Picture of the day



Top Canadian Tank Crew
By Ross Munro
WITH THE CANADIANS IN FRANCE, 7 August 1944 - (C.P. Cable) -
Twenty-four-year-old Maj. S. V. (Woppy) Radley-Walters from the Gaspé Coast and his crew of four in their Sherman tank named "Caribou" are the leading tank destroyers in the Canadian armored units in France.

Their score now is 12 German tanks knocked out and the Caribou is still rolling with the same crew.

Radley Walters and his men are members of the Sherbrooke Fusiliers, a regiment which has made a fabulous name for itself in this Normandy campaign. They landed on D-Day with the regiment and have fought with it in every battle since.

The youthful major, who lived most of his life at Shigawake, Que., and whose father, Rev. A. R. Radley-Walters, now is rector of St. Peter’s in Quebec City, said they got their first German tank near Buron in the action there the day after landing. This was believed to be the first enemy tank destroyed in the battle of France.


The Caribou, which mounts a 75-millimetre gun, destroyed two more German tanks later in fighting at Buron and got another near Thaon when the regiment was moving over to Bretteville to support western infantry there. Another kill was made south of Bretteville and yet another in a second battle at Buron.

These Canadian aces also destroyed a self-propelled gun at Buron, but that was not included in their tank kills, although such weapons are just as formidable and as heavily armored as tanks.

The biggest two days the major and his men had were at St. Andre, south of Caen, when they knocked out two tanks one day and four the next. The four were destroyed in 15 minutes.

Gunner in the crew is Paul Paquette, French-speaking Canadian from Kirkland Lake, Ont., where, he worked in an hotel. Paul is short and weighs only 108 pounds but is a giant where his gun is concerned and his regiment calls him "grand Paul" — big Paul.

The loader operator is Jimmy McDougall, Hamilton, Ont., and the driver is L./Cpl. Ed Herman, also of Hamilton. The co-driver is R.B. Taylor, St. John's Nfld.

The major and Taylor thought up the name Caribou, the former remarking: “after all, we hunted them all our lives, Taylor in Newfoundland and me in Gaspe."

For nearly two months this crew has been in the line, engaged in battles or skirmishes every few days with enemy tanks, guns and infantry. During the battle for Caen, the Caribou was right in the fore and was the second tank to enter the city in support of the Stormont Dundas and Glengary Hlghlanders.

Radley-Walters is a tall, well-built officer with closely-cropped blond hair. He was attending Bishops’ College at Lennoxville, Que., preliminary to studying medicine at McGill when he joined the Fusiliers in 1940.
 


The app. 180 paratroop helmets most probably belonged to the SS-Fallschirmjäger-Batallion 600. The helmets were found by US forces near Hagenow/Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, the place SS-Fallschirmjäger-Batallion 600 surrendered.
 


Italian Campaign, near San Leonardo di Ortona, in the vicinity of the Moro river, Central-Eastern Italy, 10 December 1943: Sergeant George A. Game of the Canadian Army Film and Photo Unit operating his camera between the cadavers of two German soldier killed during the fierce fights in the Ortona area between units of the British 8th Army and the German 10. Armee.

The German in the front must have been killed by concussion. There appears to be no blood or stress to his body. It's also interesting the his cartridge belt is around his arm. It must have been on his shoulder. Killed by a surprise arty barrage perhaps?



This was believed to be the first enemy tank destroyed in the battle of France.

Perhaps the first tank destroyed by Canadians, but not the first tank destroyed in the battle of France. The 21st Panzer Division tried to mount a hasty counter attack on June 6. It drove for the gap between the Canadians and the British on Sword.

square brackets are my additions
The counterattack enjoyed initial success as the tanks came up sharply on the 2nd Kings Shropshire Light Infantry (KSLI), which was approaching Lebisy in a dash for Caen, and forced it to scramble back a mile to the protection of a ridge at Bieville. Breaking to the left, the German armour swung into a gap between Epron and Mathieu to gain Periers Ridge, less than two miles from the open left flank of the 3rd CID's main line of advance. It was a move intended to enable the use of the ridge as a screen to protect the tanks from exposure to the antitank guns of the regiments guarding 3rd British Infantry Division's western flank. But the Germans ere not aware that the British and Canadian armoured brigades possessed a new, deadly answer to the might of their Panzers.
Hidden on the opposing Hermanville Ridge, little more than a mile to the east, were three troops of Firefly Sherman tanks mounting 17-pounder guns. Their commanded, Lieutenant Colonel J.A. Eadie of the Staffordshire Yeomanry, had anticipated that the Germans would launch a counterattack precisely into the gap between the Canadian and British divisions and use Periers Ridge to mask the move. As the Mark IV's [old short barrel 75mm with a range of 2000feet] came over the crest of the ridge, Eadie launched his ambush. The big guns ripped into the German tanks at a range of just over 6500 feet and the Germans were helpless to fight back. Sixteen tanks were knocked out in minutes and the rest scuttled back to the safety of the ridgeline.

