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Canadian Expeditionary
Force Study Group
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| Component: |
207th Infantry Battalion |
| Active Dates: |
1916 - 1920 |
| Theatre of Operations: |
France and Flanders (once absorbed and dispersed) |
| Major Battles /
Battle Honours: |
Mount Sorrel; Somme 1916; Ancre Heights; Ancre
1916; Arras 1917, 1918; Vimy 1917; Ypres 1917; Passchendaele;
Amiens; Scarpe 1918; Drocourt-Quéant Line; Hindenburg Line;
Canal due Nord; Valenciennes; Sambre. |
| Location of War Diaries: |
 | Library and Archives Canada (WD Link) |
 | CEFSG War Diary Transcription
(in progress = IP) |
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Background:
| Stewart notes that the 207th of Ottawa, Ontario
was absorbed by the 6th Reserve Battalion to provide
reinforcements in the field. Love states that it was
absorbed by the 7th Reserve Battalion. Perhaps not a
conflict as Love also notes elsewhere that the 7th Reserve
Battalion was absorbed by the 6th Reserve Battalion.
Provided by Al C:
Organized at Ottawa by Lt
Col Charles Wesley MacLean with members recruited by the
43rd Regiment "Duke of Cornwall's Own Rifles"
and volunteers from Carleton Co. and environs beginning in
February 1916. Initial training was conducted at
Rockcliffe Camp at which time the battalion earned its
unofficial nickname "MacLean's Athletes" due to its
participation in sports, especially rugby and baseball.
Additional training was done at Amherst N. S. from January
1917; the battalion sailed from Halifax with a strength
of 27 officers and 652 men on June 2, 1917. The 207th
was absorbed by the 7th Reserve Bn, most members of the 207th
being used to reinforce the PPCLI, 2nd, 21st and 38th
battalions all of which had Ottawa / Eastern Ontario origins,
individual members would, however, serve several other units
including the 4th, 5th, 20th 24th, 75th, 102nd, and 156th
Infantry Battalions as well as the 2nd and 3rd Tunneling
Co. C.E.
While in training at Rockcliffe
Camp, the Battalion published a periodical "The
WhizBang", 19 issues of which are in the collection of
the National Library at Ottawa.
There are a number of documents
(40 references) relating to the 207th Battalion listed in the
Library and Archives database:
Additional information, in great
detail provided by Ken Reynolds:
http://www.cefresearch.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=3293&highlight=
While the 38th Battalion
prepared to sail to England and to the war, the 207th
Battalion, the other Canadian Expeditionary Force unit
integral to the wartime experience of the Camerons, was still
in the recruiting and initial training stages back home in
Ottawa.
The 207th (Ottawa-Carleton) Overseas Battalion, CEF, was
organized on February 1, 1916, under the command of
Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Wesley MacLean. MacLean was a
Montrealer, a pre-war officer with the 13th Scottish Light
Dragoons, and had already served overseas during the war with
the Canadian Army Service Corps in the 2nd Canadian Division.
Headquartered in Ottawa, the 207th's recruiting area was
defined primarily as Carleton County, although recruits did
come to the unit from the city as well.
Like many of the later infantry battalions, the 207th was
largely created through the efforts of a single man or a
handful of individuals trying to raise a formed unit for
service overseas. Starting in February 1916,
Lieutenant-Colonel MacLean and his officers successfully
recruited enough soldiers to man the 207th. A total of 1,400
recruits signed on with the battalion, 600 of whom were
eventually rejected for service on various medical or
disciplinary grounds.
The 207th received an even larger proportion of its personnel
from the 43rd Regiment (men who were either members of the
regiment at that time or who were recruited by it for overseas
service) than the 38th had when it was raised one year
earlier. After the war, statistics would reveal that of the
1,400 men who tried to join the 207th Battalion, 724 came from
the 43rd. This included seventeen of the twenty-seven officers
that sailed with the battalion when it left Canada in June
1917. Among the 43rd's representatives in the officer corps
were Major Fred Demille Burpee (officer commanding No. 1
Company), Major Charles Erich Stewart (officer commanding No.
