| Dieppe While there is no need to recount the well known
details of the Dieppe Raid here, as the battalion was not commited to that battle, the
action is nonetheless a significant event in Calgary Highlanders history. The first
Calgary Highlander to die in combat was Captain TM Insinger, serving as a divisional staff
officer at Dieppe that day. As well, 21 men of the mortar platoon under Lieutenant
Jack Reynolds was assigned to the raiding force, and the first Calgary Highlanders to be
rewarded for bravery included Sergeant Bert Pittaway, Sergeant Bill Lyster and
Private "Red" Anderson, all of whom received a Mention in Despatches for their
actions during the raid, as described in the account quoted below.
Calgary
Highlanders Mortar Platoon Personnel who participated in the Dieppe Raid

|
Lieutenant |
Reynolds, FJ |
|
M 11178 |
Private |
Carlton, EC |
| M11418 |

|
Sergeant |
Dirom, JP |
M12067 |
Private |
Cochrane, GS |
| M11342 |
 |
Sergeant |
Lyster, WL |
M10919 |
Private |
Grover, CT |
| M10762 |
 |
Sergeant |
Pittaway, B |
K7074 |
Private |
Kemp, WS |
| M11702 |
 |
Lance Sergeant |
Wilson, RL |
M12049 |
Private |
Lemaire, AJ |
| M11327 |
 |
Corporal |
Hosie, W. |
M11754 |
Private |
Painter, LM |
| M12323 |
 |
Corporal |
Wilkins, A |
M11525 |
Private |
Pittman, LA |
| M11028 |
Private |
Anderson, TG |
M50018 |
Private |
Rhodes, AD |
| M11325 |
Private |
Armstrong, JR |
M10750 |
Private |
Simpson, W |
| M11322 |
Private |
Bannon, NJ |
M12264 |
Private |
Torrance, J. |
| M11347 |
Private |
Brown, AW |
M11856 |
Private |
Whitehead, GS |
The remainder of the battalion
was ordered to Portsmouth to help the wounded men disembark, as well as to guard
prisoners. The ashen faces of the returning survivors were a grim dose of reality
for any Calgary Highlander who even briefly wished that he had been able to go as
well. In the days to come, German planes dropped propaganda leaflets over Southern
England with photographs of the Dieppe beach littered with dead men and wrecked equipment.
The quoted material
below comes from an article by Bill Lyster's wife Eswyn Lyster that originally appeared in
Legion Magazine, and was then reprinted in True Canadian War Stories (Legion
Magazine, 1986).
The men of 3 Platoon of the Calgary
Highlanders had been away from their unit for several weeks competing with mortar platoons
of the Black Watch and Maisonneuve Regiment. Battle schools, schemes, and exercises
were so much a part of the Canadian infantryman's life in England that nobody thought it
particularly significant when the Calgarians chalked up the best score. Everyone's
mind was on the scarcity of leave.
Wearing good battledress, the men boarded a
transport one afternoon. As usual, Private Red Anderson carried a base plate and
sights. When Lieutenant Jack Reynolds passed out special tags, Private Dusty Rhodes
spoke up: "Hey, you guys, we had these same tags on the Isle of Wight. I'll bet
we're going to Dieppe." But nobody else had been on that May exercise for an
assault that was cancelled because of weather conditions, so they said, "Pull the
other leg, Rhodes."
 |
 |
 |

|
Lieutenant Jack Reynolds
(Calgary Highlanders Museum photo) |
Sergeant William Lyster
(Calgary Highlanders Museum photo) |
Sergeant Bert Pittaway
(Calgary Highlanders Museum photo) |
Private "Red" Anderson
Joan Anderson Photo
(reprinted from the book Alberta in the 20th Century, Volume VIII) |
The truck headed south on the
quiet Hampshire lanes. It was a warm summer's day, August 18, 1942.
