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Saskatchewan

On Remembrance Day: who are you remembering?

Saskatchewan historian Bill Waiser has spent a lot of time searching for details of a great uncle he lost in the First World War. He provides a step-by-step guide for doing similar research yourself.

Tips for researching ancestors who fought in Canada's wars

The Canadian National Vimy Memorial is seen at sunrise in Vimy, France. (REUTERS)

Remembrance Day is a time when many people reflect back on relatives who have fought in previous wars. It can be daunting, though, to find out more about people you've lost.

Saskatchewan historian Bill Waiser is no stranger to searching war records. His great uncle William Stewart Ritchie fought and diedon the battlefields during the the First World War.

Waiser wanted to find out more about his ancestor. He says Library and Archives Canada is the best place to start, so he did just that. That search yields attestation papers, the two page form completed by soldiers and nurses who signed up toserve.

Those papers are online, so I found his attestation papers, which list his address, his occupation. He was an electrician. It lists his birth as 1887. It gives his physical description.- Bill Waiser

The search wasn't quite as straightforward as Waiser had hoped for, though. First off, Ritchie was a fairly common surname.

More significantly "what really threw me was that [my great uncle] lied about his birth date. He actually said he was younger than he was. So I found his attestation paper, what I thought was him, but the date was a little off."

Researching a mystery

The Canadian War Cemetery near Dieppe (Ann MacMillan/CBC)

"Then I went to the War Graves Commission records and I found that he had been memorialised on the Vimy monument. That's where I also found that he had been wounded, buried where he had been killed. And then when they went back after the battle to exhume his body there's no body to be found. He's missing."

This is true for many soldiers who died during the First World War. It doesn't mean the trail stops there for research, though.

That's where the online census becomes helpful. Waiser says he "found out he was actually born in 1884, so he lied about his age. He said he was three years younger."

Waiser didn't stop with online searches.

Visiting European Memorial Sites

For him and his wife Marley Waiser, it was important to visit "the places where our relatives fell, died. And we were there. And we were the first members of our family to go there."

They had some incredibly moving experiences overseas. At the Vimy monument they discovered his great uncle's name inscribed in its base.

70 per cent of Canada's war dead were killed by artillery. It was the big killer, the big guns. And a lot of people were never found.- Bill Waiser, historian

"When people look at the Vimy monument, those photographs or film coverage, you do see those two reaching arms northward. But a lot of people don't realize that the base of the monument is ringed with the names of Canadian men who died in France,"Waisersaid.

A man walks his dog through a paper poppy field outside the Menin Gate prior to a ceremony for Armistice Day in Ypres, Belgium, on Nov. 11. The Menin Gate Memorial bears the names of more than 54,000 British and Commonwealth soldiers who were killed in the Ypres Salient of World War I and whose graves are not known. (Virginia Mayo/Associated Press)

"Before you go, though you can go online and find out exactly what panel ... The walls of those cemeteries are covered with the names of the missing," he advised.

"70 per cent of Canada's war dead were killed by artillery. It was the big killer, the big guns. And a lot of people were never found, so the walls of the cemeteries might have the names of the missing."

Vimy monument and Menin Gate

The names of thousands of Allied soldiers who died in the First World War are etched on the walls of Menin Gate where a nightly ceremony is held in their honour. (Ellen Mauro/CBC)

"They're on the Vimy monument, or the other place you can go to is the Menin Gate in Ypres. There are 50,000 names of the missing on the Menin Gate in Ypres. And every night at Ypres, since 1928, every night at 8 o'clock without failure, except during Nazi occupation of Belgium, there's a ceremony. And it's remarkable because of the people that turn out for that ceremony every night regardless of the weather. They come from around the world to be there and remember the fallen."