Monday 9 November 2015

Captain Bill Hayward of the North Shore (New Brunswick) Regiment

In the Second World War, the North Shore (New Brunswick) Regiment played a critical role in the D-Day invasion and the successful defeat of the German army inland.  They fought on the beaches of Normandy, alongside other Canadian regiments, and took on the German Panzer divisions in the battle for the airfields at Carpiquet.  
Finding records of individuals who fought in the Second World War is more complicated than digging up archival materials.  Many of those who fought, and their direct descendants, still live, so their records remain private.  The information we have is based on first- and second-hand recollections.  What we know with certainty is that the men who went into battle knew that two of five of them would come out the other side:  they were brave souls who fought to liberate Europe from Nazi oppression, and our family should be proud that William Henry Hayward, Lieutenant of the North Shores, was among those who took on that terrible task.
Conscription is compulsory military service, and was a subject hotly debated in Canada during WWII. After WWI, when French Canadians roundly criticized the government for conscription, the government committed to not turn to this method again to find volunteers for war.  Many Canadians who wanted to fight overseas in the earliest days of WWII enrolled with the British armed forces.  The public demand for fighters, however, became stronger as the war progressed.  Eventually the government passed the National Resources Mobilization Act in 1940.  It still did not require eligible men to fight overseas, but registered them for home defence duties.
Public outcry grew stronger after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour in December 1941.  Canadians wanted a presence in the war overseas.  The only way the Canadian government could turn to conscription and away from their post-WWI promise was, they felt, through a plebiscite.  It was the Canadian people who voted 64% in favour of conscription.  However, Canadians had already volunteered in the hundreds of thousands for overseas service, so there was no need to turn to the draft. 
Certain employment occupations were exempted from service, among those business owners, upon whom the continued health of the Canadian economy depended.  One such person was William Henry Hayward Jr., who worked in his father’s business, Hayward and Warwick.  It was a successful Saint John business, with strong ties to England, so supported both the English and Canadian economies. 
Canadians had been watching for years as the casualties overseas continued to grow in numbers that seemed unfathomable.  Nazi atrocities were not yet known to the extent that we know them today, but there was common knowledge that they were targeting cultures, religions and peoples and there was something sinister at play.  Young men in Canada wanted to fight alongside their British brethren.  In 1940-1941, Germany made a play against the British people intended to demoralize them, but it had the opposite effect.  The Blitz would kill 43,000 civilians over eight months, and would galvanize the British and their allies in a way they couldn’t have imagined.
Lt. William Henry "Bill" Hayward
We can’t know precisely why William Henry, or Bill as he was known, decided to join up with the North Shores in 1942, perhaps it was the Blitz which was the last straw. You would have to have been very brave to volunteer at this point.  Those watching the fighting from across the Atlantic would have heard rumours of Nazi horrors, and they would have known the numbers of Canadians who had already died to free the continent from the German grip.  They would have also known that the only thing it would take to liberate Europe was men, and more men, who were willing to fight and die for this cause. Bill signed up with the knowledge that his training would be destined to send him overseas where so many had already perished.
Training the North Shore (New Brunswick) Regiment
