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In memory of:

Private Damase Dubé

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Vimy Memorial

Military service

Service number: 449008
Age: 34
Rank: Private
Force: Army
Unit/Regiment: Canadian Machine Gun Corps
Division: 2nd Bn.
Birth: January 9, 1884 Ottawa, Ontario
Enlistment: January 10, 1916
Death: August 28, 1918 East Of Arras, France

Burial/memorial information

Additional information
Son of Damase Dubé and Albina Cardinal, of Eastview (Vanier), Ontario. He stated being born in 1883 when he enlisted.

Upon his arrival in France on 28 September 1916, Damase Dubé had been assigned to the 22nd Battalion. He was wounded to the hip at Vimy on 13 April 1917 and spent seven month in England to recover. When he returned in France, he spent three months with reinforcements and re-joined the 22nd Battalion in mid-February 1918. Then, after the creation of the Canadian Machine Gun Corps, an elite formation, he volunteered and was transferred with them on 1 May. Four months later, he was killed in action during the Canadian Corps offensive on the Drocourt-Quéant line, East of Arras.

In the Books of Remembrance

Commemorated on:

Page 400 of the First World War Book of Remembrance.
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VIMY MEMORIAL Pas de Calais, France

Canada's most impressive tribute overseas to those Canadians who fought and gave their lives in the First World War is the majestic and inspiring Vimy Memorial, which overlooks the Douai Plain from the highest point of Vimy Ridge, about eight kilometres northeast of Arras on the N17 towards Lens. The Memorial is signposted from this road to the left, just before you enter the village of Vimy from the south. The memorial itself is someway inside the memorial park, but again it is well signposted. At the base of the memorial, these words appear in French and in English:

TO THE VALOUR OF THEIR COUNTRYMEN IN THE GREAT WAR AND IN MEMORY OF THEIR SIXTY THOUSAND DEAD THIS MONUMENT IS RAISED BY THE PEOPLE OF CANADA


Inscribed on the ramparts of the Vimy Memorial are the names of over 11,000 Canadian soldiers who were posted as 'missing, presumed dead' in France.

A plaque at the entrance to the memorial states that the land for the battlefield park, 91.18 hectares in extent, was 'the free gift in perpetuity of the French nation to the people of Canada'. Construction of the massive work began in 1925, and 11 years later, on July 26, 1936, the monument was unveiled by King Edward VIII.

The park surrounding the Vimy Memorial was created by horticultural experts. Canadian trees and shrubs were planted in great masses to resemble the woods and forests of Canada. Wooded parklands surround the grassy slopes of the approaches around the Vimy Memorial. Trenches and tunnels have been restored and preserved and the visitor can picture the magnitude of the task that faced the Canadian Corps on that distant dawn when history was made.

On April 3, 2003, the Government of Canada designated April 9th of each year as a national day of remembrance of the Battle of Vimy Ridge.

For more information, visit Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

 

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