At the age of fifteen and a half, Babcock was impressed by two recruiting officers, one a lieutenant and one a sergeant, who quoted from The Charge of the Light Brigade at Perth Road. Babcock was recruited in Sydenham, Ontario and joined the 146th Battalion of the Canadian Expeditionary Force. He was then sent to Valcartier, Quebec. There Babcock underwent a physical, where it was discovered that he was underage. He was designated status A-4: physically fit, but underage. At the time, the minimum age for combat was nineteen. Babcock was turned down, but managed to make it all the way to Halifax by train before he was stopped by the company commander.
In Halifax, he was sent to Wellington Barracks, the city's peacetime barracks, where he wrestled freight onto large army vehicles. Tired of the work, Babcock took the opportunity to volunteer for the Royal Canadian Regiment when fifty recruits were called on, claiming that his age was 18. Officials quickly discovered that he was only 16, however, and they placed him in a reserve battalion known as the Boys (or Young Soldiers) Battalion in August 1917. Babcock then undertook an ocean voyage to England and, in Liverpool, he was stationed with the 26th Reserve and sent to Bexhill-on-Sea where he trained with about 1,300 others, about a third of whom were veterans from battles in France.
The Young Soldiers Battalion trained the recruits for eight hours a day. In his spare time, Babcock went on leave to Scotland, where he met his first girlfriend, a woman from the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps. He was also introduced to the pleasures of beer and the horrors of war that some of the older veterans had come across. Babcock asserts that he would have fought in the war, given the chance, but the war ended before he could be brought to the front lines. For this reason, Babcock claims that he never felt like "a real soldier" and rarely talked of his experiences until his centenary. He also never joined any veterans associations.
RIP John Babcock, last Canadian WW1 veteran.
Moderators: sky's the limit, sepia, Sulako, lilfssister, North Shore
RIP John Babcock, last Canadian WW1 veteran.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Babcock
no sig because apparently quoting people in context is offensive to them.
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Re: RIP John Babcock, last Canadian WW1 veteran.
I read the wikipedia link. He learned how to fly when he was 65.
and was 109 when he died. 
Re: RIP John Babcock, last Canadian WW1 veteran.
And so ends a chapter of Canadian history... RIP Mr. Babcock.

~ Lest We Forget ~

~ Lest We Forget ~
Cheers,
Brew
Brew
Re: RIP John Babcock, last Canadian WW1 veteran.
My, that is just beautiful.
RIP, sir.
Re: RIP John Babcock, last Canadian WW1 veteran.
Thanks grimey, you post some good stuff 
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flyinthebug
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Re: RIP John Babcock, last Canadian WW1 veteran.
Mr Babcock`s passing reminded me of my grandfather who passed back in 1977. He also fought in WW1 and was one of the bravest men I knew. RIP Sir`s. Lest we forget.