3 Company), Captain John Gordon MacLachlan (adjutant),
Honorary Captain Francis Chevers McElroy (quartermaster and
acting paymaster), Captain John Lewis McInnes (chaplain and
platoon commander), and Lieutenant Edward Thomas Mennie
(officer commanding Machine Gun Section).
Bringing the 207th up to strength was much more difficult that
it had been for the earlier units attempting to recruit men in
the Ottawa area. The formation of the Princess Patricia’s
Canadian Light Infantry, the 2nd, 21st, 38th, and 77th
Battalions, and legions of combat support units had absorbed
much of the local male population of fighting age long before
the spring of 1916. With a geographically large recruiting
area to draw from, Lieutenant-Colonel MacLean was forced to
purchase four cars out of his own pocket to allow his
recruiting officers to properly carry out their duties. He
also proposed the construction of a model redoubt (a small
fortress) as a recruiting attraction on Connaught Place, a
wide bridge and park area running along what is now Wellington
Street between Parliament and the Chateau Laurier. The redoubt
was to be placed approximately where the National War Memorial
now stands and was to be built by the local Engineer Training
Depot using 2,500 sandbags. While the engineers were eager for
the practice the project would give their sappers it was,
ultimately, turned down by higher militia authorities, as it
was “not thought that the expense is justified.”
The soldiers of the 207th were placed in barracks in Ottawa.
While recruiting proceeded, medical examinations were carried
out and the sub-unit infrastructure was formed. Early
training, including basic drill, care of weapons, and rapid
fire and fire discipline techniques, was carried out at the
battalion’s headquarters in a building on the corner of
Albert and Metcalfe Streets. The soldiers were provided with
uniforms and issued kit and weapons, including the Ross rifle.
On June 26 the 207th gathered its personnel together and
marched off to Rockcliffe Camp for battalion-level training.
While in Rockcliffe the battalion carried out route marches
during the day and at night, about twice a week. Some of these
were as long as thirty kilometres, “with no ill effects to
the men”. Perhaps somewhat naively, a later report on the
marches noted: “They were found of great benefit in getting
the men accustomed to long marches, also giving them a good
idea as to the actual war conditions, as far as could be
arranged during training in Canada.”
Much of the training focused on rifle practice. The soldiers
used the rifle range on a daily basis and every one of them
(except for the “lately joined recruits”) was able to fire
at least twenty rounds there. In total, 600 members of the
battalion were able to complete the British fourteen-week long
Syllabus for Infantry course during their time at Rockcliffe.
The 207th also formed a machine gun section in June 1916, its
twenty-three personnel becoming fully qualified on Colt and
Lewis machine guns while in camp.
The 207th was also kept busy with other duties, such as
inspections by the Governor General, the Duke of Connaught, on
August 10 and October 6, 1916. On September 1, 100 soldiers
and the battalion’s bands formed a guard of honour at the
laying of the cornerstone for the new Parliament Buildings
being constructed to replace the buildings which had burned
down the previous February. Other guards of honour were also
supplied in late 1916 and early 1917 before the battalion left
the city. Also notable during the 207th’s time in Rockcliffe
was the publication of a regimental newsletter, “The Whizz
Bang”, nineteen issues of which were produced by the
battalion between July 1 and November 4, 1916.
The battalion incorporated both brass and bugle bands. The
brass band was led by a member of the 43rd Regiment,
Lieutenant J.M. Brown, and included twenty-two members, while
the bugle band was forty-two strong. Used primarily for
recruiting purposes, both bands also provided “the necessary
music for marching, whenever required.”
However, the 207th was best known for what it truly
specialized at, aside from soldiering. This was sports, an
activity which gave the battalion the nickname "MacLean's
Athletes". Rugby was the unit's particular speciality. On
October 14, 1916, the 207th's rugby team crushed the Queen’s
University team by a score of 43-8. It travelled to Hamilton
at the end of the month, beating the Hamilton Tigers (the
205th Battalion’s team) by a score of 32-3 and later
defeated the Tigers in Lansdowne Park by a score of 24-8. By
the end of the year the 207th was the champion of the Khaki
Interprovincial Rugby Football League. The battalion’s
baseball team won the city of Ottawa baseball league
championship the same year.
