| John
Arthur Shreve Alexander was born on the Six Nations Indian
Reservation near Brantford, Ontario on April 3, 1918. His
father, Arthur Harding Alexander, was teaching school there
at the time. His grandfather, John Henry Alexander, had
taught school at the King Street School in Amherstburg,
Ontario during the late 1800's and early 1900's. His great
grandfather, Thomas Alexander, was a fugitive slave who
escaped from a plantation in Kentucky and settled in Anderdon
Township near Amherstburg, Ontario in the 1840's.
John
Arthur Shreve Alexander was in A Company of The Queen's
Own Rifles, on the first Canadian ship to hit Juno beach
at Normandy on D-Day. It is possible he was the first Canadian
soldier on the beach for his first task was to blow up the
barbed wire entanglement along the beach. He fought through
France, Holland, England, Italy, and Germany. He was wounded
several times and returned a highly decorated war veteran.
His acts of bravery are documented historical fact housed
in the War Memorial Archives in Toronto, Ontario. The following
is his war story which appeared in McLeans magazine June
6, 1994:
Nervously
Waiting at Home: The hedgerows and hills of Normandy
are far removed from the gently rolling southwestern Ontario
countryside where John and Jean Alexander lived in their
cozy ranch house just outside North Buxton. But the memories
of the events 50 years earlier, when John Alexander was
a young rifleman fighting on French soil, are still vivid.
The couple were married in Jean's hometown of Chatham, Ont.
on Dec. 30, 1942, just eight months before Cpl. John Alexander
left for England. Once there, the 24-year-old former railway
porter was assigned to The Queen's Own Rifles of Canada,
then stationed in Aldershot, southwest of London. But that
posting would have been news to his 18-year-old bride. "I
wrote letters to him all the time, but he rarely wrote to
me," Jean Alexander, 70, says now with a chuckle. And
it would be a long time after June 6, 1944, before she knew
what part he played in the invasion of Normandy. "It
wasn't like today, where you hear about things almost as
soon as they happen," she says. "News about D-Day
trickled in. We heard bits on the radio, saw some newsreel
footage at the cinema."
John,
now 76, continues to work four days a week as a barber,
the occupation he took up after the war. Their four grown
children and seven grandchildren, meanwhile, are regular
visitors. But during the war, Jean lived with her parents
while her husband was overseas. During the day, she worked
at an airplane parts facility with 29 other women and two
men. "We waxed the parts so they wouldn't get rusty
when they were being shipped overseas," she says. "It
was boring." In the summer, she also worked three evenings
a week at a tomato-canning factory. "I never knew when-or-if
I would see my husband again," she says.
When
D-Day arrived, life was anything but routine for John Alexander.
Once on the beach at Courseulles-sur-mer, his job was to
blow up some barbed wire entanglements. But shelling from
the ships had already done the job. "It didn't take
any time at all to get over the beach and into a railroad
ditch," Alexander says. Even so, only one-third of
his 33-member platoon made it to the relative safety of
that ditch; enemy fire mowed down the other 22 young men.
The survivors then moved about 11 km. inland, where they
rested briefly. "My buddy Jack Bailey from Galt (now
Cambridge), Ont., was hit and killed," Alexander remembers.
"I was lying right beside him."
Alexander's
luck continued. After dark, he and two other men were sent
to stand guard, about 100 metres in front of the rest of
the platoon. Spending a sleepless night, they fired into
the darkness whenever they heard a noise. "We were
firing from the hip because we couldn't see to aim,"
Alexander explains. When their sergeant major checked on
them at daybreak, he found two dead German soldiers just
two metres away.
That
September, Jean Alexander received distressing news: her
husband had been injured. "The telegram said that he
had been "seriously" injured," she says.
"There were no other details." But as she learned
after the war when John returned home, that information
was wrong. Her husband had suffered a broken bone in the
wrist after being struck by shrapnel and was able to return
soon afterward to his regiment. Improbably, a second telegram
informed Jean Alexander the following February that John
had been "slightly wounded," when in fact he was
out of action for three months after being shot in the back
and thigh.
The
extent of those injuries did not become clear until 1952,
when John was playing with their oldest daughter, Pam, then
2 1/2 years old. "She whacked her Daddy on the bum,"
says Jean Alexander. "That drove a piece of lead that
had been lodged there right up into his hip joint."
The memory of the pain still makes John Alexander wince.
"They hadn't X-rayed me during the war, so nobody knew
the lead was there," he says. "When they X-rayed
me in 1952, they also found a piece of lead in my right
lung." Because of the way each fragment was positioned,
doctors decided not to remove them. They remain to this
day, silent reminders of the ravages of war.
Sources:
(1) Barbara Wickens in North Buxton
(2) McLeans magazine June 6, 1994
(3) Alvin McCurdy Collection, Ontario Historical Archive
(4) Oral History - John Arthur Shreve Alexander - Spencer
Alexander (son)
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