Contributed by Jim Patton
Irish-born Lance Cpl Michael O’Leary of the Irish Guards (later
commissioned in the Connaught Rangers) was the first Canadian to receive the Victoria
Cross in the Great War, on 1 February 1915. Before the war O’Leary served in Canada with the Royal Northwest Mounted Police. Due to his Irish
birth, O’Leary gained substantial publicity and notoriety; even a play by GB
Shaw was based on O’Leary’s deeds.
However, the first Canadian-born soldier serving with a Canadian unit to receive the
VC was Lance Corporal Fred Fisher (posthumous), of the 13th Battalion
Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF).
Born in St. Catherine’s, Ontario, his father was a bank
manager and the family moved several times before settling in Montreal in
1905. As a schoolboy he excelled in both football and hockey. On 16 August 1914 he left his engineering
studies at McGill University to join the 5th Regiment, Royal
Highlanders of Canada. Three battalions of the Canadian Expeditionary Force
were drawn from this militia unit: the 13th, 42nd and 73rd.
On 22 April 1915, when the Germans launched
their infamous chlorine gas attack that began Second Ypres, Fisher formed and
re-formed impromptu machine gun crews and repeatedly stopped advancing German
units until he was killed on 23 April. His actions stopped the
Germans from overrunning Canadian artillery before it could be withdrawn. His
body was lost and he is commemorated on the Menin Gate. His VC is held by the
RHRC museum.
Memorial Plaque in St. Catherine’s, Ontario |
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