend.  The site for combined meeting for May 2012 will be announced in September.

 

 

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Ex-Cadets in the News

Posted by rmcclub on 29th May 2011

From Toronto to a PoW camp — and back again

Andrew (Andy) Carswell picks up a copy of his-just published World War II memoir.

“That was my plane,’’ he says, his fingers running over the cover painting of the Avro Lancaster flying, as night bombers always did, in the dark over Germany.

The Lanc, as it was known, entered active service just months before Carswell, then a 19-year-old pilot from Toronto’s Beach neighbourhood, was shot down near Berlin.

It was his fourth wartime mission. It would be his last.

The Lanc, like so many of the young men who flew it, had a dismal casualty rate…

Son 11623 John explains that he took the book to a design firm to prepare it for publication, “It turned out a literary agent named Nick Harris loved it and then it was picked up by Wiley (the publishing company). And that’s the story.”

Footnote:  photo of Andy Carswell with his brother 2743 Jim, Class of 1940 just before Andy shipped out to England.

2743 Jim Carsell was in the War Class of 1940 which was abbreviated and the last before they shut down the college in 1942. Jim went on after the war to work in the U.S. space program and worked on everything from Nike and Mercury up to the Space Shuttle so he probably was the first RMC “Space Scientist”.

Read the entire article

Another article & CTV Toronto: Naomi Parness on the new book Video – Toronto’s Andrew Carswell, 88, recalls the time he was forced to jump out of a plane over Germany in his new Second World War book.

MORE DETAILS ON THE BOOK – Over the Wire: A Canadian Pilot’s Memoir of War and Survival as a POW

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New preacher at the pulpit for Sydenham church

“I started feeling this bug that I needed to go to church,” he says. “I started going on my own in Oshawa and (then to) St. George’s Cathedral. It was there that I just felt like this is what I was supposed to be and do – that I was supposed to preach the word, do sermons, celebrate the sacraments (etc.).”

22291 Judson Bridgewater

Article

 

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Brigadier general coming to town

Milne was a sea cadet in Ottawa and London. After joining the Canadian Forces in 1980, he graduated from the Royal Military College in 1984.

14475 Jay Milne

Article

 

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Defence chief celebrates cadets

“You’re getting something right now that not a lot of people in Canada get and that is an understanding of how to be a leader, of how to solve problems, of how to stand in front of people and say, ‘Here’s what we’re going to do,’ ”

12320 Walter Natynczyk

Article

 

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Excellence with vigour

“Op Caribbe is all about preventing illicit narcotics from entering North America from both Central and South America, and we’re working with our allies in a multi-agency and an international type setting to achieve that goal,”

18127 Commander Paul Forget, HMCS Toronto’s commanding officer

Article

 

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Oromocto names new administrator

“It’s a job I feel that I have kind of been preparing for all of my career. It’s a job that needs leadership skills, but it’s also a job that needs a good understanding of how to work with elected officials and understanding their needs. In my seven years with provincial government, I have certainly learned a lot.”

11190 Dick Isabelle, a former commander of Canadian Forces Base Gagetown

Article

 

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After losing one son, Dawe family sees off another

Posted by rmcclub on 29th May 2011

After losing one son, family sees off another

The Sacrifice of duty; Parents of military Dawe family hide fear as eldest son returns to Afghanistan

By ROB TRIPP

Three Dawe brothers have served in Afghanistan.

One returned to Canada in a coffin.

One now helps lead Canada’s new training mission to the war-ravaged country.

Yet this three-generation Canadian military family concedes no anger over what it has endured or anxiety for what it has yet to face.

“I just think (the mission is) the right thing to do,” says Peter Dawe, a retired lieutenant-colonel who served 33 years in the army and who fathered four boys: Matthew, James, Philip and Peter Jr., all of whom joined the Canadian Forces.

James Dawe left the military five years ago. Philip Dawe is a physician and major now completing surgical training in Manitoba.

Peter Dawe Jr., the eldest at 41, recently returned to Afghanistan as deputy commander of Canada’s threeyear commitment to a NATO training effort. He was part of the first group of Canadians to arrive in Afghanistan in 2002.

The youngest, Capt. Matthew Dawe, was only 27, a rising star in the forces, when the vehicle in which he was riding was destroyed on July 4, 2007, by a remotely detonated roadside bomb about 20 kilometres southwest of Kandahar City. Five other Canadian soldiers and an Afghan interpreter were killed.

The Dawes, a well-known military family in this eastern Ontario community, exemplify determination in the face of a mission that has claimed more than 150 Canadian lives and is entering a new phase.

Reine Dawe says she has no lingering anger toward the fighters who killed her youngest child.

“It’s a destructive feeling and you don’t accomplish anything by doing that. You become more miserable,” she says. “You can’t have hatred within you all the time and I didn’t have hatred. I had this profound sadness which is still there and that terrible loss feeling.”

Reine Dawe does not reveal the depth of her anxiety about her eldest son’s return to Afghanistan. She hugged him before he shipped out for his recent mission and “cried a little.”

“He was very focused on his mission and the last thing I want him to worry about is his mother here at home falling to pieces,” she says. She writes to him regularly, just to “reach out and touch him.” But she conveys no fear for his safety.

“I don’t want him to have to carry that burden,” she says.

Peter Dawe Jr. is a “forceful but articulate” soldier who “leads from the front,” his father says. He knows that his son will “expose himself” to danger in his new role.

Based in Kabul, the eldest Dawe boy will oversee 950 soldiers who will mentor Afghans. He left his wife, a fourmonth-old baby girl and a toddler son in Canada.

Despite the price they have already paid, the Dawes believe firmly in Canada’s commitment to help rebuild the war-ravaged country. They articulate it with a sincerity that transcends what might be expected of a military family.

“Intolerance and ignorance, that’s what killed Matt,” she says. “What’s the best way to fight that? It’s education and helping the people over there and that’s what Peter is doing right now, trying to give them a police force, an army to keep the bad guys at bay.”

