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The South Saskatchewan Regiment was an infantry regiment of the Canadian Forces formed in 1936 by the amalgamation of The Weyburn Regiment and The Saskatchewan Border Regiment. It was reduced to nil strength and placed on the Supplementary Order of Battle (i.e., virtually disbanded) in 1968. They participated in the 1942 Dieppe Raid.
The South Saskatchewan Regiment | |
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Active |
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Country | Canada |
Branch |
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Type | Line infantry |
Role | Infantry |
Size | One battalion |
Part of |
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Garrison/HQ | Estevan, Saskatchewan |
March | "Warwickshire Lads" |
Engagements | |
Battle honours | See #Battle honours |
History
editThe regiment traces its lineage to July 3, 1905, when an infantry regiment was authorized in the District of Assiniboia and the District of Saskatchewan, which later that year became the province of Saskatchewan. The regiment was eventually organized as the 95th Saskatchewan Rifles, in Regina. After the First World War the 95th merged with the 60th Rifles of Canada (in Moose Jaw) to become the South Saskatchewan Regiment, which expanded to five battalions[1] with the creation of units in Weyburn (3rd Battalion), Moosomin (4th Battalion) and Estevan (5th Battalion).[citation needed]
In 1924, each of the battalions became a distinct regiment, and the name "South Saskatchewan Regiment" went out of use. In the 1936 reorganization of the Militia, The Weyburn Regiment and The Saskatchewan Border Regiment (in Estevan) re-amalgamated into a new South Saskatchewan Regiment.[1]
During the Second World War, The South Saskatchewan Regiment participated in many major Canadian battles and operations, as part of the 2nd Canadian Infantry Division. The South Saskatchewan Regiment fought in the Dieppe Raid of 1942,[1] Operation Atlantic, Operation Spring, Operation Totalize, Operation Tractable, and the recapture of Dieppe in 1944. They, along with the 8th Reconnaissance Regiment (14th Canadian Hussars) liberated the Westerbork transit camp on 12 April 1945.[citation needed]
During the Dieppe Raid they also undertook one of the more unusual missions of the war. They provided a bodyguard for an RAF radar expert, Flight Sergeant Jack Nissenthall, who had volunteered to try penetrate a German radar station on a cliff above "Green Beach". Because Nissenthall knew the secrets of British and US radar technology, he was awarded a personal bodyguard of South Saskatchewan sharpshooters. Their orders were to protect him, but in the event of possible capture to kill him. He survived and his action enabled vital information on the state of development of the German radar to be discovered. The full story, along with graphic, first-hand descriptions of the South Saskatchewan Regiment's actions during the raid are told in James Leasor's book, "Green Beach".[citation needed]
Headquarters and all companies were located in Estevan.[2] The regiment was reduced to nil strength and placed in the Supplementary Order of Battle on 1 September 1968.[3] The Queen's and Regimental Colours were deposited at Estevan Comprehensive School in 1969.[4]
Lineage
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Perpetuations
editBattle honours
editThe regiment possesses the following battle honours:[1][Note 1]
-
The regimental colour
First World War
editSecond World War
edit- Dieppe
- Bourguébus Ridge
- St. André sur Orne
- Falaise
- Falaise Road
- The Laison
- Forêt de la Londe
- Dunkirk, 1944
- Antwerp–Turnhout Canal
- The Scheldt
- Woensdrecht
- South Beveland
- The Rhineland
- The Hochwald
- Xanten
- The Rhine
- Groningen
- Oldenburg
- North-West Europe 1942, 1944–45
Alliances
editThe regiment was formerly allied with these regiments, but these alliances automatically expired when the British regiments amalgamated with other regiments.
Notable members
editMusic
editThe regimental march was "The Warwickshire Lads".[2] A popular song about the regiment was "We're the boys of the S.S.R.", with words by Isabel McCrae Parker and music by Arthur Clare Parker. It was published in Weyburn by A.C. Parker, circa 1939 and was dedicated to the officers and men of the South Saskatchewan Regiment. First line: "We're the boys who have gathered from near and far".[6]
Media
edit- G. B. Buchanan (1956). The March of the Prairie Men: A Story of the South Saskatchewan Regiment. Ottawa.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Literature
edit- Leasor, J. (1975). Green Beach. London: Heinemann. ISBN 0-434-41024-1. OCLC 1354236.
- Hayes, Geoffrey (2017). Crerar's Lieutenants. Vancouver, BC Canada: UBC Press. ISBN 978-0-7748-3484-1.
References
editNotes
edit- ^ Battle honours in small capitals are for large operations and campaigns and those in lowercase are for more specific battles. Entries displayed in bold type are honours that are authorized to be shown on the regimental colour.
Citations
edit- ^ a b c d e "The South Saskatchewan Regiment". Official Lineages: Volume 3: Combat Arms Regiments, Part 2: Infantry Regiments. Directorate of History and Heritage. October 2010. Retrieved October 13, 2011.
- ^ a b Morris, David A. (1983). The Canadian militia from 1855: an historical summary. Erin, Ont: Boston Mills Press. ISBN 978-0-919822-51-1.
- ^ Department of National Defence. "The South Saskatchewan Regiment". Official lineages of the Canadian Army. Retrieved May 27, 2024.
- ^ "Stories behind the carvings". Estevan Mercury. September 7, 2016.
- ^ "Perpetuation of C.E.F. Units – Infantry – 151st Bn to 200th Bn". Retrieved November 25, 2007.
- ^ "We're the boys of the S.S.R." Retrieved February 13, 2016.