Mark Zuehlke, Juno Beach Canada's D-day Victory June 6, 1944, pg290
 


Top Canadian Tank Crew
By Ross Munro
WITH THE CANADIANS IN FRANCE, 7 August 1944 - (C.P. Cable) -
Twenty-four-year-old Maj. S. V. (Woppy) Radley-Walters from the Gaspé Coast and his crew of four in their Sherman tank named "Caribou" are the leading tank destroyers in the Canadian armored units in France.

Their score now is 12 German tanks knocked out and the Caribou is still rolling with the same crew.

Radley Walters and his men are members of the Sherbrooke Fusiliers, a regiment which has made a fabulous name for itself in this Normandy campaign. They landed on D-Day with the regiment and have fought with it in every battle since.

The youthful major, who lived most of his life at Shigawake, Que., and whose father, Rev. A. R. Radley-Walters, now is rector of St. Peter’s in Quebec City, said they got their first German tank near Buron in the action there the day after landing. This was believed to be the first enemy tank destroyed in the battle of France.


The Caribou, which mounts a 75-millimetre gun, destroyed two more German tanks later in fighting at Buron and got another near Thaon when the regiment was moving over to Bretteville to support western infantry there. Another kill was made south of Bretteville and yet another in a second battle at Buron.

These Canadian aces also destroyed a self-propelled gun at Buron, but that was not included in their tank kills, although such weapons are just as formidable and as heavily armored as tanks.

The biggest two days the major and his men had were at St. Andre, south of Caen, when they knocked out two tanks one day and four the next. The four were destroyed in 15 minutes.

Gunner in the crew is Paul Paquette, French-speaking Canadian from Kirkland Lake, Ont., where, he worked in an hotel. Paul is short and weighs only 108 pounds but is a giant where his gun is concerned and his regiment calls him "grand Paul" — big Paul.

The loader operator is Jimmy McDougall, Hamilton, Ont., and the driver is L./Cpl. Ed Herman, also of Hamilton. The co-driver is R.B. Taylor, St. John's Nfld.

The major and Taylor thought up the name Caribou, the former remarking: “after all, we hunted them all our lives, Taylor in Newfoundland and me in Gaspe."

For nearly two months this crew has been in the line, engaged in battles or skirmishes every few days with enemy tanks, guns and infantry. During the battle for Caen, the Caribou was right in the fore and was the second tank to enter the city in support of the Stormont Dundas and Glengary Hlghlanders.

Radley-Walters is a tall, well-built officer with closely-cropped blond hair. He was attending Bishops’ College at Lennoxville, Que., preliminary to studying medicine at McGill when he joined the Fusiliers in 1940.

Anyone know what happened to Radley-Walters and the rest of the crew of 'Caribou'? Did they survive the war? And if so, what did they eventually do?
 
Anyone know what happened to Radley-Walters and the rest of the crew of 'Caribou'? Did they survive the war? And if so, what did they eventually do?

Funny that you're asking as they talked about him in the news last week, Brigadier General Radley-Walters turned 94 years old on January 11th. I don't know what happened to the rest of the crew.
 


Italian Campaign, near San Leonardo di Ortona, in the vicinity of the Moro river, Central-Eastern Italy, 10 December 1943: Sergeant George A. Game of the Canadian Army Film and Photo Unit operating his camera between the cadavers of two German soldier killed during the fierce fights in the Ortona area between units of the British 8th Army and the German 10. Armee.

Wow! I knew George Game. he died a few years ago. He is the twin of my mother in law, now 99 years old. George was a very accomplished photographer. He used to brag he taught Karsh some of the finer points of lighting. He visited us at Bisley one year, and took a lot of pictures.

