May 012015
 

QOR_badgeThe Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada is a reserve regiment of the Canadian Army, based in Toronto. The regiment is part of 4th Canadian Division’s 32 Canadian Brigade Group. It is the only reserve regiment in Canada to currently have a parachute role. The regiment consists of the reserve battalion, the Regimental Association, and the Regimental Band and Bugles. The official abbreviation is The QOR of C, but the name is often abbreviated to QOR.

The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada parade out of Moss Park Armoury in downtown Toronto and Dalton Armoury in Scarborough. The unit motto is In Pace Paratus—In Peace Prepared.

Regimental structure

The Reserve Battalion is made up of the following companies:

Battalion Headquarters and Signals

60th Company (Moss Park Armoury)

Buffs Company (Dalton Armoury)

Victoria Company (Combat Support / Combat Service Support)

Para Company

Normandy Company (Training Depot / Battle School Staff)

Role

The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada are the only Primary Reserve unit in Canada with a parachute tasking. The unit has qualified Parachute Instructors, Drop Zone / Landing Zone Controllers and Jumpmasters. Members also take courses in helicopter operations, aerial delivery, and as Recce and Advanced Mountain Operations Instructors.

Members of The QOR have also been sent on the Patrol Pathfinder Course. Qualified personnel in jump positions are allowed the honour of wearing the maroon beret. Trained soldiers are addressed as Riflemen.

The Queen’s Own Rifles have a long standing support role with the Canadian Army Advanced Warfare Centre, where QOR parachute instructors and other personnel on staff instruct on and support parachuting courses. The unit currently supplies a Company(-) of paratroopers to the 3 RCR Parachute Company when required.

The Battalion deploys by parachute on numerous Field Training Exercises during the year and during Divisional exercises during the summer.

The Canadian Forces SkyHawks Parachute Demonstration Team has also had support from The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada, with several members joining the elite demonstration team.

History

The 2nd Battalion, Volunteer Militia Rifles of Canada was formed on the 26th of April 1860, predating the Confederation of Canada. Its first commanding officer was Lieutenant Colonel William Smith Durie.

During the Trent Affair of 1862, William Mulock asked John McCaul, the head of University College (part of the University of Toronto), to call a student meeting that led to the formation of the University Rifle Company of volunteers, 9 Company of The Queen’s Own Rifles of Toronto, later K Company of The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada.

It was re-designated as the Second Battalion Volunteer Militia Rifles of Canada or Queen’s Own Rifles of Toronto on the 18th of March 1863.

The Fenian Raids

The Queen’s Own Rifles of Toronto were called out on active service from 8 to 31 March and from the 1st to the 22nd June 1866. The battalion fought on the Niagara frontier. The Queen’s Own Rifles first saw combat and sustained nine killed in action during the Battle of Ridgeway in 1866, where they and the 13th Volunteer Infantry Battalion (The Royal Hamilton Light Infantry) fell back when charged by a massive force of better armed and highly experienced Fenian insurgents composed of recent Irish American Civil War veterans.

It was renamed as 2nd Battalion, Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada on the 13th of January 1882.

North West Rebellion

The 2nd Battalion, Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada mobilized detachments for active service on the 10th of April 1885 that served with the Battleford Column of the North West Field Force, and were removed from active service on the 24th of July 1885.

South African War

It was named the 2nd Regiment Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada on the 8th of May 1900. The Regiment contributed volunteers for the Canadian Contingents, mainly the 2nd (Special Service) Battalion, Royal Canadian Regiment of Infantry. The Second Boer War was the first time that soldiers from the Regiment fought on foreign soil. They were recognized for their service and earned a battle honour for the regiment, even though they were not allowed to wear the QOR cap badge in South Africa.

