The Canadian Guards
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Canadian Guards | |
---|---|
Cap Badge of the Canadian Guards |
|
Active | 1953-1970 |
Country | Canada |
Branch | Army |
Type | Foot Guards |
Size | Two battalions |
Part of | Royal Canadian Infantry Corps |
Motto | A mari usque ad mare (From Sea to Sea) |
March | Quick: The Standard of St. George Slow: From Sea to Sea |
Commanders | |
Colonel in Chief | HM The Queen |
Insignia | |
Tartan | Royal Stewart (pipes and drums) |
The Canadian Guards was an infantry regiment of the Canadian Army that served in the same role as the five regiments of Foot Guards in the British Army. The regiment was formed in 1953 by the redesignation of four separate battalions:
- 3rd Battalion, Royal Canadian Regiment - 1st Battalion
- 3rd Battalion, Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry - 2nd Battalion
- 1st Canadian Infantry Battalion - 3rd Battalion
- 2nd Canadian Infantry Battalion - 4th Battalion
A year later, a militia component was added, when the Governor General's Foot Guards and Canadian Grenadier Guards became the 5th and 6th Battalions.
Throughout their existences the regular components of the Canadian Guards maintained a regimental band as well as pipes and drums. In common with the pipes and drums of the Scots Guards in the British Army, pipers of the Canadian Guards were granted the privilege to wear the British Royal Family's household tartan--the Royal Stuart tartan.
The 3rd and 4th Battalions were disbanded in 1957 to make way for two armoured regiments, leaving the 1st and 2nd Battalions in the Regular Force. In the late 1960s, as part of a reorganization of the Canadian Army, it was decided to disband the Canadian Guards. The 1st Battalion was disbanded in 1968, and the 2nd Battalion in 1970. The role of Household Troops was then passed to the two surviving militia units, which resumed their separate identities in 1976.
Col. Strome Galloway, who commanded the Guards' 4th Battalion from 1955-57 and was the first and last regimental Lieutenant-Colonel, believed that the disbanding of the Guards was a "political decision" by powerful "francophone" elements. "Our crime," Galloway wrote, "was that we were 'too British' in uniform and character to pass muster with the Francophone hierarchy which dominated the Defence Department at the time. The Unification program was the official excuse, but the program itself was partly a gimmick to 'Americanize' the Canadian forces and eliminate, as far as possible, the British traditions of the past." See Strome Galloway, The General Who Never Was (Belleville, Ontario: Mika, 1981), page 277.