After nearly four months of initial training, the battalion
left Rockcliffe, returning to its Ottawa barracks on October
20. Like the 38th Battalion, the 207th was presented with
battalion Colours on Parliament Hill. Lieutenant-General Sam
Hughes, in his final public act as Minister of Militia,
presented the Colours, a gift from the American Bank Note
Company, a local firm, on November 18, 1916.
Despite all of his efforts to form a fighting battalion,
Lieutenant-Colonel MacLean still did not know what the fate of
his unit would be within the Canadian Expeditionary Force. In
hindsight, it's easy to see that the 207th was destined to be
a reinforcement unit for front-line Canadian units. By
mid-December MacLean had discovered out that no more infantry
battalions would be sent overseas as anything other than large
reinforcement drafts. He immediately submitted a proposal to
Militia Headquarters regarding the fate of the 207th. MacLean
suggested that it be converted into a railway construction
battalion, arguing that of the 750 soldiers currently on the
battalion’s strength, 600 could be used to form the core of
a railway unit, the other 150 being sent as an infantry
reinforcement draft overseas. He noted: “You will notice
that we have, in our Battalion, a good many civil engineers,
public land surveyors, railway superintendents, section
foremen, drivers, saddlers, and tailors.”
Although no response to his proposal was found in the
documentary record, the 207th was never converted.
Nevertheless, a later infantry battalion raised in Ottawa, the
257th Overseas Battalion, was reformed as a railway
construction unit, serving in France and Flanders from 1917 to
1919 as the 7th Battalion, Canadian Railway Troops.
As 1917 began the 207th's time in Ottawa came to a close and
the battalion prepared to move closer to an overseas
deployment. Before leaving Ottawa, the battalion was inspected
by Brigadier-General T.D.R. Hemming, the 3rd Divisional Area
commander. He was quite impressed with the officers,
non-commissioned officers, and men, remarking: “A very good
class of men. Good physique and intelligent.” The general
discipline of the men was also reported as “very good”. It
was also noted that no soldiers from the battalion had been
court-martialled during its eleven months in existence in the
nation’s capital.
On January 18, 1917, the 207th left Ottawa for the Maritimes
departing by train for Amherst, Nova Scotia, for further
training. The battalion arrived two days later. Training at
Amherst followed the “Regular War Office Syllabus”, the
troops receiving instruction in such subjects as bombing
(grenades) and scouting. The battalion’s training regime was
suddenly interrupted in late February and March 1917 because
of an outbreak of infectious diseases in Amherst. On March 1
two cases of scarlet fever, two cases of German measles, and
seven cases of mumps were reported in the 207th. Medical
authorities believed the unit to be on the verge of an
epidemic and immediate measures were taken with respect to the
sanitary conditions of the soldiers’ accommodations.
By the end of March the situation had worsened. Ten members of
the battalion had German measles, another fifteen the mumps,
six scarlet fever, and another two diphtheria. All of these
men were in a local hospital “convalescing”. Of 710
officers and men with the 207th in Amherst by this point, a
total of 104 were sent to the local hospital during March
suffering from an infectious disease. By April 18 the
battalion, the only CEF unit in Amherst, was still
quarantined. It was little consolation that it wasn’t the
only battalion suffering, as five other units were quarantined
in camps in other parts of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick at
the time.
The 207th’s medical crisis was not only a trial for the
battalion; it also affected the reinforcement pool for
Canada’s battalions overseas. On April 20 the Militia
authorities in Ottawa suggested that the General Officer
Commanding the troops in Military District No. 6 be told
that every available n.c.o. and man of the 207th, who is not a
contact, or suspect, must be sent overseas this month,
regardless of whether the unit is broken up or not. It is
necessary to fill up the [troop] transports, and nothing is to
be gained by keeping whole battalions or units back in Canada,
in order to enable them to proceed overseas, complete. The
sooner we get all the medically sound, fit, un-infected
officers and men out of M.D. 6, the better.
However, the partial deployment of the 207th overseas did not
happen and, on April 30, the battalion was reported to be
“free from infection”. Nevertheless, for three members of
the 207th the epidemic was fatal, as Company
Quartermaster-Sergeant Ernest William Painter and Privates
Louis Lavallee and William Metheral died of disease while
stationed in Amherst. Four other members of the battalion
(Sergeant Oswald Olson and Privates John Joseph Hallinan, John
Milton Howard, and Ernest Samuel Povah) died in Canada between
then and the end of the war, all members of the 207th
Battalion at the time. As a result, seven men died during the
First World War wearing the cap badge of the 207th
(Ottawa-Carleton) Overseas Battalion.