The Great War

Details of the Regiment were placed on active service on the 6th of August 1914 for local protection duties. In the First World War, none of the existing militia infantry regiments in Canada were formally mobilized. In 1914 The Queen’s Own formed the 3rd Canadian Battalion (Toronto Regiment), CEF. The 3rd Battalion, CEF was authorized on the 10th of August 1914 and embarked for Britain on the 26th of September 1914. It disembarked in France on the 11th of February 1915 and fought as part of the 1st Infantry Brigade, 1st Canadian Division in France and Flanders until the end of the war. The battalion was disbanded on the 30th of August 1920.

Later in the war, The Queen’s Own Rifles recruited for additional Canadian Expeditionary Force battalions, which did not enter combat as units, but supplied reinforcements to the Canadian Corps.

The 83rd Battalion (Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada) was authorized on the 10th of July 1915 and embarked for Britain on the 28th of April 1916. It provided reinforcements for the Canadian Corps in the field until the 7th of July 1916, when its personnel were absorbed by the 12th Reserve Battalion, CEF. The battalion was subsequently disbanded on the 21st of May 1917.

The 95th Battalion (Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada) was authorized on the 22nd of December 1915 and embarked for Britain on the 31st of May 1916. It provided reinforcements for the Canadian Corps in the field until the 24th of January 1917, when its personnel were absorbed by the 5th Reserve Battalion, CEF, and was disbanded on the 17th of July 1917.

The 166th Battalion (Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada) was authorized on the 22nd December 1915 and embarked for Britain on 12th and 17th October 1916. It provided reinforcements for the Canadian Corps in the field until the 8th of January 1917, when its personnel were absorbed by the 12th Reserve Battalion, CEF. The battalion was disbanded on the 15th of September 1917.

The 198th Battalion (Canadian Buffs) was authorized on the 15th of July 1916 and embarked for Britain on the 28th of March 1917. It provided reinforcements for the Canadian Corps in the field until the 9th of March 1918, when its personnel were absorbed by the 3rd Reserve Battalion, CEF. The battalion was then disbanded on the 29th of November 1918.

The 255th Battalion (Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada) was authorized on the 1st of May 1917 and embarked for Britain on the 6th of June 1917. On the 12th of June 1917, its personnel were absorbed by the 12th Reserve Battalion, CEF to provide reinforcements for the Canadian Corps in the field. The battalion was disbanded on the 1st of September 1917.

The Queen’s Own Rifles have perpetuated the traditions and battle honours of the 3rd Battalion, 83rd Battalion, 95th Battalion, 166th Battalion, 198th Battalion, and 255th Battalion, CEF. Both the QOR and The Royal Regiment of Canada perpetuate the 3rd Battalion.

Between the wars

It was designated “The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada” on the 1st of May 1920.

The Second World War

The regiment mobilized for active service on the 24th of May 1940. It was then redesignated as the 1st Battalion, The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada, CASF on 7 November 1940. The unit served in Newfoundland (at the time a separate Dominion) in the defence of two strategic airfields at Botwood and Gander in Newfoundland from the 10th August to 15th of December 1940. After a build-up and training period, the unit embarked for Britain on the 19th of July 1941. The regiment mobilized the 3rd Battalion, The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada, CASF for active service on the 12th of May 1942. It served in Canada in a home defence role as part of the 20th Infantry Brigade, 7th Canadian Infantry Division. The battalion was disbanded on the 15th of August 1943.

For the Invasion of Normandy, the regiment landed in Normandy, France as part of the 8th Infantry Brigade, 3rd Canadian Infantry Division. The first major combat operations were on D-day 6 June 1944. The Queen’s Own Rifles landed on “Nan” sector of Juno Beach and with the support of tanks of the Fort Garry Horse captured the strategic seaside resort town of Bernières-sur-Mer. The battalion fought its way to its D-Day objective – the village of Anisy 13.5 km (8.4 mi) inland, the only[citation needed] Regiment to reach its assigned objective that day. The QOR had the highest casualties amongst the Canadian regiments, with 143 killed, wounded or captured. As well as losses in the initial landing, the reserve companies’ landing craft struck mines as they approached the beach.