Peter Dawe Sr., whose father was a gunner during the Second World War, says the mission should continue because it’s the right thing to do.

“I think we started something and yeah, it cost us personally a lot, but for the same reason, you’ve got to finish it,” he says. “I think it’s a worthwhile cause.”

He says he can understand the motivations of the Taliban fighter who detonated the bomb that killed his son.

“As a soldier, I can respect what he thought he had to do,” he says. “Were I in that circumstance, I might have done the same thing. Now, the fact that he was killed shortly thereafter gave us absolutely no closure.”

“No satisfaction,” Reine interjects, before her husband finishes speaking.

Peter Dawe Sr. says he is certain that the Taliban targeted his deceased son. Other vehicles passed by the bomb before it was detonated.

“He was up their noses, he could speak (Pashto), he could talk to the local farmers and they liked him, and so he was a threat,” he says.

“You can’t be bitter; you’re profoundly sad, you always will be, but nothing will change that.”

Peter Dawe is confident of his eldest son’s abilities. Peter Dawe Jr. has a master’s degree and certification as a Pathfinder, an elite military designation for troops trained to drop behind enemy lines from an aircraft at 30,000 feet. Only soldiers with exceptional physical and mental ability can pass the gruelling training.

If he harbours any reservations about his son’s return to Afghanistan, he has concealed them. “I didn’t tell him to be careful,” Peter Dawe Sr. says. “I said, ‘Do what you need to do to be a good leader.’ ”

Source

22596 Matt Dawe (RMC ’04) 1980-2007 – e-Veritas article

Capt. Matthew Dawe Building Ceremony

Canada’s Afghan training mission details revealed

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I Corps chief Headed to RMCC

Posted by rmcclub on 29th May 2011

Farewell to I Corps chief

The Canadian I Corps chief of staff to take over as commandant of the Royal Military College of Canada

By: Marisa Petrich/Northwest Guardian

 

After almost three years at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Canadian I Corps Chief of Staff BGen. Eric Tremblay will be moving on.

“I think in life there’s a time for everything. And now it’s time to go back home,” he said.

Tremblay came to JBLM in August 2008 to serve as the deputy commanding general of I Corps. Since then, he’s worked under three different commanding generals, and seen I Corps deploy and return.

He and his wife, Lt. Col. Brigid Dooley-Tremblay, also a Canadian exchange officer who has worked in the I Corps G-4, will be returning to Canada in July. But when Tremblay begins his next job as commandant of the Royal Military College of Canada, he’ll bring a lot from JBLM with him.

“You feel honored to be part of the team. But also, it’s a great professional experience,” he said of his time at I Corps.

As the first general officer on exchange at JBLM, Tremblay felt the pressure of coming in to a new environment when he first arrived.

“You want to give a good impression. You want to ensure that you bring added value and you make a difference,” he said.

Some of his greatest achievements here came from the transitions — whether he was responding to the energy and vision of a new commanding general or smoothing the reintegration of 18,000 troops returning from Iraq.

These experiences allowed him to improve the synergy and synchronicity of the corps, he said, and optimize efficiency.

Tremblay particularly valued the frequent exchanges of information among professionals, as well as their energy and dedication to their work.

“You learn a lot from who you work with, at any rank level,” he said.

Working with the officers and NCOs at I Corps has helped him to be a better team leader and team member. Beyond that, Tremblay has built lasting friendships in the last three years.

“I think I will miss the friendship,” he said.

All told, everything he’s learned has become part of the important “professional baggage” that he’ll carry with him to the Royal Military College.

“I’m looking forward to take charge of the college and to look in the eyes of those men and women, the future leaders of the Canadian forces,” Tremblay said.

As for the friendships he’s made, Tremblay doesn’t plan on leaving them behind. He fully expects people he’s met at JBLM to turn up on his doorstep in Canada.

“The door will be open,” he said.

Dooley-Tremblay will depart with him, going into long-term strategic planning for Canadian forces.

Source

 

Canada loans Army officers to Lewis-McChord

A Canadian brigadier general who was assigned to Joint Base Lewis-McChord in an exchange program is headed back to his motherland, while another Canadian officer will replace him.

Brig. Gen. Eric Tremblay was the first general officer from a foreign country to take part in the exchange at Lewis-McChord. Officers and other soldiers will say goodbye to him at a ceremony Tuesday afternoon. Tremblay had been assigned to I Corps since August 2009, deployed with the unit on its Iraq deployment, and moves on to become commandant of the Royal Military College of Canada.

“I think in life there is a time for everything,” Tremblay, who recently served as I Corps chief of staff, said in a press release. “And now it’s time to go back home.”

He will be replaced by Brig. Gen. Jean-Marc Lanthier, another Canadian, who will deploy this summer with I Corps Headquarters to Kabul, Afghanistan. Lanthier previously went to Afghanistan as a commander with a Canadian Army task force in 2006.

There are no I Corps officers serving in Canada.

The international exchange program is done across the entire Army. I Corps officials say they also have an arrangement with Australia in which an officer from Down Under works out of the I Corps plans shop at Lewis-McChord.

Source

 

 

 

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La Chasse-Galerie & 8725 Fergus McLaughlin

Posted by rmcclub on 29th May 2011

“Logo courtesy of Sleeman/Unibroue”

 

E3161 Victoria Edwards (RMC 2003) interviewed 8725 Mr Fergus McLaughlin (CMR RMC 1971), one of fifteen Ex-Cadets who will raise money for the Danny McLeod Athletic Endowment Fund by paddling a voyageur canoe from Ottawa to Kingston this September, 2011. You can make a pledge or donation at www.rmcclubfoundation.ca.

Victoria Edwards: This is your second ex-cadet fund-raising canoe trip down the Rideau. What gave you the idea?

