The Ontario Regiment (RCAC)

The Ontario Regiment (RCAC)
The Ontario Regiment (RCAC)
Capbadge ontarioregt 150px.jpg
Crest of The Ontario Regiment (RCAC)
Active 14 Sep, 1866-present
Country Canada
Branch Army (Reserve)
Type Armoured
Role Reconnaissance
Size One regiment
Part of Royal Canadian Armoured Corps
Garrison/HQ RHQ – Oshawa, Ontario
Nickname Ontarios, ONTR
Motto Fidelis et Paratus
(Latin, "Faithful and Prepared")
March Dismounted - John Peel
Mounted - My Boy Willie
Anniversaries 14 Sep, 1866 - Regimental Birthday
1 March - St. David's Day
Engagements World War I

Somme, 1916
Arras, 1917
Vimy, 1917
Hill 70
Ypres, 1917
Passchendaele
Amiens
Arras, 1918
Scarpe, 1918
Drocourt-Queant
Hindenburg Line
Canal du Nord
Cambrai, 1918
Valenciennes
France and Flanders, 1916-18

World War II
Pursuit to Messina
Sicily, 1943
Colle d’Anchise
The Gully
Casa Berardi
Ortona
Point 59
Cassino II
Gustav Line
St Angelo in Teodice
Liri Valley
Aquino
Trasimene Line
Sanfatucchio
Arezzo
Advance to Florence
Italy, 1943-45
Arnhem, 1945
North-West Europe, 1945

Commanders
Commanding Officer LCol Paul Brunberg, CD
Regimental Sergeant Major CWO Derek Munroe, CD

The Ontario Regiment (RCAC) is a Primary Reserve armoured reconnaissance regiment of the Canadian Forces Land Force Command. The unit is based in downtown Oshawa, Ontario. Formed in 1866, and more commonly known as the 'Ontarios', 'black cats' or 'ONT R' (pronounced "ON-tar"), the regiment ranks among the oldest continuously serving Reserve (Militia) regiments in Canada and is one of the senior armoured regiments in the Royal Canadian Armoured Corps.

Contents

Early history: 1856-1914

Officers of the 34th (Ontario) Battalion of Infantry at Camp Niagara, 1892

Militia units have existed in what is now the Region of Durham since the earliest days of the century. In 1856, a company was raised by Capt James Wallace, in Whitby, Ontario, and became Number 6 Coy of the 2nd Battalion, Volunteer Militia Rifles of Canada, later named "The Queen's Own Rifles of Toronto" in April 1860. During the period of national tension that gripped Canada in the early 1860s, other volunteer militia infantry companies were formed in Ontario County. In 1862, two formed in Oshawa, two in Whitby and one each in Prince Albert, Greenwood, Uxbridge, Columbus and Brooklin. Many men were mobilized for service during the anxieties of 1864-66, when Fenian invaders massed south of the Niagara Frontier. The Oshawa Rifle Company took part in the Battle of Ridgeway, in June 1866, as part of a Provisional Battalion of Ontario Infantry.

The Ontario Regiment was officially formed from the nine independent rifle companies on September 14, 1866. It was named the 34th (Ontario) Battalion of Infantry. In later years, men of the regiment served in the Northwest Rebellion of 1885 when they were attached to The Queen's Own Rifles and the 10th Royal Grenadiers (now the Royal Regiment of Canada). During the South African War or Boer War, members of the 34th (Ontario) Battalion were attached to the 1st (Special Service) Battalion of The Royal Canadian Regiment as well as The Royal Canadian Dragoons.

World War I: 1914-1918

The 116th Battalion (Ontario Regiment) marches through Oshawa, May 1916

In September 1915, the Second-in-Command (2IC) of the 34th (Ontario) Battalion, Major Sam Sharpe was authored to raise the 116th Battalion CEF from Ontario County. This battalion fought with great distinction in France and Belgium. Another battalion, the 182nd was also raised from the county, but it did not serve in action as a formed unit as it was broken up after its arrival in England. Most of the battalion's men were sent to the continent to reinforcement several other Canadian battalions.




Inter-War Years: 1919-1939

Soldiers of The Ontario Regiment entrain from Camp Borden traveling to Halifax and England

In 1936, the unit was re-roled as a tank battalion and became one of the first units to comprise General F. F. Worthington's newly-minted Royal Canadian Armoured Corps in 1936. The unit trained in Oshawa, throughout Ontario County and at the Armoured School at Camp Borden.