In the battle for Caen, the QOR – as part of the 8th Infantry Brigade – participated in Operation Windsor to capture the airfield at Carpiquet which was defended by a detachment from the 12th SS Panzer-Division Hitler Jugend. The Germans inflicted heavy casualties and Panzer-grenadiers attempted to recapture the village

During the war, 463 riflemen were killed in action and almost 900 were wounded as they fought through Normandy, Northern France, and into Belgium and the Netherlands, where they liberated the crucial Channel ports. Sixty more members of the regiment were killed while serving with other units in Hong Kong, Italy and northwest Europe. The overseas battalion was disbanded on 30 November 1945.

On the 1st of June 1945, a third Active Force battalion, designated the 4th Battalion, The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada, CIC, CAOF, was mobilized for service with the Canadian Army Occupation Force in Germany. The battalion was disbanded on the 14th of May 1946.

In the October of 1953, the status of the regiment was upgraded, and it was made a part of the Regular Force. The regiment consisted of two Regular Force battalions and the Reserve (Third) battalion in Toronto until 1968. There was also a regimental depot in Calgary.

Korea

The 2nd Battalion, commanded by Lt.-Col. W.H.V. Matthews served in Korea following the armistice from 26th of March 54 to the 6th of April 1955.

The following members of the 2nd Battalion died in Korea:

Rifleman Norman Philip Ferland, 31st of March 1954.

Lt. Neil MacDonald Anderson, 25th of August 1954.

Sgt Gerald Walter Koch, 4th of August 1954.

Lt. Milton Cameron Vipond 18th of March 1955.

Rifleman George Peter Reid, 11th of June 1955.

Maj. Philip Edwin Gower, MC, died on the 9th of December 1956 while serving with the United Nations Command Military Assistance Commission. As part of the Regular Force, the unit was involved in the Korean War.

Cold War

The Regular Force battalions served on NATO duty in Germany and served on UN duty in Cyprus.
In 1970, with the downsizing of the Canadian Forces, the 1st Battalion of The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada was rebadged as the 3rd Battalion Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry.

From 1983 to 1995, the regiment was operationally tasked to provide an airborne company to the Canadian Airborne Regiment.

Members of The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada have served on recent overseas deployments including: UNTAG (United Nations Transition Assistance Group) Namibia 1989–1990, Cambodia, Cyprus, Somalia (for Operation Deliverance 1992–1993 members were attached to 1, 2 and 3 Commando of the Canadian Airborne Regiment), Sierra Leone, Bosnia, Kosovo, Afghanistan, Darfur and the Sudan.

The unit played a large role in the purchase of the Victoria Cross of Corporal Frederick George Topham in 2005 and its subsequent donation to the Canadian War Museum.

On 22nd ofApril 2006, The QOR of C opened Dalton Armoury in Scarborough as part of the Land Force Reserve Restructure expansion. Buffs Company parades out of Dalton Armoury. In September 1910, the QOR went on a 13-mile (21 km) route march with The Buffs (East Kent) Regiment of the British Army. It was noted that the Buffs and QOR used the same regimental march, a tune known as “The Regimental Quick Step of the Buffs” composed for The Buffs by Handel. A regimental alliance was made official in 1914.

Battle honours

The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada has earned 47 battle honours during its history. As Rifle Regiments do not carry “colours”, the Battle Honours are emblazoned on the Regimental Drums. In April 2015, in honour of the Regiment’s newest Battle Honour, a new set of Drums was commissioned for the Regiment’s 155th Birthday.