Fergus McLaughlin: Yes. I was a member of the last team that canoed the Rideau in 2006 from Ottawa to Kingston.  My role was of trip photographer. It took me several months to put together a 1.5 hour video diary `La Chasse Galerie 2006`, each paddlers received a copy for Christmas 2006. My favourite parts of the video were musical: H4860 General (Ret’d) John de Chastelain (RMC 1960) played the bagpipes and the son of 8788 Geoff Bennett (RMC 1971) played the violin.

Victoria Edwards: In your videographer role for the fundraiser canoe trip, what is your vision for the video diary?

Fergus McLaughlin: I am preparing to send an email to the paddlers outlining my vision of the video. I envision an hour long video history of the canal covering the construction of the locks back in 1826-1832.  It will also include a brief voice over biography of each paddler as if the paddler is thinking aloud. My equipment consists of two digital cameras, which are capable of video and photographs.

Victoria Edwards: Your brother 6011 Mr Patrick McLaughlin (CMR 1964) is an ex-cadet.

Fergus McLaughlin: Yes and I tried to recruit him for the 2006 canoe trip. Our father, James Robert McLaughlin born in Gananoque and raised in Kingston would have loved to go to RMC. After he returned from service overseas in England, Sicily, Italy, France with the 1st Canadian army tank brigade, he was posted in Halifax. That’s where I was born, the third of four children. Needless to say we moved around a lot. My brother Patrick went to military college in the 196Os, he was in the same class as 6097 LGen (Ret’d) Paul Addy (CMR 1964). Patrick retired from Statistics Canada, seven years ago. He keeps busy playing golf. I asked Patrick if he wanted to participate in the 2011 canoe trip. Maybe next time.

Victoria Edwards:  You have previous paddling experience.

Fergus McLaughlin: As a teenager and active member of the Ottawa YMCA Judo club I was interested in their wilderness canoe trips to the Algonquin Park.  I took beginner, intermediate and advanced paddling courses led by YMCA members (Paddle Canada Certified Instructors).  I recall clinics which taught us how to roll a swamped canoe while treading water. Although these lessons learned came in handy over years of evening paddles, day and weekend trips on tributaries and lakes of the Ottawa River system, I doubt the fifteen ex-cadets could flip our flat-water voyageur canoe in the unlikely event we capsize.  My wife, Nadine Delbeke, and I have three canoes at our cottage on McGreggor Lake; we prefer paddling and windsurfing over motor boats. We have four adult children, two are married with children, they all love canoeing.

Victoria Edwards: What did you study at RMC? Outline your career after military college. Any highlights?

Fergus McLaughlin: I completed the third year of civil engineering at RMC. I transferred to Queens, where I actually studied Geological Engineering as opposed to Civil Engineering. I picked up extra credits in Paleontology; at that age, I wanted to do so many things. I had collected minerals as a child and was fascinated by mineralogy and palaeontology. A career highlight with the Museums of Canada involved the design and welding of the metal structure used to assemble the Daspletosaurus dinosaur display, a cousin of the T-Rex, at the Ottawa museum of nature on Metcalfe Street.

Victoria Edwards: I wonder if the tyrannosaur housed in the Canadian Museum of Nature was packed by 89 Lawrence Morris Lambe (RMC 1880-1883) who served as the GSC’s vertebrate palaeontologist from 1885-1919. The dinosaur named in his honour is Lambeosaurus lambei. ?p=29554]

Fergus McLaughlin: Actually, C.M. Sternberg removed the plaster-encased Daspletosaurus torosus from a remote location in Alberta where he found it in 1921. It was a thrill to unpack bones that had been packed up carefully by the Sternberg brothers long before. It took us 10 months in 1973, under the supervision of Palaeontologist Dale A. Russell to mount the Daspletosaurus, a genus of tyrannosaurid theropod dinosaur that lived in western North America between 74 and 77 million years ago. Since I was responsible for the structural engineering, I designed a metal frame to support the specimen, which was initially mounted for exhibition in the Museum of Nature in a striding posture.  The posture was altered slightly in 2006 to raise the head and tail for exhibition in the Museum of Nature’s Talisman Energy Fossil Gallery. A few bones are replicas since part of the legs were missing from the specimen. The skull is too precious and heavy to put on display so we made a cast and used very light fill for the display. That’s probably why the head was raised in 2006 to keep the kids from snapping off the teeth. You can imagine a kid’s disappointment when they realize the teeth are actually styrofoam.

Victoria Edwards: You completed fieldwork at the Geological Survey of Canada.

Fergus McLaughlin: In the 1970s I worked at the Geological Survey of Canada for seven years with the late Palaeontologist George W. Jeletzky.  In the Canadian Arctic, we collected and mapped fossil ammonites and other Cephalopods of the mid to upper Cretaceous Age.

Victoria Edwards: While completing sedimentary surveys, your motor boat nearly sank. Any lessons learned?

Fergus McLaughlin: Yes. Have a backup plan. In the late 1970s a system’s approach was adopted towards hydrographic surveying, we needed to collect process and analyze large amounts data quickly in a moving boat. The survey system we developed had four sub-systems: positioning, depth-sounding, survey control, data processing and display. Positioning in the dynamic mode was achieved using a MRD-1 Tellurometer system. Two remotes are placed on shore in a configuration for surveying. The master remains in the vessel and monitors the distance to the remotes. These units have accuracy, in the dynamic mode, of one metre over a maximum range of 100 km, assuming reasonable line-of-sight. Water depth was measured by means of a Krupp-Atlas Deso 10 depth sounder accurate to within 5 cm. The survey control is responsible for the data logging and display of position and depth on board the boat, the system was capable of collecting every second under normal operating conditions. The system was housed on a 10 metre, shallow-draft (0.3 m) water jet driven vessel with two Ford in-board engines.