Bellero, could you pm me a link to that picture? Any more of or by him?
 
Wow! I knew George Game. he died a few years ago. He is the twin of my mother in law, now 99 years old. George was a very accomplished photographer. He used to brag he taught Karsh some of the finer points of lighting. He visited us at Bisley one year, and took a lot of pictures.

Bellero, could you pm me a link to that picture? Any more of or by him?

I got the picture here: https://www.ww2incolor.com/canada/CAMP-IT-CANADA-MORO-VALL-sanleo_10_dec_1943.html

I don't know if they have more pics of him or from him.
 
Last edited:
Anyone know what happened to Radley-Walters and the rest of the crew of 'Caribou'? Did they survive the war? And if so, what did they eventually do?

Radley-Walters was a career officer who retired in the early 1970s as a BGEN after commanding 2 Combat Group in Petawawa and the Combat training Center in Gagetown.

I had a one way meeting with him in 1965 when he was a Colonel commanding the Armoured Corps School in Camp Borden. He was inspecting us in the field and I had done a spotty job of shaving that morning which earned me a good blast of ####e from `Rad`.

He was a skillful practitioner of armored warfare who learned his lessons the hard way. I can remember some of his comments on tactical maneuver where he was a big believer in speculative fire and `bags of smoke` to screen your movements and to mask known or anticipated enemy anti-tank positions. In recent years I`ve enjoyed his narrations on `Greatest Tank Battles` where he describes some pant-sh"tting encounters with German panzers in Normandy.
 
009
[/url][/IMG]

A British Paratrooper, with a Sten Gun and a captured STG 44, with two captured Wehrmacht/ HJ soldiers (note the HJ cap and belt from the "man" right) note also the two bikes wiht the Panzerfaust.
 
009
[/url][/IMG]

A British Paratrooper, with a Sten Gun and a captured STG 44, with two captured Wehrmacht/ HJ soldiers (note the HJ cap and belt from the "man" right) note also the two bikes wiht the Panzerfaust.

How do you come about identifying him as a Brit Para? We can't make out the beret badge, seems like overalls and not a Denison, and MKIII Stens were not the norm. Could be Belgian SAS, Polish, etal.
 
The Brit appears to be wearing the lined AFV crewman's coveralls, so he is most likely a "tankie". He wouldn't exactly be smiling on these 2 given the panzerfaust that they were carrying.


I was always under the impression that both Brit and Canadian "tankie's" wore black berets, i have several photo's of my dad who served in British tank regiment in WW2, and he and his buddies all have black berets, i believe this tradition has carried over into the present Canadian Army, armored troopers wearing black berets.

The fellow in the photo is definitly wearing the AFV Coveralls, but the beret looks to be kakhi , worn by the infantry, engineers
 
Radley-Walters was a career officer who retired in the early 1970s as a BGEN after commanding 2 Combat Group in Petawawa and the Combat training Center in Gagetown.

I had a one way meeting with him in 1965 when he was a Colonel commanding the Armoured Corps School in Camp Borden. He was inspecting us in the field and I had done a spotty job of shaving that morning which earned me a good blast of ####e from `Rad`.

He was a skillful practitioner of armored warfare who learned his lessons the hard way. I can remember some of his comments on tactical maneuver where he was a big believer in speculative fire and `bags of smoke` to screen your movements and to mask known or anticipated enemy anti-tank positions. In recent years I`ve enjoyed his narrations on `Greatest Tank Battles` where he describes some pant-sh"tting encounters with German panzers in Normandy.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sydney_Valpy_Radley-Walters
 
A lot of guys would get their hands on good pieces of kit any way they could, even if it was meant for another branch of service.

That said. He could be a crewman from a Tetrarch. So would a tanker from one, who got to battle in a glider be considered airbourne or armour?
 
A lot of guys would get their hands on good pieces of kit any way they could, even if it was meant for another branch of service.

That said. He could be a crewman from a Tetrarch. So would a tanker from one, who got to battle in a glider be considered airbourne or armour?


I never thought about that he might have picked up the AFV Coveralls, as they were a good piece of kit, kept you warm, as they were lined, he might have been a Universal, or Bren Gun carrier driver, as all infantry battalions had a carrier platoon, they were cold miserable vehicles to drive, as they had no shelter at all, not even a canvas top to keep the rain off
 
Back
Top Bottom