Second World War: 1939-1945

The unit was mobilized for World War II on September 4, 1939. Within six days 594 men had enlisted for active service. In June 1941, the regiment sailed from Halifax on the "Pasteur", arriving in Greenock, Scotland on the 1st of July, and headed south to Headley Downs, England. The Ontarios were the first Canadians to be issued the Churchill tank with which it trained in exercises in its experimental period of 1941-42. On 21 December 1941 the regiment moved to Brighton, alternating between here and Shermanbury park in operational roles in the defence of the English coast. The unit fought with distinction in several theatres during the war, beginning with the Allied invasion of Sicily in July 1943, through the Italian Campaign (World War II) seeing action in the fierce Liri Valley, Monte Cassino, and on to Ortona. In 1945, the unit entered the Northwest European theatre where it fought with distinction in the Dutch Campaign winning honours at Arnhem.


Post-War Period: 1945-present

Upon demobilization, The Ontarios continued as a reserve armoured regiment using Mark IV Sherman Tanks. In fact, the Regiment was one of the last Canadian militia units to give up their Shermans in 1972. Some of these actual tanks can be seen as monuments or gate guards at [CFB Kingston] and the former Denison Armoury on Dufferin Street in Toronto.

There were two more name changes for the Regiment after World War II. In 1946, the Regiment was designated the 11th Armoured Regiment (Ontario Regiment) and in 1958, the Regiment assumed the title by which it is known today: The Ontario Regiment (RCAC).

Cougars of the Ontario Regiment fire on the range at Central Militia Area Gun Camp, Meaford, 1985

The Regiment's role was changed to armoured reconnaissance and the unit employed a variety of equipment including jeeps, the Ferret (on occasion) and the M113 Lynx armoured reconnaissance vehicle in this role. In 1980, the Ontarios were re-designated an armoured regiment, this time employing the Cougar armoured vehicle. During many of the subsequent years, the Regiment maintained a wheeled armoured reconnaissance squadron (later downsized to an RHQ recce troop) employing the Iltis jeep. Many of the regiment's soldiers, NCOs and officers enjoy the unique distinction among their peers in reserve armoured regiments of having been trained in both armoured and reconnaissance roles.

With the retirement of the Cougar in the 2004, the Regiment was again re-designated an armoured reconnaissance unit, briefly employing and conducting trials on all terrain vehicles. Today, the Regiment continues its reconnaissance tasking and has adopted the Mercedes-built LUVW G-Wagon.

A significant number of the Regiment's soldiers have volunteered for active duty with NATO in Germany, United Nations missions in Cyprus, Bosnia, the Golan Heights, Cambodia, the former Yugoslavia and, most recently, the NATO-led engagement in Afghanistan.

The Ontario Regiment received the Freedom of the City of Oshawa and the County of Ontario in 1966, and the Freedom of the Region of Durham in 1979.

A regimental "challenge" coin was issued in late 2009 LCol R Brown and CWO DJ Munroe to the members and officers serving, as a remembrance of those Ontarios who have fallen in the line of duty. The coin, is produced in pewter colour and shows the regimental cap badge on the front side, and the Royal Canadian Armoured Corps Cap badge on the reverse, along with a serial number. A year later, the unit's CO and RSM perceived some gaps in the official honours and awards process, particularly at the unit level. As such, in November 2010 a Command Team Coin of Excellence was first presented. The coin is gold in colour and shows the regimental cap badge in full autumnal colour, ringed with the words 'For Excellence'. The reverse in gold shows the ranks of the CO and RSM, along with the camp flag of the Royal Canadian Armoured Corps.

A complete historical list of the unit's key appointments is mainatined at the Regimental Museum's official website.

Regimental Band

HCol RS (Sam) McLaughlin

Since 1866, the 34th Battalion and its successor units including the 116th Battalion, 182nd Battalion, and the Ontarios, maintained an award-winning brass marching band. The Regimental band earned top national honours in 1948 at the Canadian National Exhibition in Toronto. The band's patron, Colonel Robert Samuel McLaughlin (Colonel Sam), funded the purchase of the band's instruments and uniforms for several decades, having gone so far as to build a bandshell at Oshawa's Memorial Park to provide the bandsmen with their own venue to entertain Oshawa's citizens.

The Regiment maintained its band until 1968 when, due to a painful reorganization of the Canadian Forces, the unit's band establishment was eliminated by the federal Liberal government of the day. Lt (N) Bill Askew, a naval veteran of World War II and officer with the 1913 Ontario Regiment Cadet Corps refused to let the band wither. Under his leadership, the band was transformed into the present-day Oshawa Civic Band. Many of the former regimental bandsmen continue to play with the Civic Band today. The Civic Band regularly performs in a summer concert series at Oshawa's Memorial Park and, from to time, at military functions including the Regimental Ball (held each May) and the Regiment's annual Parkwood Promenade.