Since 1939, Woodstock had been home to the North Shores, where the infantry was trained for coastal defence. By the Fall of 1940, the North Shores moved to Camp Aldershot in Sussex to train with other regiments.  Camp Aldershot is where Bill received his officer training.  The North Shore Regiment was organized as part of the 8th infantry brigade along with the Queen’s Own Rifles (from Toronto), Le Régiment de la Chaudière (Quebec), and members from Royal Canadian Army Service Corps and the Royal Canadian Electrical and Mechanical Engineers.  The 8th brigade was part of the 3rd infantry division.
In July 1941, the North Shores were given the notice that they were going to join the fight overseas.  They would participate in a scheme called “Tiger” and training for that mission involved night marches, cipher work, weapons firing and map reading. They arrived in Liverpool to the sight of ships partly submerged and a severely damaged waterfront.  This was the first sight of the war for the North Shores, and it must have been quite a rude awakening.  You may know what you are getting into, but until you see the evidence it would be hard to imagine the extent of the damage that war can wreak.  
More intense training took place through August and September in England where the season was unusual warm and bright.  In the Fall, however, the weather turned to fog and cold as the training continued.  The army had been divided into its fighting units by this time, and the North Shore (New Brunswick) Regiment, along with the rest of the 8th brigade, became part of the First Canadian Army. 
Exercises for the brigade continued through 1942: marches and staged attacks taking place at night, in the daytime, in rain, snow, wind, and through rivers and mud.  In August, the raid on Dieppe marked the beginning of the Canadian army’s engagement in the European war.  More than 900 of the 4,963 Canadian soldiers were killed, and many others wounded or taken prisoner.   The lessons learned at Dieppe were diabolically harsh, but would help ensure that Operation Overlord – the allied attack on D-Day – would succeed. The 3rd Canadian Infantry Division was told in September that they would have the honour of conducting the next operation. 
At the end of the year, Lieutenant William Henry “Bill” Hayward, joined the Regiment after his officer training came to an end back in Sussex.  He, and a number of other officers, had to learn the ropes quickly in order to be effective during the intense training.  At this point, everyone knew what they were training for, and the potential devastating consequences.  The training took on a different flavour as they exercised in full battle gear, practiced assaults on beaches, breaching defensive positions, overcoming wire entanglements, and beating off attacks.
In October 1943 the North Shore was dealt a terrible blow when a number of men were transferred to the 1st Canadian Division in Italy.  They were all lost to the fighting.  The anxiety and fear of what was to come must have been overwhelming.  The North Shores trained hard, because this is what would protect them in the battles to come.
Lt. Bill Hayward was assigned the anti-tank platoon and likely took part in a number of specialized exercises including “Can Opener” to coordinate the training of anti-tank platoons.   In February the platoon would have joined a number of other specialized platoons from the army to learn the capabilities of the German Panzer divisions.
The North Shores had won many honours throughout their training.  They were a proud regiment - and bold.  By the time Operation Overlord was launched on June 6, 1944, the North Shore Regiment was ready.
Operation Overlord 
After four years of hard training, the North Shores were moved into action.  The victorious D-Day attack on Juno Beach came with a tremendous loss of life.  The first soldiers to unload from their launches were told that they had to survive the first 15 minutes as many would be shot as they disembarked.  Soldiers were told to get to the beach! Go forward! Don’t look back! Don’t help your comrades who fall!  Just move! Move! Move!  (the original footage here is that of the North Shore Regiment landing after the beach had been taken)