We were surveying Lesser Slave Lake located in central Alberta, Canada, northwest of Edmonton. It is the second largest lake entirely within Alberta boundaries, covering 1160 square km and measuring over 100 km long and 15 km at its widest point. We were generating data for a 3D bathymetric map of the reservoir. The weather was great until 4PM, a dark cloud moved in and within minutes we were blind and in rough water. The boat was crashing into waves spilling water into the forward compartment. The bilge pump could not keep up; we noticed the bow sinking lower and lower. Fortunately we could see our progress every second on the plotter. The 6 km trek to shore was very stressful; we made it to the dock with the bow barely out of water.

Victoria Edwards: You retired from the Ottawa River Regulation Planning Board.

Fergus McLaughlin: I retired in 2008 as the Executive Engineer of the Ottawa River Regulation Planning Board after 24 years as a Regulation Engineer. The Board was established in 1983 by the governments of Canada, Quebec, and Ontario to ensure integrated management of the principal reservoirs of the Ottawa River Basin. The goal of this integrated management is to provide protection against flooding along the Ottawa River and its tributaries, particularly in the Montreal Region, and at the same time maintain the interests of the various users particularly in hydro-electric energy production. Since retiring, I have worked part time (2 days a week) to help with the transition and training of new employees and to make some mathematical models more user-friendly.

Victoria Edwards: Why is it important to you to support RMC`s Athletic Endowment Fund, which was named in honour of S109 Major Danny McLeod?

Fergus McLaughlin: I have been an active judoka since the age of 12 when I joined the YMCA.  It has become important for me to support a fund for sport and I will tell you why. Everybody will agree that intellectual excellence is a noble objective, but to also strive for physical excellence is very difficult and impossible if you do not get help. At CMR I had the privilege of holding the position of team captain in 1968-1969. On weekends we would bus to Montreal for a quality lesson at the Hakudokan with Sensei Raymond Damblant, which would keep us busy the rest of the week. I wonder today how that was possible; who paid for these excursions? I hope to give today’s cadet the same kind of help. I appreciate the team work and training in judo from my days at the college, since it has allowed me to stay fit all these years. I am a little slower now and I protect my knees and ears. I like them healthy and normal looking, no cauliflower ears if you know what I mean. I am still doing judo at 62 years of age; they call me the old fox at the Jean Bosco club in Gatineau, because of all those sneaky manoeuvres I pull out of my bag of tricks.

Victoria Edwards: You enjoy hiking in the Mountains. Any lessons learned?

Fergus McLaughlin: It’s interesting how as a young student I was attracted to engineering, it suits me well. I realize that I am not answering you question just yet, but I will get there. I can spend hours and even days planning the finer details of a renovation or building project before even touching a tool. My wife says I need to get out more and socialize; she knows what she is talking about, she is a psychologist…

Nadine has always taken care of that aspect of our life. That explains why our hiking in far away places is most often in the company of psychologists. Being the only engineer comes in handy for the group during our expeditions and is very uplifting for me. Our hiking expeditions have taken us and three other couples with two guides to 5000 meters in the Aconcagua Mountains. Aconcagua is the highest mountain range on the American continents located in the mid-west of the Republic of Argentina, Province of Mendoza. We reached the top of Franke Mountain on New Year’s Day 2009. The mountaineering challenges were not only of extreme altitude; there were also high winds, scree, snow slopes, and penetentes. We were fit and ready to go higher, according to our guides, but we left it for another time. In 2010 the same group travelled to Europe where we completed a twenty-two day hike at 2-3000 meters in Monte Viso, a mountain in the Cottian Alps in Italy close to the French border. We hiked ten hours a day carrying medium packs of tents, food, bedding and clothes. Unlike Aconcagua we didn’t need to adjust to the lower oxygen environment found at high altitude and there was no danger of altitude-related illnesses. Monte Viso 3841 m (12,600 ft.), isn’t as high as the Aconcagua Mountains 6,959 m (22,834 ft.). We would like the next mountaineering challenge to be Mount Kilimanjaro, Africa’s highest mountain in Tanzania. Depending on the route, you can hike all the way to the summit 19,335.6 ft (5,895 m). The accommodation is in huts and tents and the scenery is spectacular.

Victoria Edwards: You are a member of a group training for the Saint-Jacques-de-Compostelle pilgrims’ route in Spain and France.

Fergus McLaughlin: With its 1600kms, Le Puy en Velay’s Road is the road of a Christian pilgrimage past numerous holy places (churches, sanctuaries). Pilgrims have been taking the route since the 10th century. The group I train with meets in the summer in Jacques Cartier Park in Gatineau. We start walking flat paths of 8 km along the canal and build to 20 km and more up into the Gatineau hills.

 

Our aim at e-Veritas is to conduct one-on-one interviews with all 15 participants (in no particular order) over the next few months of e-Veritas editions.

Class of 1960 4815 Mike Jackson

Class of 1960 H4860 John de Chastelain

Class of 1963 5893 Tom Gee

Class of 1968 H7543 Joe Day

Class of 1971 8684 Peter Holt

Class of 1971 8725 Fergus McLaughlin

Class of 1971 8788 Geoff Bennett

Class of 1971 8816 Marius Grinius

Class of 1971 8833 John Leggat

Class of 1971 8926 Ray Hook

Class of 1972 9143 Bruce McAlpine

Class of 1983 M0288 Roxanne Rees

Class of 1986 15414 Catherine Paquet-Rivard

Class of 1997 20800 Cindy McAlpine

Class of 2002 22461 Claire Bramma

Posted in k. Miscellaneous | 1 Comment »

BRANCH NEWS: Vancouver Military Ball

Posted by rmcclub on 29th May 2011

Vancouver Military Ball

The ball was held Saturday, 21 May (after the world had NOT ended) at the Hyatt Hotel. The event was well attended in general, the entertainment was fine, with many displays of pipers, brass bands, and a swing band for dancing, and the Guest of Honour was Rear Admiral Nigel Greenwood, Commander Maritime Forces Pacific and a 4-year Rodent. While the Van Branch contingent was small, a great time was had by all, and Kate Armstrong was able to connect with 2 of her 1984 classmates, Al Jensen and Joel Anderson.