For almost forty years, the band of the 1913 Ontario Regiment Cadet Corps has provided the Regiment with much of its marching music at public events and official regimental functions.


Allied Regiment: The Royal Welsh (UK)

Since 1928, The Ontarios have maintained a strong friendship and alliance with its allied British regiment, the Royal Welsh (Formerly The Welch Regiment (41st of Foot) which amalgamated with the South Wales Borderers (24th of Foot) to form The Royal Regiment Of Wales (RRW) in 1969.) In 2006, under a further reorganization of the British Army, the RRW was amalgamated with the Royal Welsh Fusiliers (RWF) to form the Royal Welsh Regiment (RWR).

Several exchange visits have taken place over the years. In 1969, officers and men of the Ontarios performed 'groundskeeping' duties on the occasion of the Welsh’s amalgamation parade at Cardiff Castle. In September 1983, a small group of Welsh officers and soldiers were on parade in Oshawa on the occasion of the Ontarios’ change of command. In July 1989, the Ontarios sent a 35-man guard to Wales for the RRW’s Tercentenary parade at Cardiff Castle. HRH Charles, Prince of Wales the longtime Colonel-in-Chief of the Welsh, inspected the Regiment. The Welsh reciprocated in 1991 by providing a guard for a parade at Iroquois Park in Whitby, Ontario to mark the Ontarios’ 125th anniversary. More recently, in September 2004, the Welsh band toured many of its War of 1812 battlefields near Niagara and encampments throughout Ontario including Kingston, Ontario. The band also visited Oshawa to perform at the Ontarios’ annual Parkwood Promenade, held at the home of Colonel R.S. McLaughlin, the unit's former patron and long-serving Honorary Colonel.

The Ontario Regiment received the Freedom of the city of Oshawa and the County of Ontario in 1966 and the Freedom of the Regional Municipality of Durham in 1979.

A complete historical list of the unit's key appointments is available online at the Regimental Museum's official website.

Battle honours

Guidon of The Ontario Regiment (RCAC), presented by HM Queen Elizabeth II, Ottawa, 1967

Those battle honours approved for emblazonment on the Guidon are in bold.

World War I

  • Somme, 1916; Arras, 1917; Vimy, 1917; Hill 70; Ypres, 1917; Passchendaele; Amiens; Arras, 1918; Scarpe, 1918; Drocourt-Queant; Hindenburg Line, Canal du Nord; Cambrai, 1918; Valenciennes; France and Flanders, 1916-18

World War II

  • Pursuit to Messina; Sicily 1943; Colle d’Anchise; The Gully; Casa Berardi; Ortona; Point 59; Cassino II; Gustav Line; St Angelo in Teodice; Liri Valley; Aquino; Trasimene Line; Sanfatucchio; Arezzo; Advance to Florence; Italy 1943-45; Arnhem 1945; North-West Europe 1945

Cap Badge

Cap Badge of The Ontario Regiment (RCAC), 1953 onward

Blazon

Gules on a bar a cat statant guardant irate Or, the whole within an annulus Gules fimbriated and inscribed with the motto FIDELIS ET PARATUS in letters Or and surmounted at the base by a bezant fimbriated and charged with a fillet saltire Sable the base quarter removed, and beneath the annulus a scroll Or with the words ONTARIO REGIMENT inscribed in letters Sable, and above, encircling the annulus, a wreath of nine maple leaves autumnally coloured, the centre one in chief ensigned by the Royal Crown proper.

Symbolism

The badge is based, in part, on the cat from the Clan MacGillivray familial crest, a member of which commanded the regiment in the early 1900s. After World War I, the cat was designed into a fierce or fighting pose echoing the experience of the regiment's members in the war. The maple leaves, nine in total, reflect the nine provinces (prior to Newfoundland joining Confederation) that contributed soldiers to the First World War battalions which the regiment perpetuates. Post World War I regulations which forbade the use of the units traditional numerals '34' posed an identification problem for the Regiment. This problem was solved by placing a circle at the base of the scroll and dividing it into four quadrants, one of which has been cleared, giving the idea of three from four or 34. "ONTARIO REGIMENT" is a form of the regimental title and "FIDELIS ET PARATUS", Latin for "Faithful & Prepared" is the motto of the regiment. (Source: [1]).

The present-day badge is topped with the crown of Canada's sovereign, currently the crown adopted by HM Queen Elizabeth II in 1953. The pre-Elizabeth II badge bore the "King's" crown as seen above. Once they have completed their secondary trade qualification, currently Armoured Reconnaissance, every member of the Regiment, regardless of rank, wears the same brass cap badge. Several attempts to introduce a wire or cloth officer cap badge in the 1960s and 1980s failed. The complete evolution of the cap badge is explained here.

