Thanks for the memories!
Garrison Commandant when I was there was Col. Strome Galloway, a WWII vet who wrote about his time in Italy as a "D-Day Dodger". Had a copy of his book once .....
Speaking of things "shotgun", we used to shoot Skeet at CFB Churchill on the bay shore as late as midnight as it never really got dark during the summer! That is until the club got a letter from the Commandant suggesting that perhaps 11pm would be late enough. I said, "Well, he didn't order us to stop ....". The response I got was - "When a Col. makes a 'suggestion', you can regard it as carved in stone." We ceased fire at 11pm thereafter.
And as far as who is really in command, the Commandant is a figure head, a father figure. I used to enjoy speaking to Col.'s and Brigadiers as they genuinely seemed to appreciate hearing from a common soldier instead of a bunch of toadying Officers. Any soldier would prefer to stand before God rather than the RSM. Why? Because God would have mercy!
There is no doubt in any soldiers mind as to who runs the Army!
I provided this photo (oops photo didn’t show - I will find the original and repost) of Strome to Esprit de Corp when Galloway died. It was one of my fathers many photos and I thought it would be appreciated by Strome - it certainly captures him from my brief recollections. Dad had joined the RCR as a private and CFR’d in UK after they came back from Brest. He was capt instructing at OCTU when Husky was planned and he reverted to Lt in order to command a Pl (and briefly A/Coy comdr) when they landed at Pachino ..... he was (along with MANY others) involved with the RCR resupply of the Hasty P’s at Assoro which I only mention because shortly after that he was made back to substantive Captain and made the RCR RQ ... suffice to say he knew Strome very well. Very well. Dad stayed with the Regiment right up until Operation Goldflake when he was pulled out to be OIC of an LCT that took some HQ, support and armour elements as well as some RCR from Leghorn to Marseilles and then up into Belgium etc. ( not long ago I came across the written orders he had received for this operation - very interesting - and kept very hush hush etc) Galloway mentions, at the end of one of his books, that at completion of the Italian campaign most of the officers returned to Canada or England .... except one: that was my father who continued with the unit into Holland and served with them till wars end... then transferred to Occupational Forces ... as far as anyone can determine he is the only officer that served in every action the RCR participated in WWII ... including Ortona at the ‘crossroads’ .... this Christmas marks 75 years since that event!



























































