National News

Displaying 721 - 730 of 947

No Sapper Can Be Forgotten 01 Nov 17

01 November 2017 Last Post entries acknowledge the service, military and civilian, each of these people made over their lives. Last Posts are published as they are completed, regardless of when the person died. Our listings are presented in the order in which we were informed. The following Last Posts were published in the past week.  Lest we forget. Fallen Comrade   Date of Death Col André D. Gauthier, OMM, CD (Ret'd)   26 October 2017 Spr William…

No Sapper Can Be Forgotten 24 Oct 17

24 October 2017 Last Post entries acknowledge the service, military and civilian, each of these people made over their lives. Last Posts are published as they are completed, regardless of when the person died. Our listings are presented in the order in which we were informed. The following Last Posts were published in the past week.  Lest we forget. Fallen Comrade   Date of Death Donald “Donnie” O’Donnell   21 October 2017 Kenneth Higham   08…

CME Museum Contract Opportunity

The museum at the Canadian Forces School of Military Engineering is currently experiencing a several year backlog in artifact processing and seven years of data updates to be entered into Canadian Forces Artifact Management System. To resolve this issue, an Request for Proposal (RFP) has been issued by CFSME for a contractor to process the backlogged items in order to bring the museum catalogue up to date. Propsals will be accepts by CFSME up to…

Sapper entombed at WWII airfield in U.K. a roadblock for housing development

Reprinted for Halloween from a National Post article dated 11 April 2017 For decades, staff the Dunsfold Aerodrome in southern England talked of the dead Canadian beneath the runway For decades, the staff at the Dunsfold Aerodrome in southern England talked of the dead Canadian beneath the runway. Clifford Davies heard the story when he started working there in the 1960s, 20 years after the Royal Canadian Engineers built the airfield during the Second World War. The story,…

First Poppy of 2017 Presented to Governor General

The Royal Canadian Legion’s president David Flannigan presented the symbolic First Poppy to Her Excellency the Right Honourable Julie Payette, Governor General and Commander-in-Chief of Canada, at Rideau Hall in Ottawa today, 23 October 2017.  Sharp eyes will notice her Aide-de-Camp is an RCE officer and Combat Diver. She is Captain Celine Best who has been working at Rideau Hall since April 2016.    

No Sapper Can Be Forgotten 17 Oct 17

18 October 2017 The CMEA website has been publishing Last Post entries for Fallen Engineers for quite some time. These entries acknowledge the service, military and civilian, each of these people made over their lives. We create a Last Post entry whenever we learn a comrade has fallen. We try to record deaths back to the origins of the CMEA in 2000. This information is archived by the CME Museum in a databank of personality profiles each and every Engineer deserves to have…

4 ESR Combat Diver Exercise in the Netherlands

From 06 June 17 to 23 June 17, Combat Divers from 4 Engineer Support Regiment (4 ESR) took part in a Military Engineer Diving Exercise 2017 in the Netherlands. Members conducted valuable dive training alongside NATO allies from Norway and the United Kingdom in order to hone their skills and improve interoperability with members of other dive teams. Training included underwater navigation, salvage diving, welding, bridge deconstruction, as well as river crossings and bottom…

Flashback 1946: Sapper Leads Antarctic Expedition

A new book of interest to the CME family and our surveyors, in particular, has recently been published. Two Years Below the Horn: Operation Tabarin, Field Science, and Antarctic Sovereignty, 1944-1946, published by the University of Winnipeg, tells the story of Major Andrew Taylor B.Sc (C.E.), CD, M.A., Ph.D., D.Sc., O.C., a renowned Antarctic explorer and the only Canadian to lead an expedition. The article Sapper Leads Antarctic Expedition tells some of the story,…

Mine Awareness Training Area Named for Fallen Sapper

The Mine Awareness Training Area of the Peace Support Training Centre in Kingston Ontario was dedicated 26 May 2000 to Sergeant Ivan Stark. Sergeant Ivan Lethbridge Stark was born 9 April 1928 in Ocean Falls British Columbia. His parents, Ivan and Mary, originated in Labrador.  Sergeant Stark joined the Canadian Army on 5 February 1945 in London Ontario. He served in Canada and had volunteered for the Pacific Theatre, but the war ended before he could be sent. He…

New documentary about Canadian combat engineers in Kandahar to be released

Reprinted from the Ottawa Citizen by David Pugliese A new documentary about Canadian Forces combat engineers in Afghanistan will be shown later this month. On Thursday, October 26, Clearing the Way: Combat Engineers in Kandahar will have its world premiere as the opening film of the Forest City Film Festival in London, Ont.  The film is based on the book,  “Clearing the Way” by London native, Colonel Mark Gasparotto Former Canadian Army commander retired Lt.-Gen.…