Motto

Fidelis et Paratus (Faithful and Prepared)


Marches


Regimental Lineage/Perpetuating Units

  • Whitby Highland Rifle Company, formed in 1827.


In April 1852, the Regiment of Ontario, consisting of 9 Battalions, was formed in the Sedentary Militia upon the creation of the new Ontario County from part of the former York County. In April 1860, the Whitby Highland Rifle Company was one of several Toronto-area units that amalgamated to form the 2nd Battalion, Volunteer Militia Rifles. This unit split off again in 1862 to become part Ontario County's growing militia garrison which eventually consisted of nine independent rifle or infantry companies authorized on these dates:

  • No. 1 Company, The Volunteer Highland Rifle Company of Whitby, 31 March 1858
  • No. 2 Company, Volunteer Militia Company of Infantry, Oshawa, 28 November 1862
  • No. 3 Company, Volunteer Militia Company of Rifles, Oshawa, 28 November 1862
  • No. 4 Company, Volunteer Militia Company of Infantry, Whitby, 26 December 1862
  • No. 5 Company, Volunteer Militia Company of Infantry, Prince Albert, 2 January 1863
  • No. 6 Company, Volunteer Militia Company of Infantry, Greenwood, 9 January 1863
  • No. 7 Company, Volunteer Militia Company of Infantry, Uxbridge, 6 February 1863
  • No. 8 Company, Volunteer Militia Company of Infantry, Columbus, 6 February 1863
  • No. 9 Company, Volunteer Militia Company of Infantry, Brooklin, 6 February 1863


On 14 September 1866, these nine independent companies based in seven towns across Ontario County (now Durham Region) were drawn together to form the 34th Ontario Battalion of Infantry. The unit underwent several redesignations after the nineteenth century and during the World War I:

  • 34th Ontario Regiment, 8 May 1900
  • 116th Overseas Battalion, CEF, authorized 22 December 1915 and disbanded 30 August 1920 (embarked for Britain on 24 July 1916 and fought with the 9th Infantry Brigade, 3rd Canadian Division)
  • 182nd Overseas Battalion, CEF, authorized 15 July 1916 and disbanded 1 September 1917 (embarked for Britain on 3 May 1917 and absorbed into the 18th Reserve Battalion, CEF)
  • The Ontario Regiment, 1 May 1920 (Upon redesignation, the regiment was organized as a two-battalion unit: 1st Battalion (116th Battalion, CEF) on the Non Permanent Active Militia order of battle; and, the 2nd Battalion (182nd Battalion, CEF) on the Reserve order of battle. The reserve battalion was disbanded on 14 December 1936).


The unit was converted from infantry to armour (tank) and redesignated:

  • The Ontario Regiment (Tank), 15 December 1936; and, 2nd Regiment, The Ontario Regiment (Tank), 13 August 1940
  • 11th (Reserve) Army Tank Battalion, (The Ontario Regiment (Tank), 1 April 1941
  • 11th (Reserve) Army Tank Regiment (Ontario Regiment (Tank), 15 August 1942
  • 11th Armoured Regiment (Ontario Regiment), RCAC, 1 April 1946
  • The Ontario Regiment (11th Armoured Regiment), 4 February 1949
  • The Ontario Regiment (RCAC), 19 May 1958


Messes

The Ontario Regiment (RCAC) houses three messes at the Col. R.S. McLaughlin Armoury. The Junior Ranks Mess (JRs Mess) is located on the main floor, The Sergeants' Mess (Sgts' Mess) and The Officers' Mess are located on the upper floor at opposite ends of the building.
The Colonel R. S. McLaughlin Armoury is a recognized Federal Heritage building 1991 on the Register of the Government of Canada Heritage Buildings. [1]

References

  • The Adjutant. The 116th Battalion in France. Toronto: EPS Allen, 1921.
  • Schragg, Lex. History of The Ontario Regiment, 1866-1951. Oshawa: General Printers, 1952.
  • Marteinson, John Kristjan & Michael R. McNorgan. The Royal Canadian Armoured Corps: An Illustrated History. Toronto: Robin Brass Studio, 2000. (French version also available)
  • Barris, Ted. Victory at Vimy. Markham: Thomas Allen Publishers, 2007.


External links


References

  1. ^ http://www.pc.gc.ca/apps/beefp-fhbro/FHB_Rech_Search_e.asp Register of the Government of Canada Heritage Buildings.

Order of precedence

Preceded by
8th Canadian Hussars (Princess Louise's)
The Ontario Regiment (RCAC) Succeeded by
The Queen's York Rangers (1st American Regiment) (RCAC)

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