The Sappers' War: 12th Field Company Royal Canadian Engineers, Oct 1943 to Sept 1945, now available on Amazon
Note: The book is currently available in Kindle form ($3.99), and will soon be available in a paperback version, also available on Amazon. A free promotional version will be available during the Remembrance Day week, Nov 8-12, for those on a limited budget.
Are you a history buff, particularly interested in World War 2? Or, did you have a family member or other relative participate in the conflict and are therefore curious about their experiences? If so, you might want to read about the journey of a military engineering company, throughout their time in action during the war.
The book focuses on one particular company of soldier/sappers in the Canadian Army, but many of their experiences would be common to any of the Allied units in the European theatre. Some of the major battles in which they were involved included Ortona, Monte Casino, the Gothic Line, the battles for Ravenna and the Po Valley, the Liberation of Holland and final defeat of the Third Reich.
In addition, some content relates to the experiences of civilians in Britain during that time. Appendices also look at some of the details of military engineering (e.g. bridging, mines, storm boats, the M-test), casualties, the Aldershot Riots and other issues of post-war rehabilitation and return to civilian life.
Much of the material comes from company war diaries and related materials, though a brief sketch of the wider campaigns relevant to the experience of these men is included, as are some interesting side-bars (e.g. the unit served alongside the celebrated irregulars known as Popski’s Private Army during their time in Northern Italy). To get a more “micro” feel for the on-site experiences of the time, some of my own family’s stories are related (a soldier/sapper, a war bride/war worker, a P.O.W., and an Atlantic convoy merchant marine sailor, among others). The summations of the War Diaries also include much interesting information about day-to-day life, both military and non-military.
So, grab your Lee-Enfield rifle and your mine-detector, and check out the life of a war-time sapper.
U.S.: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09HSXN6Q2
U.K.: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B09HSXN6Q2
Germany: https://www.amazon.de/dp/B09HSXN6Q2
France: https://www.amazon.fr/dp/B09HSXN6Q2
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Italy: https://www.amazon.it/dp/B09HSXN6Q2
Netherlands: https://www.amazon.nl/dp/B09HSXN6Q2
Japan: https://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/B09HSXN6Q2
Brazil: https://www.amazon.com.br/dp/B09HSXN6Q2
Canada: https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B09HSXN6Q2
Mexico: https://www.amazon.com.mx/dp/B09HSXN6Q2
Australia: https://www.amazon.com.au/dp/B09HSXN6Q2
India: https://www.amazon.in/dp/B09HSXN6Q2
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The Sappers' War: 12th Field Company Royal Canadian Engineers, Oct 1943 to Sept 1945
What follows is a review of the history of
the 12th Field Company, Royal Canadian Engineers, primarily relating to the
time that the company was in the Italian and Northwestern European theatres
during World War II. Though the book focuses on the experiences of a particular
company of Canadian military engineers, it also discusses some of the wider
issues of the second world war and how it affected the people who lived through
the era, civilian and military. Among those are my father (a sapper or military
engineer) and mother (a war worker in wartime Britain and ultimately a war
bride).
Thus, this is meant to be an informal and unofficial history of the company,
written by an interested party in an effort to understand what these men went
through during this period, and how that experience affected them and other
people who lived through the war. The military aspects of the company's history
are there (e.g. fighting, building bridges, detecting mines, maintaining
routes), as are the cultural factors that influenced them and their times (e.g.
the movies that they watched, the drinking they did, the many diseases they
faced, their interactions with the Italian, British and other civilians that
they lived among, their worries for the future). Some focus on life on the British
home front is also given, via the experiences of my mother and her family.
Since many people had family and relations that lived during this time, it is
my hope that the account will be of general interest to them, and to any that
have a particular interest in this critical interval in history. Also, though
the text relates specifically to Canadian sappers, I believe that many of the
experiences will be common to the soldiers and loved ones of other nations who
lived through the war, especially Americans and those from Britain and the
British Commonwealth.
The primary sources of this document are the 12th Field Company War Diaries and
related orders, with some material from The History of the Corps of Royal
Canadian Engineers, Volume 2 as well as various official histories by
the Department of National Defence. Various other published sources are used as
well, especially when discussing the wider issues of the war or the army
experience (e.g. Churchill’s history of the war) , or conversely when relating
very specific episodes of the war (e.g. Popski’s Private Army in late 1944).
Personal accounts of my father’s or mother’s stories also augment the
narrative. I have tried to fit those in during appropriate time periods, though
some stories are more general and have therefore don’t necessarily relate to
the time period being discussed. Nonetheless, they do help capture the essence
of “being there” during the war years.
The War Diary is a day by day account of the primary activities of a given
unit, as recorded by personnel in the headquarters staff of that unit, and
signed off by the commander of the unit. As such, it is an official record,
though the writers often brought a bit of their own character into the
document. Naturally, as a relatively brief document it can’t hope to capture
the complexity of the individual stories of 280 or so men, so the family lore
generally has no corresponding entry in the War Diary, though there are
sometimes tantalizing hints and near-verifications of these personal accounts.
There are a number of other sources for the book, from official histories to
popular history books. I include quotations and references from these works (an
eclectic mix), as I believe that they also shed light on different aspects of
this period of time, and besides that, are just interesting accounts, in and of
themselves.
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