150 high school students preparing to take part in D-Day anniversary trip - Action News
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New Brunswick

150 high school students preparing to take part in D-Day anniversary trip

Students from eight high schools in northeastern New Brunswick will be taking part in a special trip to commemorate the North Shore Regiment and the 75th anniversary of the D-Day Landings.

Anglophone North School District plans special trip as way to unite district and honour North Shore Regiment

Students at Miramichi Valley High School honoured three members of the North Shore Regiment that were killed during the Second World War. The school is one of eight in Anglophone North School District that will be participating in the Juno 2019 trip. (Submitted by Brandon Savage)

Students from eight high schools in northeastern New Brunswick will be taking part in a special trip to commemorate the North Shore Regiment and the75thanniversary of the D-Day landings.

The group of 150, along with officials and members of the current North Shore Regiment, will spend 10 days in May and June 2019 retracing the footsteps of the North Shore Regiment.

It will wind through villages where the regiment fought, saidBrandon Savage, a history teacher atMiramichiValley High School inMiramichiand the leader of the project.

The idea for the district-wide project began with a request from Mark Donovan, Anglophone North School District superintendent,for ideas to unite the large district with a common theme.

"One of the things he thought of was the North Shore Regiment and that common line of heritage that we all share in this region of New Brunswick."

The school district's boundaries extend fromRextontoCampbelltontoBlackville, similar borders for those who served in the regiment.

The regiment was formed in 1870and was called for active service in both the First and Second World Wars. The district's trip will focus on what the regiment did in the Second World War.

"We saw the trip as having some very great possibilities for our students and for our community as a whole," Savage said.

Some preparation already done

The group will visit and participate in ceremonies inTailleville,Saint-Aubin-sur-Mer,Bny-sur-MerandCarpiquet, all locations the regiment wasconnected to before and after D-Day.

Students on the trip will follow the footsteps of the North Shore Regiment through France. (North Shore Regiment)

Savage, along with two other teachers, ChrisMathesonand Brent Cameron, used some recent vacation to travel to Europe in July. Theybegan to lay the groundwork for the trip.

"We wanted to see what types of resources existed and connections and people that were interested in collaborating with us, and what kind of learning possibilities existed in those areas."

Savage said the trip was successful, especially when they visitedSaint-Aubin-sur-Mer, the villagewhere the regiment landed on June 6, 1944.

The regiment also fought a major battle inCarpiqueton July 4 and suffered more casualties than in any other battle during the war.

"We met with the townspeople and the mayor of those communities just to let them know we were going to make this trip and to see what kind of collaborations could happen during our visit next June."

Honour the fallen

Bill Savage was wounded when he landed on Juno Beach on June 6, 1944. (Submitted by Brandon Savage)

Savage said the climax of the trip will be attending the75thanniversary of D-Day.

"Right on D-Day itself, the plan is our students will be there on the beach atSaint-Aubin-sur-Merstanding in the exact spot the North Shore Regiment landed."

The plan is to lay a plaque at Juno Beach to commemorate the event and then visitCarpiquetfor other commemoration services.

The trip hasa personal connection for Savage. His grandfather, Bill Savage, landed on Juno Beach on D-Day and was wounded.

"That's always been sort of my drive as to the career path that I've chosen and why I enjoy teaching students history," he said.

"It was a very happy moment when I was told this trip was happening and I was to play a key role in it."

Remembrance projects

Savage and his fellow teachers have been using their school's Remembrance Day service to make a bigger impact on students by having them research names that were listed on a plaque that hung in the former Harkins High School.

This year, three men who served in the regiment were remembered in a short play written and performed by the students.

"We realized as you move another generation away from those conflicts, we need to make it very real students," Savage said. "You have to peel back those numbers because thosenumbers become trivial after awhile and put a face to that number to show a human side to the loss of war."

The three men honoured were Aloysius Daley, Donald Houlston and Fay Kitchen. Savage said two families connected to the men attended the service.

He said this has an impact on those involved.

"The students realize what they're doing isn't just a project for credit but more on the side of the importance of remembering."