Signalman J. Bennett of the 1st
Canadian Railway Telegraph Company
installing wire on pole in station
yards, Louvain, Belgium, 6 January
1945. |
| Photo
by Barney J. Gloster. Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-130257. |
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The mission of the Auxiliary Corps is to
provide the Armed Forces with all the supplies
and resources they need to do their job.
Many soldiers, who already had the required
skills when they enlisted, were directed
towards these corps. For others, it may
have been the opportunity to learn a new
trade. Some auxiliary corps, such as the
postal services, worked behind the lines
and, normally, did not t come under fire,
while others, signalmen for instance, were
assigned to combat units and shared the
life of regular troops. They all played
a vital role and they all faced the dangers
that an army can encounter when advancing
in enemy territory.
The Royal Canadian
Corps of Signals
Communications are a key concern for a
modern army, given the number and size of
the units that need to be coordinated. The
Royal Canadian Corps of Signals sets up
and maintains communication lines as required
between the staff and the troops: radio,
telephony, teletype, telegraph, motorcycle
messenger service.
The Canadian Provost Corps
An army on the march means huge concentrations
of men and vehicle of all sorts, advancing
on untested ground, taking roads that the
enemy may target at any time. In addition
to its police duty, the Canadian Prevost
Corps ensures road marking and safe circulation.

|
“Slow,
Dangerous Curves Ahead”.
Humour goes a long way when road
signs must be read by young men
– the majority of the Army.
No. 2 Canadian Provost Company
Corporal Ernie Nault of Meadow
Lake, Saskatchewan, puts up sign
along the road to Falaise, Normandy,
13 or 14 August 1944. |
| Photo
by Michael M. Dean. Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-131272. |
|
See John
Cameron’s Canadian Military Police
Virtual Museum.
The Canadian Postal Corps

The mail jeep of the “A”
Squadron of the Fort Garry Horse
making its first stop for deliveries
in France or Belgium, 11 October
1944. |
| Photo
by Michael M. Dean. Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-140198. |
|
Away from home, sometimes for years at
a stretch, men and women of the Canadian
Army rely on the Postal Corps to keep in
touch with their families. Maintaining that
precious link with loved ones boosts morale
and helps soldiers remain confident that
one day, they will make it back home. It
is the Postal Corps’ mission that
every single letter or parcel reach its
destination, whether in Canada, in Great
Britain, or “somewhere in Europe”.
The Canadian Forestry Corps
High
rigger atop spar tree, Canadian
Forestry Corps, Scotland, 1941.
|
| Department
of national Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-175325. |
|
An urgent need for lumberwood led to the
creation of a special service, the Canadian
Forestry Corps, in 1940. Its main task was
the exploitation of Scotland’s forests;
in 1943 it was 220 officers and 6,771 men
strong, posted in the British Isles. Starting
in 1944, the Forestry Corps had to provide
lumberwood for the invasion forces. Logs,
formed into rafts, were to be floated across
the Channel in the summer of 1944. But as
early as July of that year, Forestry Corps
men were sent over to the Continent, to
work in the forests at Cerisy (France),
Waterloo (Belgium), and in the Ardennes,
where German attacks forced them to retreat
in a hurry. They resumed work in Belgium,
and later, in the Reichswald and Hochwald
forests, where bloody battles had just been
fought.
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