Finally, on May 28 the battalion left Amherst for Halifax, the
journey overseas about to begin.
The 207th Battalion’s journey overseas began on June 2,
1917, when the unit left Halifax onboard the troopship S.S.
Olympic. Eight days later the battalion arrived in Liverpool,
England, the voyage being described as “entirely
uneventful”. After a brief train ride to Seaford Camp in
Sussex, the 207th was placed under the command of Canadian
Troops, Seaford. On the very same day, the battalion’s
independent existence came to an end when the 7th Reserve
Battalion, CEF, “absorbed” the battalion and all of its
twenty-seven officers and 652 other ranks. The officer signing
the order was the officer commanding Seaford Camp, Colonel
Stanley Douglas Gardner, M.C. Ironically, Colonel Gardner
would become the commanding officer of the 38th Battalion in
France on August 29, 1918.
Technically, the 207th didn’t cease to exist at this point.
It simply became a reinforcement-holding unit, ready to supply
officers and men to other units that needed them. For example,
200 non-commissioned officers and men were sent to the 156th
Battalion in Witley Camp on June 13. Another twenty other
ranks joined them four days later, never to return to the
207th, but eventually finding their way to the front with a
fighting battalion.
As the numbers of reinforcements sent to the front grew the
207th, in effect, faded away. Eventually, the battalion sent
157 soldiers to the 2nd Battalion, 118 to the Princess
Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry, ninety-two to the 38th
Battalion, sixty-six to the 21st Battalion, and the rest
spread over a variety of other units. Sixty-two of these
soldiers were killed in action or died from their wounds or
disease. The units with which these men passed into history
ranged from various infantry battalions to the 5th Battalion,
Canadian Railway Troops, to the 3rd Tunnelling Company,
Canadian Engineers. Not surprisingly, many of the greatest
losses of former 207th soldiers were suffered in the
infantry’s 2nd Battalion (thirteen), the PPCLI (eight), and
the 21st Battalion (eight). However, the largest number of
207th men (twenty-two in total) who died did so, perhaps
appropriately, as members of the 38th Battalion.
While serving with their new units, two former 207th men were
decorated for bravery. Captain Edward Thomas Minnie was
awarded the Military Cross with the 38th Battalion before
dying of his wounds on November 7, 1918, and Private James
Arthur Robertson was awarded the Military Medal with the 38th
before being killed in action on September 2, 1918. Notable,
too, was Private Nelson Taylor who was killed in action with
the 38th on November 15, 1917, at the young age of seventeen.
Its ranks depleted, the 207th Battalion was disbanded on April
11, 1918. The last symbol of the Camerons’ second CEF unit,
the King’s and Regimental Colours, remained in Westminster
Abbey with no one to retrieve them. Finally, on September 5,
1919, Captain Duguid, a member of the 15th Battalion, CEF,
gathered them up and brought them back to Ottawa where they
were laid up in Knox Presbyterian Church on November 16,
1919."
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Sub-Components:
War Diary Entries:
Primary References:
 | Meek, John F. 1971. Over the
Top! The Canadian Infantry in the First World War. Orangeville, Ont.
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 | De Wolfe, D. H. (compiler).
1919. "Our Heroes in The Great World War". Patriotic
Publishing Co., Ottawa, Ontario, 1919. (includes Photo's and
biographical sketches of some members of the 207th)
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 | Stewart, C. H. 1970. "Overseas" The
Lineages and Insignia of the Canadian Expeditionary Force 1914
-1919. Little & Stewart, Mission Press, Toronto, Canada.
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 | Love, D. W. 1999. "A Call to Arms"
The Organization and Administration of Canada's Military in World
War One. Bunker to Bunker Books, Winnipeg & Calgary,
Canada. |
Secondary References:
Internet References:
| This Page Last
Updated On: |
Tuesday January 29, 2008 04:17:03 PM -0500
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