Near Portsmouth, progress was slowed by
dozens of military vehicles, all converging on the dockyards, where 3 Platoon marched on
to a flat-bottomed craft with a large 6 painted on its side. Officially it was
landing craft tank (LCT) 163, commanded by Thomas Andrew Cook, RNR. Already it was
crowded with three tanks, a bulldozer and Canadian servicemen, including Calgary Regiment
tank crews. (Note - this was Number
Six Troop of the Calgary Tank Regiment under Lieutenant Jack Dunlap) Reynolds led his men to a space between a tank and one side
of the craft. Sergeants Bert Pittaway and Bill Lyster, buddies since training camp
in Shilo, Manitoba, noticed that two tanks bore their Christian names. Almost
immediately LCT 6 began to pull away from the dock. Everyone had the feeling of
being inside an overcrowded box because the steel sides of the craft only allowed a clear
view of the sky.
| Back at Halnaker Camp, near
Petworth, Sussex, Captain John Bright, adjutant of the Calgary Highlanders, was writing in
the regimental diary: "No. 3 Platoon (Mortars) was reported to be coming back to camp
but did not turn up. Further messages revealed that they were putting on a
demonstration for the RAF." Anderson
climbed up on a narrow walkway on the LCT to get a better view. As they cleared the
harbour he saw that other landing craft, equally crowded, were ahead of them.
Reynolds assembled his men and announced: "We're on our way to France." |

ECP Armees Photo DAT 2126 L44
|
"I knew it" said Rhodes. This time nobody argued, but Reynolds could tell
they were still skeptical. Too much phoney war, he thought. Too many
schemes. His face serious, he read out the orders. Then he unfolded a map."This is the town of Dieppe," he said.
"We'll be landing on this section of the beach, code-named Red, just before
sunrise. We're to set up at the tobacco factory, here, and give covering fire.
At 11:00 hours we're to rendezvous here, at the church, and make our way back to the
landing craft. Anyone who can't rendezvous or get off the beach is on his own."
Then he distributed escape kits containing
waterproof maps and packets of French francs. Fingering the notes, Private Bill
Simpson said: "This can't be a scheme. The army doesn't give money away unless
it absolutely has to!" |
BERT
and BILL disembarked onto the beach at Dieppe. BERT made it to a point east of the
Casino, where it had its left track blown off. BILL also maneuvered in the vicinity
of the Casino, firing at various targets on the beach front and up on the west headland.
Above, BERT lies abandoned in front of the Casino, BILL lies at the water's edge.

Bundesarchiv Photo
362/2207/37 |
But with the clear, blue sky
overhead and the leisurely progress it felt the same as all those other exercises, even
when the order came that steel helmets be worn.
Eventually one man began writing a
letter. Others followed suit and Pittaway wondered how this mail would get to its
destination.
"Here, Red, I owe you."
Someone pushed £6 in to Anderson's hand. Always a soft touch for a loan and a good poker
player to boot, he stood amazed as debt after debt was paid. "Well I'll be a
hairless Highlander," he said. "They should put on more raids like
this."
The long twilight faded in to a warm and
cloudless evening. After a haversack lunch the men tried to settle down for the long
night. Anderson leaned against some sacks almost as uncomfortable as the steel
deck. By the earthly smell he guessed they held potatoes.
LCT 6 had been riding steadily in a calm sea,
but about 23:30 it swayed slightly. More ships were joining the small convoy and
they jockeyed for position as they passed in line astern through the swept section of a
minefield. Unaware of the hazards mere yards away, Reynolds and his men shifted
uneasily, cussing the army brass that in its wisdom had decided blankets weren't necessary
for this short voyage.
At 02:00 the moon set and in the darkness the
men dozed fitfully. Only the even throbbing of the engines broke the silence.
They were travelling slowly, keeping pace with the slowest vessels. They were not
due in to Dieppe until first light.
At 03:47 a star shell burst overhead,
illuminating the interior of LCT 6 like sudden daylight. Up ahead ships were
exchanging fire and the convoy broke formation. As the star shell faded, a
tremendous explosion lit the sky and in the confusion another craft came partly across
their bow. The jolt skidded Anderson across the deck. "I can't
swim," he shouted. "What the hell do we do now? Jump
overboard?"
"We can't," yelled Pittaway above
the din. "No bloody lifebelts. It's against marine regulations or
something." He was laughing nervously, but he was thinking 'By God, we've had
it.'
But as suddenly as the firing began it was
over. Eyes strained by the sudden glare of star shells and gunfire became
accustomed once more to the darkness. Only the stars shone brilliantly from the
black, cloudless sky. But sleep didn't come. In every mind was the dreadful
thought that by now the French coast must be on full alert. The men had no way of
knowing that the eight-vessel German convoy they'd encountered was steaming to Dieppe
unaware it had been in the midst of a raiding force.
