Canadian Forces in 🇺🇸 Profile picture
Aug 7, 2021 11 tweets 4 min read Read on X
When Alex Decoteau lay dead on a battlefield in Belgium, an enemy sniper stole his most prized possession. Image
After he survived Battleford Industrial School, Alex moved to Edmonton and became Canada’s first Indigenous police officer. Image
He won several races and earned a spot on the Canadian Olympic Team.

He finished sixth in the 5,000 metres at the 1912 #Olympics in Stockholm. Image
Alex Decoteau was one of Canada's best runners.

Then he signed up. Image
While training for the war, he kept running. When he won a five-mile race in England, the trophy hadn’t yet arrived.

In lieu of the trophy, King George V gave Alex his own pocket watch. Image
A month before he died, he wrote his last letter home.

“…we are all aching and longing for our own beloved Canada. Of course there's work to be done yet and I spose I will stay there till it is finished.” Image
He carried his watch as he ran messages at the front. He carried it everywhere.

It was in his pocket when he stood in the mud of Passchendaele in October 1917.

It was in his pocket when a sniper’s bullet halted Alex Decoteau. He was 29 years old. Image
He had left everything to his sister. His widowed mother couldn't read, and he heard stories about Canada not supporting its own.

"I'm afraid they would take advantage of her... And by the stories going around some poor fellows have a hard time getting what's coming to them." Image
His prized watch?

Alex’s brothers found the sniper and stopped his looting for good.

They recovered the watch from the sniper's pocket and sent it home to Alex’s mother. Image
He survived the place Canada called school. He ran for Canada. He fought for Canada.

Cree Olympian. Our fallen brother.

Please remember Alexander Wuttunee Decoteau. Image
We see you, brother.

mypoppy.ca Image

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More from @CAFinUS

Sep 22, 2022
He dropped behind enemy lines on D-Day with the Screaming Eagles, his brothers.

He stared down the enemy in Belgium, Holland, and Germany.

He saw the horrors of the camps and helped take Hitler’s house in the mountains of Bavaria. ImageImage
Jim “Pee Wee” Martin, 101, died earlier this month. Image
“I’ve been there and I’ve done that.”

Things and places didn’t impress him, he would say. “What I like, are the people that I know.” Image
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Aug 23, 2022
With his Jewish mother weeping after hearing her brothers and sisters were murdered by the Nazis, Alex Polowin wondered what he could do. He wanted to try to help her remaining relatives.

“I felt I owed it to them try to save their lives.”
Born to a Jewish family in Lithuania, his parents brought him to Canada when he was three years old.

14 years later, in the middle of the Second World War, he lied about his age to enlist in the Navy.
As he and his shipmates protected the supply routes from U-Boats, he stared down antisemitism.

Fighting the Nazis on the Atlantic crossing, the Murmansk Run, off Normandy on D-Day. Fighting the intolerance of his own shipmates.

He had to fight Canadians to keep fighting Nazis.
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Aug 16, 2022
Airborne!
When his father took him to the train to head off to the war, he looked him in the eye and said words Vince Speranza never forgot. As he was about to jump for the first time, those words came rushing back.

"Son, don't do anything to shame the family."
When they were surrounded by the Nazis in Bastogne, his wounded friend asked him for a drink. He scoured the bombed out local taverns until he found the fruitful tap.

Vince filled his helmet with beer and brought it back to Joe Willis.

"Aid and comfort to the wounded."
Read 6 tweets
Aug 8, 2022
A combat medic when the Americans stared down Nazis in the frozen Ardennes, he saw everything and carried it home. His wish for his 100th birthday?

To hear Bach’s Toccata and Fugue in D minor on the church organ. But he died the day before his celebration.

Rest, Robert Heinzen. Image
To remember him, the show went on.

The show must go on.
“He never spoke of it. He just never wanted to speak about it. He kept it to himself.”
chicago.suntimes.com/obituaries/202…
Read 4 tweets
Jul 28, 2022
Stoker 1st Class Ernest Howell likely wouldn't have been in Panama that night if his father hadn't died two years earlier back in Nova Scotia.
Born to Newfoundlanders in Cape Breton, Ernest headed across the pond to serve in the Merchant Navy when he was 18 years old.

Three years later he was in the Royal Navy.
Ernest was a stoker aboard HMS Duke when his father was killed in an accident back home, prompting this request from his mother.
Read 12 tweets
Jul 20, 2022
Frank Slade was helping his Aunt Ethel run her gas station in Goldsboro, North Carolina, when there was a knock on the door.

Two men told him he had a choice between joining the U.S. Army for the Korean War or returning to Canada.

What did he do? Image
He returned to Canada. But at the Horseshoe Tavern in Toronto, he bumped into a buddy from Newfoundland.

Don Penney was in a Canadian Army uniform and about to head to Korea. He told Frank to join him.

The next day, Frank Slade signed up. Image
Frank and Don were from fishing villages in Newfoundland, their childhood far removed from the conflicts they read about in the newspapers and heard on the radio.

Frank's first job was carrying messages to people in town who didn't yet have telephones. His pay?

Food. Clothing.
Read 16 tweets

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