Canada House - D-Day 4 June 1944

D-Day+79

Today marks the 79th anniversary of D-Day and the first time we commemorate without any known living survivors of that landing.

Some of us recently attended the memorial service for Alex Adair who passed away on Christmas Eve 2022 and was our last known living D-Day veteran.

Alex was one of the four soldiers in the well-known photograph (above) of the just liberated home now known as Canada House. The other three were Jim Leslie, Norman Hore and Bob McBurney.

You can hear about how they ended up in this photo from Alex himself in this short video:


Sixty-one Queen’s Own soldiers were killed on D-Day and you can find profiles of each of them here.

Some Facts About The QOR Fallen

  • The average age of the fallen was 29.9 years old
  • The youngest was 19-year-old Rifleman Russell Adamson of Midland
  • The oldest was 40-year-old Corporal Hugh Rocks of Kirkland Lake
  • Many of these riflemen left school at the age of 14 or 15 – few completed high school
  •  Many of their fathers had served in the First World War
  • Rifleman Calbert’s brother was also QOR and was killed in Holland in February 1945.
  • Rifleman Corvec was transferred to the QOR from a reinforcement unit on 26 May 1944 – just 12 days before D-Day
  • Rifleman Hall served in the 1939-1940 Finnish-Russian War before enlisting with the QOR in England in 1942
  • Sergeant “Freddy” Harris was the only Jewish rifleman among the QOR’s D-Day fallen.
  • Rifleman Lizon has no known grave and is remembered on the Bayeux Memorial however there are several graves in Beny-sur-mer Cemetery with no known names.
  • Rifleman Martin lied about his age in order to join the QOR in Jun 1940. He was two days shy of his 22nd birthday on D-Day
  • Riflemen May and McCallum were originally drummers but would serve as stretcher bearers on D-Day
  • Lance Corporal McKechnie was married in England on 18 May 1944 – just weeks before D-Day
  • Included in this list are two brothers – Gordon and Douglas Reed
  • Rifleman Showers was AWOL (absent without leave) when his original regiment The Black Watch, left Newfoundland, and on reappearing was posted to the QOR
  • Rifleman Stock was an indigenous soldier from Gibson Reserve
  • From the QOR fallen alone, at least 17 children became fatherless on D-Day

Watch this video to learn more about The Queen’s Own on D-Day:

You can find more about the QOR and the Second World War including personal reminisces of D-Day on our Second World War Resources page.

Please consider supporting the Regiment’s Return to Normandy: 80th Anniversary of D-Day.

2 thoughts on “D-Day+79”

  1. I love these articles as my father (Lorne Jackson) was in the Queens Own and while fighting in France he was wounded at Caen and lost his left arm. He didn’t ever talk to much about the war unless he was with veterans in our area and usually at the Legion in Wheatley. God Bless them all

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