Just before 05:00 Allied light bombers and
fighters came out of the north flying low, almost at mast level. Flashes of light
and faint whomps showed that the Dieppe garrison was under attack and was retaliating with
anti-aircraft fire.
With each mile the noise grew louder and
almost imperceptibly the sky began to lighten in the east. Eventually Lyster
scrambled up the side, but he could see little more than the dark silhouettes of the other
craft and a false dawn reddening the sky over Dieppe. With an ear-splitting roar the
four-inch guns on several escorting destroyers opened fire on the coast. Billows of
white smoke rose from the shoreline ahead, signalling that the forward assault landing
craft were almost at touchdown. With a curious, sick excitement, Lyster called down:
"Mortar platoon, load rifles!" The craft was picking up speed and someone
set his rifle butt down heavily on the deck, perhaps to steady himself. A shot
whistled past Lyster, missing him by inches.
"Gees, did I hit you, Bill?" The
man was almost in tears.
Lyster was shaken. "You just
missed my ass. Save your bloody ammunition for the beach!" he said, sliding
down to the comparative safety of the deck.
Pieces of shrapnel began clanging against the
craft. Suddenly Reynolds, who was squatting beside Anderson, said "My God,
man, you just got hit!" Anderson looked down at a long tear in his battledress
trousers and a piece of metal that lay on the deck between them. He thought shock
must have numbed his leg, but found his skin wasn't even cut. He dropped the piece
of shrapnel in his pocket.
Now shells were exploding inside the LCT and
Pittaway called to some of his men who had been passing time by helping the galley crew
peel potatoes. They'd scarcely joined the rest when the galley received a direct hit
that killed most of its crew. Then a mortar bomb exploded nearby and blew an army
service corps man into Anderson. They writhed on the deck, covered with a wet,
sticky substance, the man shouting in a French Canadian accent that he'd been killed.
"No you haven't, you fool...It's those God damned potatoes!"
Another explosion, this time in the
engine-room, sent thick, acrid smoke in all directions. Shouts of "Gas!"
went up. Pittaway, his throat searing, thought for the second time that morning:
"We've had it!" This time we've really had it!" Their
respirators were with their blankets back at the battle school, but it was a smoke
canister that had been kicked loose by the explosion. The craft swung wildly to port
as the helmsman, overcome by fumes, lost control. Then the engine-room burst into
flames.
Anderson and a few others manned a hose, but
it had been shot so full of holes they doused themselves instead of the fire. Others
had better luck and a new helmsman took over. Now, only 70 yards from the beach, the
canister smoke mingled with the white smoke-screen drifting over them. Still, the
wheelhouse took a direct hit that killed the second helmsman.
Again the craft swung hard to
port. A medic, who was climbing up to reach a stretcher, lost his hold. Below
him stood an infantryman, his old-fashioned, long style bayonet fixed. The medic
crashed down, driving the bayonet through his thigh. Pittaway, who helped two others
pull the blade out, saw that it had pierced far enough to lift the skin on the other side.
A new man took the wheel and within minutes he too was killed. A fourth man brought
the craft under control and they approached the beach from a different angle. With
yards still to go, they came out of the smoke-screen in to brilliant morning sunshine and
a storm of gunfire. LCT 1 - officially 145 - was lying out of action broadside to
the beach. Using it as partial cover, they crossed the last stretch of water.
The men swayed as LCT 6 finally touched down on the shale. The gates creaked open,
the ramp fell and they saw Red Beach. |

LCT 1 after the battle, lying at the eastern edge of the Dieppe beach
ECP Armees Photo DAA 2815 L28
|
Rough shingle sloped up to a
huge roll of barbed wire parallel to the shore. Beyond it, more beach ended at a
sea-wall and promenade. Well back from the promenade a row of buildings was
dominated by the twin chimneys of the tobacco factory. From his limited viewpoint,
Reynolds could see dozens of dead and wounded crumpled on the stones. "Red
Beach," he thought bitterly. "It's well named."
