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In memory of:

Private Rene L'Abbe (Labbé)

Military service

Service number: E/14869
Age: 21
Rank: Private
Force: Army
Unit/Regiment: Royal 22e Régiment, R.C.I.C.
Birth: June 9, 1922 Québec, Québec
Enlistment: August 11, 1941 Québec City, Québec
Death: October 9, 1943 near Campobasso, Italy

Burial/memorial information

Grave reference: III. D. 2.
Additional information

Baptized Joseph Hervé René Labbé. Son of Albert Labbé and Alphonsine Racine, of Québec City, Québec. Brother of Private Roméo Labbé, service number E-10435, who also fought in Europe. He survived the war.

He was first enlisted on September 12, 1940, at the 5th Military District Depot in Quebec City, under service number E-429507. On August 11, 1941, he also enlisted in Quebec City with the 2nd Divisional Ammo Company of the Royal Canadian Army Service Corps, under the same service number. On April 28, 1942, he transferred to the 1st Battalion of the Royal Canadian Army Service Corps, service number E-14869. In May 1942, he sailed for Great Britain, where he landed on the 12th in Greenock, Scotland. On August 22, he was assigned to the Régiment de la Chaudière until January 31, 1943, to temporarily relieve the 6th Canadian Infantry Reinforcement Unit. On February 25, he came under the command of the 1st Canadian Corps. On May 11, 1943, he was transferred to the 4th Battalion of the Royal 22nd Regiment. Assigned to the Mediterranean theater of operations with Force M on June 28, 1943, he embarked for Sicily on the 29th to take part in Operation Husky. He landed on the beaches on the 11th. On September 10, he set foot on the Italian mainland at Reggio di Calabria. He was killed in action on October 9, 1943, in the hills near Jelsi, Campobasso. He was buried on the 10th in Gambatesa. Around February 22, 1945, his remains were exhumed and reburied at the Moro River Cemetery in Ortona. He had served for 707 days, including 490 days overseas.
 

In the Books of Remembrance

Commemorated on:

Page 178 of the Second World War Book of Remembrance.
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MORO RIVER CANADIAN WAR CEMETERY Italy

By the winter of 1943, the German armies in Italy were defending a line stretching from the Tyrrhenian Sea north of Naples, to the Adriatic Sea south of Ortona. The Allies prepared to break through this line to capture Rome. For its part, the 1st Canadian Infantry Division was to cross the Moro River and take Ortona. In January 1944 the Canadian Corps selected this site, intending that it would contain the graves of those who died during the Ortona battle and in the fighting in the weeks before and after it. Today, there are 1,615 graves in the cemetery, of which over 50 are unidentified and 1,375 are Canadian.

The Moro River Canadian War Cemetery lies in the locality of San Donato in the Commune of Ortona, Province of Chieti, and is sited on high ground near the sea just east of the main Adriatic coast road (SS16). The cemetery can be reached from Rome on the autostrada A25 (Rome-Pescara) by branching on the autostrada A14 and leaving it at Ortona. The approach road to the cemetery from the main road passes under an arch forming part of the little church of San Donato. The cemetery is permanently open and may be visited anytime.

For more information, visit Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

 

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