Early years

North West Canada 1885‡

South Africa 1899–1900‡

The Great War

Ypres, 1915

Gravenstafel Ridge

St. Julien‡

Festubert, 1915

Mount Sorrel

Somme, 1916‡

Pozières Ridge

Flers-Courcelette‡

Ancre Heights

Arras, 1917

Vimy, 1917‡

Arleux

Scarpe 1917

Hill 70‡

Ypres, 1917

Passchendaele‡

Amiens‡

Arras, 1918

Scarpe 1918

Drocourt-Quéant

Hindenburg Line

Canal du Nord‡

Pursuit to Mons‡

France and Flanders, 1915–18

Second World War

Normandy Landing‡

Le Mesnil-Patry‡

Caen‡

Carpiquet

Bourguébus Ridge‡

Faubourg de Vaucelles

Falaise‡

Quesnay Wood

The Laison

Boulogne, 1944‡

Calais, 1944

The Scheldt‡

Breskens Pocket

The Rhineland‡

Waal Flats

The Hochwald‡

The Rhine‡

Emmerich – Hoch Elten

Deventer

North-West Europe, 1944–45

War in Afghanistan

AFGHANISTAN ‡

Important engagements

Battle of Ridgeway, Fenian Raids, 1866

Battle of Cut Knife, North-West Rebellion, 1885

First World War

St Julien

Hill 70

Passchendaele

Mount Sorrel

Amiens

Somme, 1916

Flers-Courcelette

Canal du Nord

Pursuit to Mons

Vimy, 1917

Second World War

Normandy Landing

Le Mesnil-Patry

The Scheldt

Caen

The Rhineland

Bourguebus Ridge

The Hochwald

Falaise

The Rhine

Boulogne, 1944

Victoria Cross recipients

Seven members of the Regiment have been awarded the Victoria Cross, Canada’s highest military award:

Capt. Thain Wendell MacDowell, VC, DSO (9th of April 1917)

Cpl. Colin Fraser Barron, VC (6th of November 1917)

2nd Lieut. Edmund de Wind, VC, (Killed in action 21st of March 1918)

Lieut. Charles Smith Rutherford, VC, MC, MM (26th of August 1918)

Lieut. Wallace Lloyd Algie, VC (Killed in action 11th of October 1918)

Lieut. George Fraser Kerr, VC, MC & Bar, MM (27th of September 1918)

Sgt. Aubrey Cosens, VC (Killed in action 25th / 26th of February 1945)
Colonels-in-Chief.

HM Queen Mary (1928–1953)

HRH Princess Alexandra, The Honourable Lady Ogilvy (1960–2010)

HRH the Duchess of Cornwall (2010–present)

Notable members

The Rt Hon Vincent Massey was appointed Governor General of Canada in 1952. He was the first Canadian appointed to the post, and since then the governor general has always been a Canadian citizen. Massey Hall in Toronto was donated by his family.

The Hon Donald Ethell, Lieutenant-Governor of Alberta since April 2010.

Sir John Morison Gibson (1st of January , 1842 – 3rd of June 1929) was a Lieutenant Governor of Ontario. He was a Lieutenant during the Fenian Raids, and fought at the Battle of Ridgeway.

Sir Hugh John Macdonald was the son of John A. Macdonald, served as a member of the Canadian House of Commons, a federal cabinet minister, and as the eighth Premier of Manitoba.

Lieutenant Colonel The Hon Barney Danson, PC, CC, served with the regiment in Normandy and later served as Minister of National Defence. He is a Companion of the Order of Canada, Canada’s highest civilian honour.

General Sir William Dillon Otter (3rd December 1843 – 6th of May 1929) was the first Canadian-born chief of the general staff, the head of the Canadian Army. In 1890, Otter founded the Royal Canadian Military Institute as a body for “the promotion and fostering of military art, science and literature in Canada.” He was appointed as the first commanding officer of the Royal Canadian Regiment of Infantry in 1893.

Lieutenant General Charles H. Belzile was a former head of the Canadian Army.

Major General Lewis MacKenzie (born 30th of April 1940) is a retired Canadian general and writer. MacKenzie established and commanded Sector Sarajevo as part of the United Nations Protection Force or UNPROFOR in Yugoslavia in 1992.

Major General Malcolm Mercer was a barrister and art patron who practised law in Toronto. He led the 3rd Canadian Division during the first two years of the First World War before he was killed in action at Mount Sorrel in Belgium. He remains the most senior Canadian officer to die in combat.