Lt. Hayward was not to land with the first attack.  He had to wait for Juno beach (the site of the Canadian attack) to be taken before he could unload his heavy equipment at Courseulles-sur-Mer as a reinforcement.  He would move with the rest of the reinforcements to Banville to await orders.  The reinforcements would have passed hundreds of bodies and debris as they made their way inland, witnessing the smoke and explosions of the battle in the distance.  While making their way from the beach to Banville, the reinforcements passed a young man from the Division’s Winnipeg Rifles whose corpse had been covered in flowers by the locals.  They were told the following day to proceed to Chaudiere. 
Prisoners taken by the North Shores

Meantime, the rest of the North Shores made their way to Tailleville, having taken St. Aubin-sur-Mer, and then to their next objective.  Three-quarters of "A" company was gone, including their commander.  The troops set to clearing the woods amongst heavy fighting and trying to maintain morale despite their heavy losses.  The North Shores continued inland attacking enemy gun positions and tanks.  “There never was the like of those North Shore men for sheer guts and durability,” Major Bill Harvey wrote.  The first phase of Operation Overlord was declared complete the night of June 11. 

Operation Windsor
Operation Windsor
Briefing the Canadian troops at Carpiquet
Next began Operation Windsor – the effort to take Caen from the enemy.  The North Shores, along with the rest of the 8th infantry brigade, were to take the town of Carpiquet and the airfield.  The beach-head to Carpiquet was a mere 24 kilometres, but the journey and the fighting lasted a month until Carpiquet was in allied hands.  This was the battle in which Lt. Hayward was fully engaged.  Here, the North Shores came up against the resistance of the heavily armed and reportedly fanatical 1st Battalion of the 26th SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment, as well as strong concrete positions built by the Luftwaffe.  The battle for Carpiquet began on July 4, 1944.
Canadian troops at Carpiquet airfield
The North Shores were able to get to their objective by 0632 and set to cleaning out the village of German troops while under heavy shellfire.  Their victory was at great loss.  The North Shores that day had their heaviest single day losses of the entire campaign: 132 casualties of which 46 were fatal.  It was during this battle that Lt. Bill Hayward was wounded and evacuated to England.  The North Shores received the Battle Honour “Carpiquet” for their participation in this action.  A tribute to the North Shores stands in Carpiquet as a memory of the Regiment’s commitment, bravery and loss.
Battle Honour
"Carpiquet"
Monument at Carpiquet

Lt. Bill Hayward returned to the North Shore Regiment after he had recuperated to assist with the allied advance through Europe, with battles in France and Belgium, and the liberation of Zutphen in Holland.  The battles were all fiercely fought in horrid conditions, including flooded fields and bombarded cities.  Lt. Bill Hayward at some point in the fighting was promoted to Captain, and was there when the North Shores ended their campaign in Aurich, Germany upon the declaration of the cease fire on May 8, 1945. 
The North Shore (New Brunswick) Regiment had lost 380 men in their fighting in Europe and another 850 were wounded.  The Regiment was finally able to return home to Saint John on December 29, via Halifax.  A special North Shore edition of the Saint John Telegraph Journal published on the 29th reported: 
They can claim combat records that will endure for all time, to furnish stories to be told to breathless audiences and retold to coming generations of New Brunswickers, glad tales, sad tales, heart-warming tales and heart-breaking tales, too, for military deeds are not done without grave losses, and many a brave New Brunswick lad lies over there sleeping his last sleep among comrades who suffered and died with him.

Sources:
Background and photo of Lt. Bill Hayward from his son Mark
Some census information
Image of Carpiquet battle with the regiments along with a number of the photos used in this article: http://www.canadiansoldiers.com/history/battlehonours/northwesteurope/carpiquet.htm
D-Day operation - Includes photos of beach where North Shores landed: http://www.gnb.ca/0007/Heritage/Regiment/chp7a.htm

Films, Footage and images:
http://histomil.com/viewtopic.php?t=3918&start=1470 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kAnox_kbNvc one year after – battle Normandy shots of carpiquet – move to falaise gap
This one has the film of the landing https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5fYcWM4JtmE
5:15 – scenes from Carpiquet and Caen; falaise 6:22
Photo présentée dans le livre : La Normandie en flammes
de Jacques Henry, Editions Charles Corlet, 1984.
Archives publiques du Canada
Blockhaus encore visible le long de la route de Caumont devant l'aérogare de Carpiquet. Le sol a été nivellé jusqu'au béton. Seule la partie supérieure sort du sol.



Sunday 1 November 2015

Allison Politicians of Nova Scotia at the End of the Colonial Era

Nova Scotia was one of the first official colonies in what is now known as Canada, a colony previously inhabited solely by the Mi’kmaq for thousands of years.  Port Royal was established in 1605 in a land surrounded by trees, First Nations communities, and a rocky ocean coastline.  The riches of the area were enhanced by transportation access to Europe and the rest of North America.  The land and port changed hands, and war was fought with the Acadians and Mi’kmaq, ending in 1761. Loyalists moved into the territory after the failed British bid to retain its colonies in the United States.  In 1784, the colony of Nova Scotia was divided into Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Cape Breton.  These events meant that the colony was destined to grow, and demanded good governance to ensure that its riches would continue to support the British Empire.

Nova Scotia boasts the oldest legislative assembly in Canada, with its first sitting in 1758. As with colonial governments of the day, the governance of the colony was through a governor and an appointed Upper Chamber (the Nova Scotia Council), along with a House of Assembly. The Council was appointed from wealthy and influential families who supported the growth of the Empire.  The Assembly was elected from Protestant landowners.  Our Allison ancestors were among the first elected to this assembly. 