With the ramp down, their last bit of
protection was gone. A shell hit the nearest tank and ricocheted through Reynolds'
men, just catching Pittaway's shoulder patch. He had dodged instinctively to the
left, which saved his life. The Calgarians watched in horror as the shell struck a
man crouched nearby. The force lifted his steel helmet and knocked him to the deck
with part of his head torn away.
The tanks were ready to move, but the
bulldozer was the first to trundle down the ramp. Reynolds watched the operator with
awe, thinking: "He's up there with nothing around him but his tin hat and he's not
batting an eyelid." The bulldozer travelled only a few yards before the man was
dead.
Two tanks followed, turning left and
right. The first went about 10 yards, hit a mine and lost its tracks. The
second went a little farther before being stopped by heavy gunfire. A third, the one
called Bert, went straight ahead and over the wire. As it lumbered on, the wire
sprang back into place, halting the progress of the troops who were pouring out of the
LCT. Caught in the murderous fire that seemed to come from all directions, they were
adding their bodies to those already strewn in front of the craft.
Aboard LCT 6 the situation was chaotic.
Medics, under heavy fire and often injured, strove to comfort the wounded and dying.
On the bridge skipper Cook was still in command, but most of his crew were dead or badly
injured, including the gunners at the exposed port and starboard anti-aircraft pom-pom
guns. The 30 or so infantrymen still aboard fought the fires and assisted the
medics.
The skipper was calling "All
ashore!" but Reynolds felt he would lose every man on the beach. He ordered
that the mortars be set up on deck. Anderson began the drill, but found his base
plate wouldn't grip on the sloping deck. "I can't make the damn thing
secure," he reported. Reynolds swore. "Why the hell didn't they
give us a few sandbags?..."
The tide was rapidly going out. In a
few minutes the LCT would be stranded.
"No more ashore!" the skipper
ordered. "Up ramp!" But the ramp chains had been damaged and the
struggling men could get it only part way up, so that the doors would not swing
shut. Slewing badly, the craft pulled off the beach and came alongside LCT 1, which
seemed about to sink. A line thrown to the stricken craft was shot away in a hail of
gunfire. Abandoning the idea of taking it in tow, skipper Cook signalled to the few
survivors. They swam across to LCT 6, machine-gun fire dimpling the water around
them. Four ratings came aboard, followed by a young RNVR sub-lieutenant, his wet,
red hair gleaming darkly in the sunshine. "My 22nd Channel crossing," he
grumbled, "and the worst one yet!"
The intensity of fire lessened as LCT 6 moved
in to deeper water and headed for the main anchorage where the larger ships directing
operations were under aerial attack. The red-haired officer asked for men to handle
the pom-poms and Reynolds detailed Lyster, Pittaway and Anderson and other groups to take
turns. It was difficult at first, requiring two men to co-ordinate the traverse and
elevation mechanisms and a third to handle the clips of ammunition, but despite their
exposed positions these new gun crews felt a surge of energy and a profound relief to be
fighting back at last, even if their accuracy left something to be desired.
Most casualties, including the man with the
bayonet wound, were transferred to the hospital ship. Only the most critically
injured were kept on board for fear they would not survive being moved. Among them,
miraculously, was the man with the head wound.
New British naval crews came aboard and
worked on the steering mechanism. There was constant harassment from enemy aircraft
and those below were amazed to see the red-headed officer above decks, coolly shaving off
his day's growth of beard. Reynolds and his men became aware of their itching chins
and their hunger. By Anderson's count it was 16 hours since they had last eaten.
Word came that they were going back in.
Men were already awaiting rescue on Red Beach under cover of a thick smoke-screen laid
down by Allied planes. Those on LCT 6 shrank from the idea, but the craft swung
round and joined a group of small assault boats heading in. The enemy were firing
blindly in to the smoke. The small boats, travelling faster than the LCT, ran in to
the fierce barrage with devastating results. Within minutes many were holed or blown
apart, the remains of their crews struggling in the water. Up on the guns Lyster and
Pittaway fired in to the tobacco factory. They little realized that the firest
started that day would deprive Frenchmen, already suffering enemy occupation, of several
weeks' tobacco rations.
A bearded individual was standing in one of
the surviving boats waving them in. "He must be drunk," said Anderson,
trying to account for the man's disregard for his own safety. But drunk or not, he
had a boatload of Canadians and there were more in the water around him.