Major General Sir Henry Pellatt (6th January 1859, Kingston, Ontario, Canada – 8th of March 1939) was a well-known Canadian financier and soldier who built Casa Loma.

Bridgadier General John “Jock” Spragge, DSO, OBE, ED joined as a rifleman in 1925 and rose to become commanding officer of the Queen’s Own Rifles on D-Day and in August 1944, Officer Commanding 7th Canadian Infantry Brigade.

Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae is remembered for his poem In Flanders Fields. He was a member of The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada while studying at the University of Toronto, during which time he was promoted to captain.

Lieutenant Colonel Arthur Godfrey Peuchen was a businessman and RMS Titanic survivor. He commanded the Home Battalion of the QOR during the First World War.

Major John Hasek was a journalist and author of The Disarming of Canada. He was the first commander of the SkyHawks Parachute Team, and also served in Ghana, Vietnam and Cyprus. Hasek was injured and killed while reporting on the war in Yugoslavia in 1994.

Major Ben Dunkelman – Promoted through the ranks from private to major during the Second World War. Saw action at Caen, Falaise, and the Battle of the Scheldt. His father was David Dunkelman, the founder of Tip Top Tailors.

Major Edward Arunah Dunlop, Jr. was an MPP and first president of the Toronto Sun. He was blinded during the Second World War while trying to save a soldier from a grenade.

Surgeon-Major James Thorburn was a medical doctor and a professor of pharmacology and therapeutics at the University of Toronto

Captain and Assistant Surgeon Norman Bethune, Sr., MD was a physician and medical educator who served with the Queen’s Own from 1877-1879. His grandson was Henry Norman Bethune, MD, the internationally known physician who doctored in the Spanish Civil War and in China during the Communist Revolution.

Lieutenant Norm Gardner, former Chair of the Toronto Police Services Board.

Bugle Major Charles Swift served as Bugle Major of The Queen’s Own Rifles Bugle Band from 1876 to 1923 – a total of 47 years.

Herbert L. Clarke was a well-known American cornet player, feature soloist, bandmaster, and composer who joined The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada Band as a cornetist in 1882.

Frederick J. Conboy served as Mayor of Toronto from 1941 to 1944. He joined the unit as a Rifleman during the WWII in response to a government appeal for more volunteers.

Rifleman John Andrew Forin, served in the Northwest Rebellion where he kept a diary of his experience, later moved to British Columbia where he practised law before serving as a County Judge.

Alexander Muir—author of “The Maple Leaf Forever”, fought at the Battle of Ridgeway
John Bayley served as the bandmaster of the Regimental band from 1879-1901.

K. Dock Yip, reservist during World War II, first Chinese Canadian to practice law and local activist.

Regimental Museum of The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada

The Regimental Museum of The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada is located on the third floor of the historic Casa Loma château in Toronto. Sir Henry Pellatt, who built Casa Loma, was an ardent supporter of the Regiment, and was knighted in 1905 for his service with the unit.

Three non-functioning firearms – a Sten submachine gun, Bren light machine gun and a Bock bolt-action rifle – were stolen during a 2008 break-in. They were later recovered and returned. Two suspects were arrested after police used DNA analysis, fingerprints, and tips from the public to identify them.

Regimental church

St. Paul’s, Bloor Street Anglican Church in Toronto has been the regimental church of the QOR since 1910. It is located at 227 Bloor Street between Church Street and Ted Rogers Way (which connects to Jarvis Street which is further south).

The Cross of Sacrifice located outside the church is dedicated to the members of the QOR that have died in combat. It was built and dedicated after the First World War.

The Books of Remembrance are a list of the names of the QOR fallen, and are located in the interior of the church. The books are paraded annually on Remembrance Day Sunday, when the regiment parades to St. Paul’s to attend services.

