ww1 canadian rail troops or the American legions does anybody know much about them

rempel429

CGN Regular
Rating - 100%
51   0   0
hey researching my familys military history and my great grandfather was an american from oklahoma signd up in nelson bc to the 211th got merged with the 218th irish and turned into 8th crt does anyone know much about what they did in france?
 
I'd recommend heading over to the Canadian Expeditionary Force Study Group's forum as they'll be able to help answer some questions. Their site is www.cefresearch.ca. If you haven't already, I'd recommend looking into ordering your great grandfather's service record as it will provide you with quite a bit of information on his time in the CEF. You can order it by finding his record by searching here.
 
Railway troops built and operated hundreds and hundreds of miles of narrow-, extra-narrow- and ultra-narrow-gauge railways behind and right up to the Front positions, especially to Artillery emplacements. They were utterly necessary and it was a risky business, being that Fritz knew how important they were and regularly made targets of the railways.

A 6-inch Howitzer Mark VIII, for example, had 2 weights of shell: the lightweight shell at a mere 100 pounds, the standard heavy shell at 122 pounds. That is the weight of the Projectile, per shot, and does not include propellant or fuse. Half a dozen guns firing a round each every 5 minutes would require more than 100 TONS of shell per day....... plus propellant and fuses. And Howitzers are relatively short-range guns........ but they must be fed.

And so the Trench Railways came into being: steam railroads to carry the immense quantities of warlike stores to where they could be used. They were tiny railroads with tiny locomotives, some as small as 8-inch gauge although 12-inch and 18-inch were more commonly used..... where they could be used..... and they carried everything. A single crate of .303 ammunition weighed 74 pounds but held only 1248 rounds: enough for half a platoon at normal scale, enough for a small section at frontline allowance; 1500 crates to ONE Division for a weight penalty of 55.5 tons, plus another 3 tons of Chargers. Canada alone had 4 Divisions at the Front.

The War would have dragged on until the 1950s (see Bairnsfather's immortal cartoon) if it had not been for the Railway Battalions.

And today they are forgotten.

Hoist one for Great-Grandpa!
 
My wife's Grandfather was with the 127th Battalion railway troops out of the Toronto area which is the Queens York Rangers now I guess. It was later rolled into the 2nd Battalion which was my Grandfathers Battalion that went in 1914; the 127th didn't get over until 1916.

My Wife's Grandfather is buried in Mount Pleasant Cemetery and on his tombstone it say Saper which I always thought was someone that worked in the tunnels. Interestingly he was only 5'4" tall and was a miner in Britain before coming to Canada. He was 41 when he went over which astounded me.
 
well i have his rifle that was "borrowed" when he left so they say, 1918nrfSMLE with canadian broad arrow, had to put it back to mill-spec bore isnt great but it shoots strait, been in a cabin with a ross 1905 for god knows how many years till the registry was removed
 
Back
Top Bottom