 

Photo caption: Ex-cadets and guests LCol Al Jensen, LCol Joel Anderson, Kim Mech, Mark Duncan, Joan Duncan, Kate Armstrong, OCdt Anders Mech (entering 2nd year at RMC) and Konrad Mech.

 

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Peter Dawe Retirement Bar BQ – Last Call

Posted by rmcclub on 29th May 2011

Peter Dawe Retirement Bar BQ – Senior Staff Mess –

3 June:  1200 (noon)  To 1430 (approx)

Peter Dawe is retiring as Executive Director, RMC Club of Canada in early June. He has filled the ED position with distinction for close to ten years from his office at Panet House.

College military and civilian staff; cadets; Ex cadets & friends who wish to attend are requested to contact us at rmcclub@rmc.ca Out of town guests are welcome too.

Provide name(s) of people planning to attend NLT 31 May in order that ample food etc is ordered.

There will be a charge of $20.00 per person to cover the costs of food and accessories which will be collected at the Bar BQ.

We request those who signify their intent to attend but are unable to do so will be prepared to pay to cover the costs of food etc which would have been ordered beforehand.

Those wishing to send well wishes are encouraged to do so rmcclub@rmc.ca

B-B-Q pour souligner la retraite de Peter Dawe — Mess des officiers et des cadres 3 juin, 12h00 à 14h00

 

Peter Dawe, le Directeur Exécutif du Club des CMR du Canada a décidé de prendre sa retraite au début de juin. Il a cumulé les fonctions de Directeur à la Maison Panet pour près de dix ans.

Le personnel civil et militaire du Collège, les cadets, les anciens cadets et amis qui désirent participer au B-B-Q sont priés de communiquer avec nous au rmcclub@rmc.ca. Bien sûr, les gens de l’extérieur sont aussi invités.

Nous avons besoin du nom des personnes qui veulent participer au B-B-Q pour s’assurer d’avoir suffisamment de nourriture et d’autres nécessités.

Le coût du B-B-Q sera de 20.00$ par personne pour défrayer le coût de la nourriture, etc., payable la journée du B-B-Q.

Si vous nous indiqué votre intention de participer mais que vous ne puissiez pas venir à la dernière minute, nous nous attendons à ce que vous acceptiez de payer votre part, car la nourriture qui aura été commandé à l’avance doit être payée.

Pour faire parvenir vos bons souhaits à Peter, communiquez au rmcclub@rmc.ca.

Posted in Retirements | Retraites | No Comments »

McNaughton-Vanier scholar brings worldly experience to RMCC

Posted by rmcclub on 29th May 2011

McNaughton-Vanier scholar brings worldly experience to RMCC

A/SLt 24498 Noelani Shore

No stranger to Kingston, Ann Fitz-Gerald returned in January to become this year’s McNaughton-Vanier Scholar at the Royal Military College. A one-year position, this Canada-based research post has given Ann the opportunity to re-live her academic and scholarly experience.

“One of the most rewarding things about this post is to be hosted by my Alma Mater, and also to come back into contact with some great academics who very much impacted on my life,” she explained.

Ann received two undergraduate degrees from Queen’s University (Commerce and Political Science), her Masters from RMC, and her PhD from Cranfield University in the United Kingdom.

Fitz-Gerald reflected that, back in 1993, attending RMC was “a slight culture shock.” She said, “I was the only female civilian student. I was also surrounded by people who were attending post-graduate courses as part of their duty, and therefore I was all of a sudden surrounded by people who were very committed to academic life, determined to make the most out of every opportunity. I had to act sharply and judiciously, and to read everything there was in order to be as active in the classroom debates as the rest of the students were. Admittedly, there was a bit of a cultural difference between RMC and mainstream undergraduate life, but it was a transition that I really enjoyed, and as a result I became a ‘serious’ student.”

When asked what she gained from receiving a military education, Ann explained: “What I wouldn’t have got from mainstream university is the discipline, and the opportunity to attend graduate school with mid-career professionals. I learned a lot from their operational experience and, at the end of the day, we were all students in the classroom; there was no apparent rank structure. It was always handy to go out for a beer with the senior folks who had been around, and to have those easy, informal discussions in the pub, or in the mess. That was something I found enormously useful. That set me up very well for understanding the military perspective in international organizations I’ve worked with like NATO, and for the ground-based experience in operations that I’ve worked in support of.”

Ann has been involved in National Security Strategy and security sector related work in many countries. This has included reviews, assessments, capacity-building programmes and policy development exercises. The two experiences that stand out most in her mind was the time she spent in Botswana and Indonesia.

“In Botswana, there were representatives around the table from what the Botswanan government called the “House of Chiefs.” They really brought the tribal and traditional societal perspective to the table, and this isn’t always evident elsewhere. You normally get a real capital-city, political-elite perspective that often doesn’t transfer well out in to the rural areas of the country, and the larger the country, the more difficult that transfer of ideas is. In Botswana – similar to present-day Somaliland – you see formal state structures and mechanisms that reflect the real societal fabric.”

Her time in Indonesia stands out because the country is so large, and spans across countless different groups of islands, and one of the key issues for National Security there is a balance between the aspiration to achieve unity across society, but pay due respect for the diversity across society as well.

“It’s interesting how the set of five values in Indonesia that was pushed pre–Suharto regime has re-emerged again as being so important to National Security Policy and Strategy development out there. It’s called Pancasila – and that’s a word in Bahasa for ‘five values.’ They include such things as social justice, one almighty God, unity, diversity, and tolerance, but they wrap it up all in one word so that even the most disinterested and ill-informed (often illiterate) sector of society can identify with something that makes them ‘Indonesian.’ This sense of unity is quite important when considering national security issues, and something that we have struggled with in other regions, including Afghanistan. It reflects the importance of having a real foundation for National Security, made up of core values which, in turn, inform national interests,” she said.