You may remember Joseph Allison and his family left their ancestral Ulster home in Ireland for a better life in the United States, only to find themselves landing in Nova Scotia in 1769 and making a life there.  In the earliest days of the colony, life would have been harsh.  The head of the family, Joseph, trudged his way across miles of winter to find the land he had purchased: 1150 acres of farmland for him and his family.   They would have made their way back and forth to Halifax by horse and carriage to sell and transport their goods, and purchase equipment for their farm.  They depended on a strong government that would support their growing economy and allow them to prosper.

After 30 years of Allisons toiling to make a living as farmers and merchants, it was time for the family to help direct the future of the province as officials in the oldest elected assembly in Canada. The first Allison to be elected was Joseph, who was born in Limavady, the third son of the head of the Allison clan, Joseph Allison senior.  Joseph Junior was elected from 1799 to 1806 (as a member of the 8th General Assembly of Nova Scotia).  At that time, the colony was governed by John Wentworth, a Loyalist and obviously sympathetic to the demands for privilege from his compatriots who had come to Nova Scotia in the thousands in the latter part of the 18th century.

John Wentworth
Wentworth had a history of corporate administration and colonial governance, working at his father’s business in America.  He proved himself loyal to the British governing authority, even to the point of organizing loyalist volunteers in 1776 in New York City.  His fortunes in Nova Scotia waxed and waned, but found himself in the right place at the right time when, while in London in 1792, Lieutenant Governor John Parr of Nova Scotia died.  Wentworth pressed his experience and position and was appointed lieutenant governor.  It was during his tenure that our Joseph was elected to the assembly.

At this time in the political growth of Nova Scotia, there was a clear debate between those seeking greater self-governance through strengthening the powers of the House of Assembly, and those seeking to reinforce colonial ties, supported by the power and wealth of the Loyalists.  The former were led by William Cottnam Tonge, himself from Newport (and therefore a neighbor of sorts to the Allisons).  It is hard to say whether Joseph Jr. sided with the Loyalist supporters, but consider the context.  The Allisons were not Loyalists.  Their own family history suggested that greater democratic rule would support their own cause to gain wealth.  Loyalists appointed to the upper council by the governor would have stood in their way.  The best way to ensure the continued livelihood of their own family and others like them would have been to side with Tonge and support increased democracy and less reliance on Loyalist wealth.  In any case, Tonge himself was not the leader that they needed.  His approach was undisciplined and resulted in his being dismissed both as Speaker of the Assembly and from his position as naval officer of Halifax.

Province House - where the Nova Scotia Legislature has
met every year since 1819 
The next Allison ancestor to sit in the assembly was Joseph Junior’s brother John.  He served in the Legislative Assembly as an elected official from 1811 to 1820 (the 10th and 11th General Assemblies).  During the War of 1812 Nova Scotia saw some significant economic prosperity as a trading station and post from which privateers would launch their ships. We know that Joseph Junior was a part-owner in some of these legal pirate ships, and no doubt the Allison influence in the legislative assembly would have made their cause easier.  Unfortunately, much of John’s time in the assembly would have been marred by the economic recession that followed the War.

Joseph Howe
In 1836, the movement towards responsible government and away from colonial management was gaining speed under the leadership of the charismatic and much loved Joseph Howe.  Coincidentally, this is when our ancestor James Whidden Allison was first elected (elected through 1840 as a member of the 15th General Assembly).  James was the son of John Allison, who had served earlier in the assembly.  This meant James was the third Allison to sit in the legislative assembly in Nova Scotia (and as far as I can tell the last).  While I can’t find any evidence to suggest that James was connected with the reformers, it stands to reason that he would be.  It wasn’t until 1847 that the reformers were elected to a majority in the assembly.

Regardless of their political affiliations, our ancestors were in the middle of a veritable quiet revolution against colonialism.  Over 20 years, in intermittent periods from 1799 to 1840, Allisons participated in the creation of a burgeoning responsible government, the first of its kind in the British Empire.

Sources:
Various primary sources including census and tax records
The History of the Alison or Allison Family in Europe and America, by Leonard Allison Morrison
The Canadian Encyclopedia, Hurtig
Public Archives of Nova Scotia (1984). Elliott, Shirley B, ed. The Legislative Assembly of Nova Scotia, 1758-1983: A biographical directory. Province of Nova Scotia http://novascotia.ca/archives/virtual/Assembly/archives.asp?ID=723