"Let their be no doubt -
they were the Glens!"
Correcting a 65-year-old
mistake
The
Maple Leaf , 08 Dec 2010
BERNIERES-SUR-MER,
France — The famous photo of the Stormont, Dundas & Glengarry
Highlanders’ (SD&G Highr’) D-Day landing on Juno Beach,
which for years misidentified the soldiers’ regiment, is now
displayed in the village where the event took place.
The
Canadian Defence Attaché in Paris, Colonel Christian Rousseau,
travelled to the Norman coast November 8 to present to the Deputy
Mayor of Bernières-sur-Mer a large, framed photograph of the
SD&G Highr disembarking landing craft LCI(L) 299 on Juno Beach
06 Jun 1944. An identical photograph was
presented to Nathalie Worthington, the director of the Juno Beach
Centre in nearby Courseulles-sur-mer, where it will be prominently
displayed.
The
photograph, taken by RCN Lieutenant Gilbert Milne at Juno Beach on
the morning of the D-Day invasion, is perhaps the most iconic image
of the Normandy invasion in the Canadian sector. It has appeared in
many books, publications, magazines and posters. And, until
recently, the unit on LCI(L) 299 was officially but incorrectly
identified as either the Highland Light Infantry of Canada or the
North Nova Scotia Highlanders. An oil painting in the City Hall of
Bernières-sur-Mer, based on the photograph, wrongly identified the
soldiers as being from the Regiment de la Chaudière.
The
honorary colonel of the modern-day Glens, Bill Shearing, took the
necessary steps to correct the historical record. By means of
in-depth historical and archival research, as well as by an
eye-witness account from a Glen who was there, John Angus McDonald,
HCol Shearing succeeded last year in convincing Library and Archives
Canada that the soldiers photographed disembarking from landing
craft LCI(L) 299 where in fact from SD&G Highr.
Two other
enlargements of the photo, each with a plaque recognizing the Glens,
now hang proudly in the City of Cornwall and in the United Counties
of SD&G Chambers in Cornwall.
“It was
crucial that the historical record be corrected, both here in Canada
and in Normandy,” said HCol Shearing. “That photo recorded the
precise moment when the Glens landed in Normandy to begin their part
in the liberation of Europe.”
“It is
fitting that, now, the most famous image of the Juno Beach landing
correctly identifies the heroes who were there,” said Glens’ CO
Lieutenant-Colonel Rob Duda. “Let there be no doubt – they
were the Glens.”
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