Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Sign Up

Sign Up

Please fill this form to create an account.

Already have an account? Login here.

Ottawa

80 years after D-Day, veterans in Ottawa reflect on their time in the war

Second World War veterans at Ottawa's Perley Health celebrated turning 100 this week, and reflected on their time serving in the war.

Perley Health veterans celebrate turning 100, reflect on 80th anniversary of D-Day

Archival photograph of Lucille Lane in uniform
Lucille Lane joined the Women's Royal Canadian Naval Service in 1943 and worked in the signals branch, decoding naval messages from ships in the north Atlantic. (Submitted by Lucille Lane)

In a rec room at Ottawa's Perley Health, balloons line the walls, a piano player sings the jovial 1920s hit Five Foot Two, Eyes of Blue,and residents mingle over cake and tea.

It's abirthday party for 14seniorsliving at the centre who turned at least 100this year, welcoming them into Perley's"Century Club,"a tradition that began nearly a decade ago.

But Wednesday afternoon'scelebration was bittersweet for some, as they reflected on a very different anniversary.

Eighty years after D-Day, veterans in the crowd shared their wartime memories with the CBC.

'It haunts you'

At 19, joining the army wassomething Roland Lalonde felt he "needed" to do, so in 1942, hejoined theRoyal Canadian Ordnance Corps as a clerk typist.

For a year and a half,Lalondewas stationed in England, but a few months after D-Dayhe was deployed to Italywith the Royal 22nd Regiment, Canada's famous "Van Doos."

"From a typewriter to a .303 rifle, that's quite a change, I can tell you that," Lalonde recalled.

From therehe went on to France, Belgium and finally Germanywhere his regiment participated in the Liberation of the Netherlands.

It's not a time he likes to think about.

"Everything comes back to you," he explained. "It haunts you."

But when Lalondedoes reflect on his service, he does so with pride.

"It was quite a life," the 101-year-old said.

A man sits with a chalkboard that reads NAME: Roly AGE: 101 WORDS OF WISDOM: make the best of everyday.
Canadian Second World War veteran Roland Lalonde, 101, shares some words of wisdom. (Submitted by Perley Health)

Beryl Vignale joined the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) with herlate sister Daphne when they were 18.

Vignalesays she remembersbeing the first pair of twins to join the RCAF, and doing a variety of jobs at the Mountain View airfield in Prince Edward County.

"The equipment section and the hospital orderly room for a short time," she recalled.

They were important jobs, but Vignale said what she and Daphne really wanted was to go overseas.

"They wouldn't post us," she said. "They kept us together on that station."

This year she shared her birthday not with her twin sister, but with the RCAF, as they both turned 100 in April.

A 100-year-old woman in a wheelchair accepts a ribbon being pinned to her shirt by another woman.
Beryl Vignale, 100, was one of many veterans honoured at a special birthday party at Perley Health on Wednesday. (Submitted by Perley Health)

Betty Phippswas born in Englandand served in the British military as a radar operator with theRoyal Artillery.

She was in London a week after D-Day.

"The rockets started to come over from Germany and we couldn't shoot them down because they were going so fast and they would come everywhere," she said.

"I remember being terrified."

Soon after the war ended, Phipps moved to Canada with her husband, a Canadian soldiershe met at a canteen in an English village.

"I'm a real Canadian now, I've been here for so long," she said.

A 100-year-old woman in a black and white striped sweater poses with a purple pin on her shirt that reads
Betty Phipps served in the the Royal Artillery in England as a radar operator during the Second World War. (Anchal Sharma/CBC)

Lucille Lane was 21 when she joined the Women's Royal Canadian Naval Service in Halifax.

Now 102, she still remembers the stress of her job decodingmessages from ships in the North Atlantic.

"I was called in one day because I'd made a slight mistake," she said.

Lane was told that a convoy might have gone to the wrong place because of her error.

A woman in a white shirt stands next to a walker and poses for a photo with a certificate honouring her 102nd birthday.
Lucille Lane was 21 when she joined the Women's Royal Canadian Naval Service. Now 102, she lives at Perley Health with fellow veterans. (Submitted by Perley Health)

"Oh boy, I felt terrible," she said with a nervous chuckle.

But in the end shesays the convoy was brought home.

For Lane, serving in the Navy as a woman at the time was a "privilege."But she says it also prepared her for life as a "Navy wife"for nearly 70 years.

"I knew what it was allabout," she said.

With files from Jodie Applewaithe