In later years, Lyster and Pittaway and the
rest couldn't remember how many times they travelled between the beach and the anchorage,
picking up men from the boats and the water. They could only remember the fear that
gripped their empty stomachs and made breathing difficult - and the bearded man who always
seemed to be waving them in.
On the last run to the anchorage, a
Messerschmitt came through the smog that hung thickly over the battle area and dived
straight towards them. Lyster and Pittaway got it in to their sights and saw their
tracers plunging in to its belly. Suddenly the plane seemed to shudder.
Pouring smoke and flame, it passed over their heads and crashed in to the sea. An
almost-hysterical cheer went up from the dirty, weary men aboard LCT 6.
At last the order came to head home.
For most of the mortar platoon the journey was a blank and there was only a mild stir when
they stopped to pick up a downed RAF pilot.
It was dusk when they arrived back in
England. They'd been away just over 24 hours. The wounded were taken off
first, the man with the head wound still living, although surely death was only hours
away. Anderson slipped on the gangplank and hung from the guardrail, his feet
dangling in space. "My God!" he thought, "I get this far and now I'm
gonna drown in a friendly port!" But strong hands soon pulled him to safety.
After interrogation the men were given a
stiff rum. On the journey back to Halnaker Camp, Anderson couldn't stop talking.
"Imagine," he marvelled, "they kept asking me, what did I see?
I said 'I saw a helluva lot! and they said did I see any dead guys? I
said 'I saw lots of dead guys,' and they said did I see any planes and I said 'I saw
hundreds of planes.' Where the hell did they think I'd been?"
Private Simpson leaned towards Lyster.
In the dim light of the truck he looked anxious. "Sergeant, I've lost my
rifle." Under normal circumstances this was a cardinal offence.
"Well, if that's all you've lost," Lyster assured him, "you're damned
lucky."
At Halnaker they had something less than a
hero's welcome. It was necessary to rouse Corporal Barnes, the assistant
quartermaster.
"What the hell did you do with your
blankets?" he wanted to know. The strong smell of rum didn't ease his
suspicions.
Pittaway grabbed him. "Look, we've
been to Dieppe and we're cold, tired and none too friendly." After that
everyone wanted to help. They'd heard radio reports of the raid and how the
Canadians had suffered almost 3,500 casualties in a force of 5,000. The men at
Halnaker wanted to know every detail.
"Never mind that," said Anderson,
"how about something to eat."
When Lyster and Pittaway finally reached
their quarters, Lyster said: "Bert, did you ever imagine we'd be back here all in one
piece? We're damned lucky, all of us."
"Lucky?" said Pittaway.
"Luck be damned. It's a bloody miracle."
Lyster laughed. "Old Barney was
sure we'd flogged those blankets. For a second there I thought you were going to hit
him." But Pittaway was sound asleep.
Aftermath
The men of the mortar platoon had survived the Raid, though Lieutenant Reynolds was
mistakenly reported missing and had to hurriedly cable his wife to say "Disregard any
rumors. I'm OK." Reynolds was called on to give evidence that the
man who was injured by the bayonet had been accidentally hurt and that it was not a
self-inflicted woud.
|
 
After the Dieppe Raid, pamphlets like this were dropped over England from German
aircraft; the showed Canadian dead and wounded, as well as the wrecks of military
equipment on the main beaches. This example fell on the Canadian garrison at
Aldershot on the night of 8/9 September 1942. Farran's history tells us that these
leaflets were also dropped on the Calgary Highlanders.
Artifact and
photos kindly donated by Jim Curley. |
| It appears that all
but one of the Dieppe veterans of the Calgary Highlanders mortar platoon survived the
war. William Hosie, still serving as a Corporal in the Calgary Highlanders, was
killed on 1 August 1944. Lance Sergeant Wilson went on to be promoted to Company
Sergeant Major and was twice wounded, on 13 August 1944 and again on the 8th of
September. Private Lemaire would be wounded on 21 July 1944. As for their actions at Dieppe, Bill Lyster's wife
tells us that "The war histories sum up the events on LCT 6 by stating that after
some initial difficulties the craft reached the beach; that 30 men failed to disembark
and, after 15 minutes, the craft withdrew." |
|