Ann finds these two experiences memorable, especially in terms of developing policy for countries like Afghanistan.

“I find that there is a real lack of platform that connects the core of society to the periphery and rural areas in Afghanistan. We’re learning very quickly that our Westphalian and Eurocentric approaches to state-building don’t transfer easily to non-Weberian societies where there are others systems of governance beyond the state. We have to learn how to speak and connect with non-state actors, or traditional and religious leaders, and we lack the tools in the international community to do that effectively.”

With so much global experience, Ann is more than qualified to handle the responsibilities of the McNaughton-Vanier Scholar. She is expected to contribute positively and actively to academic life at RMC, to be available to support both undergraduate and post-graduate students, to give lectures or be used as a guest-lecturer for relevant degree programs, and to contribute to seminars and conferences. Ann will be contributing to a Military Education Symposium in June, which will take place in Ottawa.

Balancing her work with research is a constant challenge for an academic. Ann does her best to orientate her teaching responsibilities, as well as her overseas advisory and consulting responsibilities with her writing, but it’s not always ideally arranged.

“Academia is a vocation and a passion; one must always be looking for opportunities to interview people when you’re out servicing these consultancies and projects. You have to be prepared to learn as much from your students as they would learn from you. I feel very privileged to be teaching, both in the UK and overseas, classrooms full of cross-government and cross-civil society, mid-career professionals, and future leaders. My Masters programme in Security Sector Management program in Ethiopia includes the Chief of Defence Staff and the Minister of National Defence, so I have the great privilege of learning just as much, if not more, from my students, as they hopefully learn from me. They are also as much a part of my research base as my independent work is.”

Ann has also recently returned from facilitating post-referendum negotiations between the Northern and Southern Sudan Security Chiefs. These discussions took place in a small town called Debre Zeit, approximately 1 hour north of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

“I was asked by the African Union and United Nations High Panel to facilitate the talks between the Northern and Southern Security Sector Representatives on issues related to the Common Border Zone, and the strategic issues relating to security management.”

These parties have had their differences over the years, and have endured violent conflict and extreme levels of poverty, particularly in the south. However, there is an opportunity here, despite some of the difficulties around issues concerning oil, and the contested region of Abeyei; there are a tremendous number of mutual and common interests between the two sides. There is a good degree of resource dependency for better development opportunities in the future. “However, Sudan sits in a region that hasn’t enjoyed relative security and stability in a long time, and therefore this issue does not just concern Sudan, but it concerns the region as well. There is a great interest in taking a regional approach to issues concerning post-referendum Southern Sudan, and I and others do hope that the donor community becomes engaged in supporting a locally and regionally driven approach to developing capacity in human skill sets in that region,” Ann explained. “We often expect things like professionalism of the military forces and other security forces, good degrees of government oversight and accountability, and we have to balance those expectations with a realistic view of the human capacity in those areas, particularly in Southern Sudan.”

It will take some time to affect positive change in these areas, and according to Ann, “we’re talking about generational change. If we develop opportunities from small seeds, this can lead to a degree of apathy towards sources and drivers of instability and conflict. It opens new opportunities for many groups and communities to turn to, whereas in the past, no such opportunities have existed.”

Ann has enjoyed all of her experiences overseas, and is grateful for all of the opportunities she’s had to learn about different societies.

“Things like going for supper at the home of a local person or group provides more knowledge than you could gain from any university. I hold up Ethiopia as a country that I have really enjoyed working in, because I see such a thirst for change, a thirst for knowledge, and the application of that knowledge into practice. I also see a lot of realism applied in Ethiopia, and an acknowledgement that stability for your own country has to be gained by contributing to the stability of neighbours as well. For example, Ethiopia takes an unconditional approach to accepting members of the defence forces from Southern Sudan, Somalia, and elsewhere, because it feels that such measures are contributing to stability and conflict prevention for the region. I think measures and programs like that are very laudable, particularly in a developing country.

The other experience which stands out is my work in Northern Ireland, which helped remind me that these problems and issues relating to security and development are often viewed through the lens of the developing South, and that we should appreciate the applicability and the utility of many of these ideas, frameworks, and methods, that we develop with the South in mind for Northern purposes as well.”

Ann is looking forward to the rest of her time at RMC, and feels “enormously privileged to have this reflection time to organize and develop my thoughts from many regions, and to try to translate that into something which pushes the intellectual frontiers forward.”

Note: The McNaughton-Vanier Scholar is a Canada-based research post is for one year and is named after General Andrew G.L. McNaughton (left), who was the first Commander of the Canadian Army in Britain during the Second World War, subsequently the Minister of Defence in Canada, and Ambassador to the United Nations. General Georges Vanier is a World War I notable solider-scholar who became the Governor-General of Canada.

 

Posted in m. Extra Innings | No Comments »

Catching Up With the News

Posted by rmcclub on 29th May 2011

Shaun Francis: Canada has a proud military once again

Recently, Gen. Natynczyk took me aside to tell me what a favour RMC was doing by presenting me with an honorary degree. “Finally, Shaun,” he said in his powerful voice. “You’re going to graduate from a proper service academy.” As I watched the parades and ceremonies, I couldn’t help but feel proud to join the community that exists around Gen. Natynczyk’s proper academy.

Article

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Dr. Hafizur Rahman has been honoured by the Kingston branch of the Queen’s University Alumni Association.

Dr. Rahman, a 1970 Queen’s graduate who’s an electrical and computing engineering professor at Royal Military College, received the Padre Laverty Award in recognition of his 30 years of service to Queen’s and the Kingston community.

Rahman was a founding member of Kingston and District Immigrant Services and a past president of the Kingston Islamic Society. He has also served on the Queen’s University International Centre Council and the Queen’s Interfaith Council.

The Padre Laverty Award, presented annually since 1967, is named for late Queen’s University chaplain Marshall Laverty, who died in February at age 98.

