Service militaire
Lieu de l’enterrement/commemoration
Galerie numérique de Lieutenant d'aviation Joseph Ash
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Galerie numérique de
Lieutenant d'aviation Joseph Ash
Joseph Ash is honoured on page 6 of the memorial book,<br>
CANADIAN JEWS IN WORLD WAR II, Part II: Casualties,<br>
compiled by David Rome for the Canadian Jewish Congress, Montreal, 1948. <br>
This extract is provided courtesy of the Canadian Jewish Congress which holds the copyright for this volume. For additional information about these archival records, please contact:<p>
The Canadian Jewish Congress National Archives <br>
1590 Ave. Docteur Penfield, Montreal, Que. H3G 1C5 (Canada)<br>
telephone: 514-931-7531 ex. 2 <br>
facsimile: 514-931-0548 <br>
website: www.cjc.ca
Galerie numérique de
Lieutenant d'aviation Joseph Ash
Ex-cadets are named on the Memorial Arch at the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston, Ontario and in memorial stained glass windows to fallen comrades.
2669 F/O Joseph Ash (RMC 1938) was educated at the Osgood Public School, Lisgar Collegiate, Ottawa Technical School and the Royal Military College. He served with the Royal Canadian Air Force, #5 Operational Training Unit. He was reported missing after air operations over the North Sea on Nov 2, 1942. He was presumed dead on Oct 9, 1943. His name is listed on the Runnymede Memorial, Surrey, United Kingdom. His name is listed on page 6 of the memorial book Canadian Jews in World War II.
Galerie numérique de
Lieutenant d'aviation Joseph Ash
Ex-cadets are named on the Memorial Arch at the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston, Ontario and in memorial stained glass windows to fallen comrades.
2669 F/O Joseph Ash (RMC 1938) was educated at the Osgood Public School, Lisgar Collegiate, Ottawa Technical School and the Royal Military College. He served with the Royal Canadian Air Force, #5 Operational Training Unit. He was reported missing after air operations over the North Sea on Nov 2, 1942. He was presumed dead on Oct 9, 1943. His name is listed on the Runnymede Memorial, Surrey, United Kingdom. His name is listed on page 6 of the memorial book Canadian Jews in World War II.
Galerie numérique de
Lieutenant d'aviation Joseph Ash
Ex-cadets are named on the Memorial Arch at the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston, Ontario and in memorial stained glass windows to fallen comrades.
2669 F/O Joseph Ash (RMC 1938) was educated at the Osgood Public School, Lisgar Collegiate, Ottawa Technical School and the Royal Military College. He served with the Royal Canadian Air Force, #5 Operational Training Unit. He was reported missing after air operations over the North Sea on Nov 2, 1942. He was presumed dead on Oct 9, 1943. His name is listed on the Runnymede Memorial, Surrey, United Kingdom. His name is listed on page 6 of the memorial book Canadian Jews in World War II.
Galerie numérique de
Lieutenant d'aviation Joseph Ash
A beautiful monument was installed in 2015 at the Jewish Community Cemetery on Bank Street, honouring those brave men of the Ottawa Jewish Community who fought and lost their lives in war. The three panel granite monument lists Ottawa community members who served and fell in the Great War, World War II, Israeli War of Independence and while on active duty with the Israeli Army.
Galerie numérique de
Lieutenant d'aviation Joseph Ash
Joseph Ash
1920 - 1942
Pilot Officer Joseph Ash was born in Ottawa in 1920 to Mr. And Mrs. Abraham Ash.
He was the first Ottawa Jewish person to attend the Royal Military College, Kingston. Joseph Ash resigned his commission in the army and enlisted in the air force where he expected more action. He trained at St. Hubert, Quebec, Chatham, New Brunswick, Summerside, Prince Edward Island and graduated from the Initial Training School in April, 1942. Flying Officer Ash went overseas in May, 1942 and was attached to an R.A.F. Training Flight.
Ash was reported missing over the North Sea on November 2, 1942.
#LestWeForget
Galerie d'images
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Joseph Ash is honoured on page 6 of the memorial book,<br> CANADIAN JEWS IN WORLD WAR II, Part II: Casualties,<br> compiled by David Rome for the Canadian Jewish Congress, Montreal, 1948. <br> This extract is provided courtesy of the Canadian Jewish Congress which holds the copyright for this volume. For additional information about these archival records, please contact:<p> The Canadian Jewish Congress National Archives <br> 1590 Ave. Docteur Penfield, Montreal, Que. H3G 1C5 (Canada)<br> telephone: 514-931-7531 ex. 2 <br> facsimile: 514-931-0548 <br> website: www.cjc.ca
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Ex-cadets are named on the Memorial Arch at the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston, Ontario and in memorial stained glass windows to fallen comrades. 2669 F/O Joseph Ash (RMC 1938) was educated at the Osgood Public School, Lisgar Collegiate, Ottawa Technical School and the Royal Military College. He served with the Royal Canadian Air Force, #5 Operational Training Unit. He was reported missing after air operations over the North Sea on Nov 2, 1942. He was presumed dead on Oct 9, 1943. His name is listed on the Runnymede Memorial, Surrey, United Kingdom. His name is listed on page 6 of the memorial book Canadian Jews in World War II.