Memorials

The most recent is the regimental badge carved on the back of one of the pews of the Royal Memorial Chapel at Royal Military Academy Sandhurst.

The oldest memorial is the Ridgeway tablet at the Memorial United Church in Ridgeway, Ontario. Ridgeway is also commemorated in a stained glass window at University College, a tablet in the Ontario Provincial Parliament buildings, the Canadian Volunteers Monument in Queen’s Park (west side of Queen’s Park Crescent) and a cairn at Ridgeway.

A sandstone monument with Italian marble figures and bronze plaques erected on the University of Toronto Campus was dedicated to those of the The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada regiment who were killed in action or who died from wounds defending her frontier in June 1866. The monument was erected by the Canadian Volunteer Monument Campaign of 1866, Committee of Toronto citizens and its chairman, Dr. McCaul, then President of the University of Toronto.

The North-West Rebellion of 1885 is remembered by the North-West Rebellion Monument in Queen’s Park (east side of Queen’s park Crescent), the Battleford Column tablet in Moss Park Armoury and a cairn at Battleford, Saskatchewan.

The South African War memorial is on University Avenue. An additional tablet is in Denison Armoury.

The First World War is commemorated by the Cross of Sacrifice and the shrine containing the Book of Remembrance at St Paul’s Anglican Church. In addition, a tablet is mounted at Moss Park Armoury. The QOR fallen are also remembered in The Buffs Memorial window, Warrior’s Chapel, of Canterbury Cathedral.

A plaque was erected to the fallen in the Second World War at the site of the D-Day landing, Bernières-sur-Mer, Normandy, France. A tablet was also placed of a farm building at Mooshof, Germany, where Sergeant Aubrey Cosens, VC, earned his decoration.

There are also significant memorials at Le Mesnil-Patry, Anguerny, Anisy (France) and Wons, Rha, Sneek, Doorn, Oostburg, Zutphen (Netherlands). Other lesser memorials also exist.

Lineage

26th of April 1860 – Second Battalion Volunteer Militia Rifles of Canada

18th of March 1863 – Second Battalion Volunteer Militia Rifles of Canada or Queen’s Own Rifles of Toronto

13th of January 1882 – 2nd Battalion, Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada

8th of May 1900 – 2nd Regiment Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada

1st of May 1920 – The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada

7th of November 1941 – 2nd (Reserve) Battalion, The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada

14th of May 1946 – The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada

On the 16th of October 1953, it was amalgamated with the Regular Army 1st Canadian Rifle Battalion and 2nd Canadian Rifle Battalion. The 1st Canadian Rifle Battalion and 2nd Canadian Rifle Battalion became the 1st and 2nd Battalions, respectively, of The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada, while the Reserve component was designated as the 3rd Battalion.

On the 15th of September 1968, the 2nd Battalion was reduced to nil strength and transferred to the Supplementary Order of Battle. On the 27th of April 1970, the 1st Battalion was reduced to nil strength and transferred to the Supplementary Order of Battle and the Reserve Force battalion automatically relinquished its battalion designation.

Alliances

United Kingdom – The Rifles (2007–Present)

United Kingdom – The Royal Gurkha Rifles (1994–Present)

United Kingdom – The Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment (Queen’s and Royal Hampshires) (1992–Present)

Historical Alliances

United Kingdom – The Brigade of Gurkhas (1982–1994)

United Kingdom – The Royal Green Jackets (1966–2007)

United Kingdom – The Queen’s Regiment (1966–1992)

United Kingdom – The Queen’s Own Buffs, The Royal Kent Regiment (1961–1966)

United Kingdom – The King’s Royal Rifle Corps (1956–1966)

United Kingdom – The Buffs (Royal East Kent Regiment) (1935–1961)

United Kingdom – The Buffs (East Kent Regiment) (1914–1935)

Sourced from Wikipedia and Youtube

Picture by “QOR badge” by Canadian Forces. Via Wikipedia – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:QOR_badge.jpg#/media/File:QOR_badge.jpg