 

Bio

Article

Bio

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Grease is back for obelisk climb at Naval Academy

Article

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Housing market affecting military families, too

(U.S.A. Military article)

 

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New GI workouts mimic stress of battlefield

MILITARY: I Corps NCO develops course to help U.S. troops avoid injuries common in combat

Article

 

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West Point Hockey Team Forms Neighborhood Knights

Article

 

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Hockey Canada bans head shots

“We had no choice but to show some leadership. This has been a lingering issue in the sport for a long time.”

Newly elected Hockey Canada board chairman Michael Bruni – father of three Ex Cadets – Jesse, Amanda & Gino

Article

 

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Posted in g. Catching Up With the News | No Comments »

Careers | Carrières

Posted by rmcclub on 29th May 2011

x

Quality Control Manager / Responsable Contrôle Qualité Le Groupe

LMT, Longueuil

Java Developer / Développeur Java/J2EE

LS Canada Inc., Montreal

Manager, Software Design Control Systems / Directeur, Conception de logiciels – systèmes de commande

Pratt & Whitney Canada, Longueuil

Chief Estimator / Chef Estimateur(trice)

Axxys Construction, Montreal

Project Manager – Logistics / Chargé de projets logistique

Bombardier Produits Récréatifs, Valcourt

 

________________________________________

 

PLEASE REMEMBER:


The RMC Club Relies On Its Members. Contact us to renew or to take out an annual or life membership. 1-888 386 – 3762

https://www.rmcclub.ca/forms/membership.asp

Do you wish to be taken off of our call list? If yes, let us know rmcclub@rmc.ca

Souvenez vous que:

Le Club des CMR compte sur ses membres. Afin de renouveler ou de vous procurer une adhésion annuelle ou à vie, veuillez communiquer avec nous au : 1-888 386 – 3762

http://www.rmcclub.ca/Membership.htm

Si vous préférez ne pas être sur notre liste d’appels, veuillez nous en informer au rmcclub@rmc.ca

Posted in Careers | Carrières | No Comments »

Did You Know? Asks Victoria Edwards

Posted by rmcclub on 29th May 2011

Did you know?

Researched by E3161 Victoria Edwards

This plaque in the vestibule of Mackenzie Building, was erected in 1902. The same plaque was installed in St. George’s Cathedral in Kingston and in Rochester Cathedral, or the Cathedral Church of Christ and the Blessed Virgin Mary, a Norman church in Rochester, Kent. The Royal School of Military Engineering in Brompton means the Corps of Royal Engineers and Rochester Cathedral maintain strong links to this day.

Sacred to the memory of the undermentioned Officers Graduates of the Royal Military College of Canada

[Column 1]

Huntly Brodie Mackay

Captain Royal Engineers

Born at Kingston Ontario 14 March 1858

Served with distinction in Bechuanaland 1884-9 and as Commanding Royal Engineer on the West Coast of Africa 1887-9.

In recognition of his services in Expeditions against the tribes near Sierra Leone he received the Distinguished Service Order

Died of fever at Mombasa on the 10 April 1891 whist acting administrator to the Imperial British East Africa Company

[Column 2]

William Henry Robinson

Captain Royal Engineers

Born at St. John New Brunswick 16 July 1863

Rendered valuable services as Commanding Royal Engineer W Coast of Africa 1880

Killed in action on the 14 March 1892 whilst with conspicuous bravery in blowing up the gate of the stockade at Tambi near Sierra Leone.

[Column 3]

William Grant Stairs

Captain the Welsh Regiment

Born at Halifax Nova Scotia 1 July 1863

Lieutenant Royal Engineers 1885-91

Served on the staff of the Emin Pasha Relief Expedition 1887 under the leadership of H.M. Stanley and exhibited great courage and devotion to duty.

Died of fever on the 9 June 1892 at Chinde on the Zambesi whilst in command of the Katanga Expedition sent out by the King of the Belgians.

This tablet is erected by their old comrades and friends of the Royal Military College of Canada and by friends of the deceased officers in the Corps of Royal Engineers.

 

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Did you know?

Researched by E3161 Victoria Edwards

As part of the Royal Military College, Duntroon’s centenary celebrations it is timely to consider how the Australian College was founded on 27 June 1911 by an ex-Kingston cadet.

25 Cadet William Throsby Bridges (RMC 1877-9) was born February 18, 1861 in Greenock, Scotland. He was one of the recruits who had entered RMC Kingston late in the second term on 10 April 1877. Although he was a good student, he became unsettled and began failing his courses when his family migrated to Australia leaving his in Kingston. Commandant Hewett asked his father to withdraw his son. This ex-cadet was the first RMC dropout.

In 1890, the Governor General, the Marquis of Lorne spoke of the success of RMC graduates in the British Army and said that a similar college was needed in Australia. At the request of Queensland 6 copies of the RMC regulations and the instruction syllabus were sent to Brisbane. In 1902, MGen E.T.H. Hutton proposed the RMC, Kingston system by which officers were trained for the reserve as well as for all arms of a regular force for Australia.

In 1909-10 Colonel William Throsby Bridges reported to the Australian Minister of Defence that on his way home to establish the Australian Military College, he had inspected his alma mater the Royal Military College of Canada. According Bridges’ diary in RMC’s Massey Library, he felt that the RMC Kingston system trained officers without getting full use of their services after graduation, since officers were trained for the reserve as well as for all arms of the regular force. With the international scene getting darker, he copied the West Point system, by which only regular army officers were trained via a four-year course training for all arms.

Lieutenant-General Sir William Throsby Bridges, KCB CMG served as founder and first commandant of the Royal Military College, Duntroon (1910-14). He served as commander of the Australian Imperial Forces in 1914. He was the first Kingston ex-cadet to command a division in the field. He was killed at Gallipoli on 18 May 1915. He is commemorated on the Canadian Virtual War Memorial and on page 566 of the Canadian First World War Book of Remembrance. His name is listed on the RMC memorial arch. He is remembered in a Memorial at Mt Pleasant Lookout Royal Military College, Duntroon.

