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In memory of:

Sergeant Edward Charles Dunsford

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Military service

Service number: H/6382
Age: 44
Rank: Sergeant
Force: Army
Unit/Regiment: Winnipeg Grenadiers, R.C.I.C.
Birth: November 19, 1897 Tiverton, United Kingdom
Enlistment: September 18, 1939 Manitoba
Death: December 19, 1941 Mount Butler, Hong Kong

Burial/memorial information

Grave reference: Column 25.
Additional information
His full name is Edward Charles Dunsford.

Son of James Hewett Dunsford and Mary Jane Squire of Winnipeg, Manitoba. Husband in 1st marriage to Phylis Grace Smith, father of a daughter, Phyllis Joan Dunsford, in 2nd marriage to Hilda Mabel Calver. Father of Royal Canadian Air Force aviator Edward Frank Dunsford, regimental number R-56824, who survived World War II, and George Rex Dunsford. James Hewett (father of Edward Charles) fought in France in the First World War with the British Army, wounded in 1915, he was discharged after 287 days of service.

A World War I veteran, wounded in action in 1915 while serving with the 8th Battalion Queen's Own (Royal West Kent) Regiment of the British Army, regimental number 2518. During the Second World War, he enlisted with the Winnipeg Grenadiers - NPAM - from 1932 to 1939, assigned at his request to the regular forces of this regiment to serve in Manitoba, Jamaica with Y Force, Hong Kong with C Force. He had 824 days of service, including 53 overseas.

To commemorate his sacrifice, the Manitoba government named Dunsford Lake located north of Molson Lake in his honor in 1973.

In the Books of Remembrance

Commemorated on:

Page 29 of the Second World War Book of Remembrance.
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SAI WAN MEMORIAL Victoria, Hong Kong

This SAI WAN MEMORIAL honours over 2,000 men of the land forces of the British Commonwealth and Empire who died in the defence of Hong Kong during the Second World War.

The SAI WAN MEMORIAL is in the form of a shelter building 24 metres long and 5.5 metres wide. It stands at the entrance to Sai Wan Bay War Cemetery, outside Victoria, the capital of Hong Kong. From the semi-circular forecourt, two wide openings lead to the interior of the building. The names are inscribed on panels of Portland stone. The dedicatory inscription reads:


1939 - 1945 The officers and men whose memory is honoured here died in the defence of Hong Kong in December 1941 and in the ensuing years of captivity and have no known grave.

The northern side of the Memorial is open and four granite piers support the copper roof. From a commanding position 305 metres above sea level, it looks out over the War Cemetery where some 1,500 men lie buried, and across the water to Mainland China - a magnificent view of sea and mountains.

The Cape Collinson area has many cemeteries. Walking up this narrow one-way traffic road, one will pass the Catholic Cemetery situated on the hillside to the left of the road, and the Hong Kong Military Cemetery on the right. Sai Wan War Cemetery is about half way up Cape Collinson Road and faces the Muslim and Buddhist cemeteries.

One can also get a taxi from Chai Wan Terminus and follow the same route. Alternatively, one can board a public light bus, Route No.16M, which runs from Chai Wan MTR Terminus to Stanley. En route to Stanley the minibus will pass Sai Wan War Cemetery.

For more information, visit Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

 

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