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Ex-cadets are named on the Memorial Arch at the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston, Ontario and in memorial stained glass windows to fallen comrades. 2669 F/O Joseph Ash (RMC 1938) was educated at the Osgood Public School, Lisgar Collegiate, Ottawa Technical School and the Royal Military College. He served with the Royal Canadian Air Force, #5 Operational Training Unit. He was reported missing after air operations over the North Sea on Nov 2, 1942. He was presumed dead on Oct 9, 1943. His name is listed on the Runnymede Memorial, Surrey, United Kingdom. His name is listed on page 6 of the memorial book Canadian Jews in World War II.
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Ex-cadets are named on the Memorial Arch at the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston, Ontario and in memorial stained glass windows to fallen comrades. 2669 F/O Joseph Ash (RMC 1938) was educated at the Osgood Public School, Lisgar Collegiate, Ottawa Technical School and the Royal Military College. He served with the Royal Canadian Air Force, #5 Operational Training Unit. He was reported missing after air operations over the North Sea on Nov 2, 1942. He was presumed dead on Oct 9, 1943. His name is listed on the Runnymede Memorial, Surrey, United Kingdom. His name is listed on page 6 of the memorial book Canadian Jews in World War II.
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2432 F/L John Okeden Alexander (RMC 1934) served with the Royal Air Force. He died on Oct 21, 1941. He was buried in the Helensburgh Cemetery in Dunbartonshire, United Kingdom 7. Grave 3. Sec. R. Walk.
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Inscription - Runnymede Memorial - April 2017 … photo courtesy of Marg Liessens
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Remembered on the pages of the Ottawa Journal. Submitted for the project, Operation Picture Me
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Remembered on the pages of the Ottawa Journal. Submitted for the project, Operation Picture Me
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Remembered on the pages of the Ottawa Journal. Submitted for the project, Operation Picture Me
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Remembered on the pages of the Ottawa Journal. Submitted for the project, Operation Picture Me
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Remembered on the pages of the Ottawa Journal. Submitted for the project, Operation Picture Me
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A beautiful monument was installed in 2015 at the Jewish Community Cemetery on Bank Street, honouring those brave men of the Ottawa Jewish Community who fought and lost their lives in war. The three panel granite monument lists Ottawa community members who served and fell in the Great War, World War II, Israeli War of Independence and while on active duty with the Israeli Army.
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Joseph Ash 1920 - 1942 Pilot Officer Joseph Ash was born in Ottawa in 1920 to Mr. And Mrs. Abraham Ash. He was the first Ottawa Jewish person to attend the Royal Military College, Kingston. Joseph Ash resigned his commission in the army and enlisted in the air force where he expected more action. He trained at St. Hubert, Quebec, Chatham, New Brunswick, Summerside, Prince Edward Island and graduated from the Initial Training School in April, 1942. Flying Officer Ash went overseas in May, 1942 and was attached to an R.A.F. Training Flight. Ash was reported missing over the North Sea on November 2, 1942. #LestWeForget
Dans les livres du souvenir
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Page 55 du Livre du Souvenir de la Seconde Guerre mondiale.
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MÉMORIAL DE RUNNYMEDE Surrey, Royaume-Uni
Au cours de la Seconde Guerre mondiale, plus de cent seize mille hommes et femmes des forces aériennes du Commonwealth britannique sont morts au champ d'honneur. Plus de dix-sept mille d'entre eux étaient membres de l'Aviation royale canadienne ou des Canadiens qui servaient dans la Royal Air Force. Presque un tiers des morts n'ont pas de sépulture connue. De ce total, vingt mille quatre cent cinquante sont commémorés par nom au Mémorial de Runnymede situé à Englefield Green, près d'Egham, à trente-deux kilomètres à l'ouest de Londres.
L'architecture du Mémorial de Runnymede est originale et impressionnante. La pierre du Souvenir repose au centre d'un cloître qui domine une tour carrée perchée sur le sommet de la colline de Cooper qui surplombe la Tamise. Les allées du cloître aboutissent à deux observatoires, l'un donnant sur Windsor, l'autre sur l'aéroport de Londres à Heathrow. Les trois mille cinquante aviateurs canadiens tués au combat sont parmi ceux dont les noms sont gravés sur les revers de pierre des fenêtres étroites des allées cloîtrées et des observatoires.
Au-dessus de l'entrée à trois arches qui conduit au cloître, trône un aigle de pierre surmonté de la devise de la Royal Air Force «Per Ardua ad Astra». De chaque côté, figure une inscription en anglais dont voici la traduction :
« CE CLOÎTRE HONORE LES NOMS DE 20 000 AVIATEURS SANS SÉPULTURE CONNUE QUI SONT MORTS POUR LA LIBERTÉ LORS DES OPÉRATIONS AÉRIENNES AU-DESSUS DES ÎLES BRITANNIQUES, ET DES TERRES ET MERS DU NORD ET DE L'OUEST DE L'EUROPE. »
Dans la tour se trouve un sanctuaire voûté, paisible et propice à la méditation. On peut y lire, orné d'enluminures, un extrait d'un poème anglais de Paul H. Scott.
Pour plus d’informations, visitez la Commission des sépultures de guerre du Commonwealth (site disponible en anglais seulement).
L’image du coquelicot est une marque déposée de la Légion royale canadienne (Direction nationale) et est utilisée avec sa permission. Cliquez ici pour en savoir plus sur le coquelicot.
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