Source: Richard Arthur Preston “Canada’s RMC: A History of the Royal Military College’ (Published for the Royal Military College Club of Canada by the University of Toronto Press, 1969) Toronto, Ontario

Canadian Virtual War Memorial http://www.veterans.gc.ca/eng/sub.cfm?source=collections/virtualmem/Detail&casualty=20011

 

Posted in b. Trivia | Bagatelle | No Comments »

First Penalties…The Dr. Stanley Connection To War on Ice & More

Posted by rmcclub on 29th May 2011

 

Photo of 3918 Al Roberts – former Adjutant Old Brigade taken Reunion Weekend, 2010 – by 15378 Henry Litjens

 

First Penalties – The story behind the story – including the first West Point penalty and the first RMC penalty – a year later with the Dr. George Stanley  connection.

This article was first produced for the RMC Hockey History Digest (2002) .  The article appears on pages 194 & 195. Through a clerical error, credit for authoring the article did not appear – it should have read By: 3918 Al Roberts.

This article is very well written with style and humour and it certainly describes the mood of the RMC hockey players and the interest of at least one college professor in the West Point / RMC hockey game just over 55 years ago.

Click, click on the images for better viewing…

 

 

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Photo: 5780 Bernie Laliberte, one of many RMC star players from the 1960s.

“Fantastic news. Long overdue. It should never have stopped. Hope that the game with the associated pre/post game mingling of players of the two teams can regain its place amongst the most significant traditions of RMC. Our whole hockey season was geared to taking on West Point. I am still in contact with two of the West Point players some 40 years later. It was a great and memorable event for the whole Cadet Wing. Go Redmen, Oops, Go Paladins.”

5780 Bernie Laliberte – 29 May 2011-  On hearing the news that the USMA / RMC game was back on!

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Background West Point / RMC hockey series…

The West Point series originated when the commandant of RMC, Sir Archibald McDonnell and the superintendent of the United States Military Academy (West Point), Brigadier General Douglas MacArthur, suggested a game of hockey between the two schools in 1921. After two years of exchanging ideas the first game was played on February 23, 1923 at West Point.  The Redmen won that first game 3-0 and a New York paper stated “Army was beaten at hockey today by Royal Military College of Kingston, Ontario. The Canadian cadets excelled the Army men all the way, displaying the best all around form seen here in years. Hamilton and the Carr- Harris’s were the outstanding stars of the Canadian team. This game was one of the cleanest fought contests staged here this winter and was marked by a fine display of sportsmanship on both sides.” In commemorate of the game, RMC donated the “Challenge Trophy.”

In 1924 the series moved to Kingston thus beginning the tradition of rotating venues. This was Army’s first away game and up until 1941 the West Point Game was the only time that Army played away from the Academy.

From 1923-1935 RMC ran up a record of 14-0-1. The only blemish being a 4-4 tie in 1935. 1939 saw Army win its first game 3-1. As a result of WWII only one game was played, at 3-1 Army win in 1942, over the next 10 years.

In the 50′s and 60′s Army won 15 of 20 games bringing the series close with RMC holding a 21-18-1 advantage. Throughout the 70′s and 80′s the teams played fairly closely. In 1986 the record stood at 26-25-4 in favour of RMC.

Army dominated from the late 1980s all through the ‘90s – going unbeaten from 1988-1999.

The last game in 2006 was a 3-3 tie in front of 3100 fans in Kingston.

When the series “stood down” Army led 39-29-7.

 

War on Ice – RMC versus USMA.

Article by JW (Bill) Fitsell, Historian first appeared in the RMC Hockey History Diges – 2002

Click, click on pages for better viewing…

A little bit of ….RMC / West Point Hockey History

By WJO

Most of us who were around when the RMC / West Point hockey game was played became familiar with the phrase – the longest international hockey series in the world.

But it was not continuous. Take a good look at the scoreboard, which still hangs proudly on the main floor of Currie Hall.

Why were there no West Point / RMC hockey games in 1926; 1940 & 1941? While doing some research for Volume II of the RMC Hockey History Digest (HHD) which is currently a work in progress – we discovered the following:

The 1926 match coincided with the accidental shooting death of I Year, 1833 WL Campbell on 10th February, just ten days before the hockey game was scheduled Initially, RMC officials postponed the game; however, they ultimately decided to cancel it for that year.

Colonel CF Constantine had assumed command of RMC in the summer of 1925 taking over from Sir Archibald Macdonell who had retired that year from the Canadian Army.

Constantine stated, “ The tragedy has indeed been a big blow to us all. In a small college such as this (RMC) – the strength of our cadet body is only one hundred and sixty odd – an occurrence like this looms very large, and the shadow cast over the life of the college is a very real one.”

The RMC / West Point hockey-break for WW II requires more explanation.

Due to the status of Canada and America in the war, the series was cancelled in 1940 and 1941.

Canada declared war at the same time, as Britain and the United States did not enter the war until 1941. During that time, no “official” relationship was to exist between Canada (a belligerent power) and the United States (a neutral power). By 1942 the United States had entered the war and the hockey rivalry resumed for that year – just two months following the bombings at Pearl Harbour.

RMC closed during the war and reopened with “The New 100” in 1948. This “international” hockey rivalry finally resumed in 1949.

The curtain falls…in 2007…

Click here for The Whig-Standard article – Thursday, January 25, 2007 on the cancellation of the game.

 

 

Posted in e. What's Happening At RMC | No Comments »

West Point / RMC Hockey Memories in Photos

Posted by rmcclub on 29th May 2011

We were able to dig up a few photos from past West Point Weekends.  We were looking for a little more variety; the following was the best we could do on the time available.

We will stay on the lookout.

Feel free to leave a comment if any of the photos bring back a memory or two.

 

 

Posted in j. Flashback | Rétrospective | No Comments »