Linda Seccaspina

Linda Seccaspina
Location
WHOOOOOOOOOOOVILLE, Peaceful
Birthday
July 24
Title
The Maiden of Death
Company
When you wish upon a star
Bio
Book is now available : http://www.amazon.com/Menopausal-Woman-From-Linda-Seccaspina/dp/1475181302 >>>>>>Profile Photo by Diana Ani Stokely GRAFIX to go>>>>>>>> Cover also done by Diana Ani Stokely GRAFIX to go.>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________***Linda now blogs Monday to Friday in Zoomers Canada, where links to her stories have been picked up by Time Online, USA Today and Huffington Post from other sites she has blogged on......>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> ______________________________________ Follow her on Twitter @@Mcpheeeeee. Linda Seccaspina was born in Cowansville Quebec about the same time the wheel was invented. _____________________________________ She used to own clothing stores in Ottawa and Toronto Ontario Canada from 1974-1996 called Flash Cadilac, Savannah Devilles, Nightmares and Flaming Groovies. _____________________________________ Her brain tries to writes stories about her menopausal life and a host of other things she gets annoyed at. _____________________________________ She has two sons, Schuyleur and one that does not want his name mentioned. She has a grandson called Romeo who is a Boston Terrier and a grandaughter Bella who is a french bulldog. _____________________________________ Linda loves people quite plain and simple and loves to hug.. Yes, she is one of "those".

NOVEMBER 11, 2011 9:42AM

Who Will Remember Us? – To the Veterans of Valour - 11-11-11

Rate: 34 Flag

 

Linda now blogs Monday to Friday ON THIS SITE

My photos can be SEEN HERE

 

     abernie       Last year I wrote a blog about my Grandfather and his friend Bernie who fought in WW1 with the British Army. It was a story that was repeated during my teens, and as I look at Bernie's picture today there will never come a day where I will forget him.

 

Veteran’s Day, or Remembrance Day as we call it in Canada, was always a day of marching in a parade with the Girl Guides and watching my Grandfather and Father walking ahead of us proudly with their medals pinned on their overcoats. It was also a day of having cold feet and hands as we stood on the frozen ground in front of the cenotaph during the ceremony.

 

 

The eerie sound of the bugle playing 'The Last Post' would echo through the air at 11am while everyone respected the two minutes of silence. After the service I would run to my Grandparents house for lunch and would get comfortable as I knew one of my Grandfather’s War stories would accompany lunch.

I had heard most of them and they always ended with his proudest achievement; starting branch number 99 of the Royal Canadian Legion in Cowansville, Quebec. Most stories were interesting and easy to listen to until the one Remembrance Day I will never forget.

My Grandfather was not pleased with me that particular day, as he had seen me giggling with my friends at the cenotaph and he felt I was not showing the respect that was needed. After a shaking of his finger he told me to listen carefully to what soldiers had to endure during the war as freedom is never free. Thus began the tale I only heard once in my lifetime about life in the trenches.

 

 

 

Grampy told me that he could smell the air full of death most days and that it was hell on earth living weeks in mud and hoping that the guy next to you didn’t get a bullet in his head. He had stood beside dying men and had wet feet and head lice for months. Grampy hated the rats that were everywhere as they seemed to know when there was an upcoming onslaught of gunfire as they would scurry off and hide minutes before the shells started firing.


 

 

If you got sick there was no where to go but lie in your own filth and hope to god you would not become part of a pile of bodies that were forming down at the end of the trench ready for a burial. Over 200,000 men lost their lives in those trenches in WW1 and others never made it - like Bernie who died beside him from Trench Fever.

 

Grampy told me he and Bernie barely got any sleep and had to test their weapons while the sun rose as some raids were carried out at dawn. They never knew what they were going to face and sometimes the noise of constant shells going off created extreme shell-shock, forcing some off the front lines. He knew I was claustrophobic and explained to me the size of space they lived in and how they had to repair sand bags and fences in the dark of night.

 


 

 

Then came the day he figured they were gassed as no one really knew what it was. There were over 188,000 British gas casualties but they did not take into account the number of men who survived like my Grandfather. He along with others suffered for years with headaches and respiratory problems. He was the lucky one he said; Bernie tried to keep up but ended up dying beside him. My Grandfather said Bernie asked him frequently,

 

“Fred, who is going to remember us?”

 

So who is going to remember all these valiant soldiers who fought for our freedom? There are the Legions and the War Memorials but is there anywhere that provides memorabilia that honour former Veterans who gave their lives in defense of their Country? On Edmund Street in the small town of Carleton Place, Ontario there is such a place called the Canada Veterans Hall of Valour. Carleton Place was chosen specifically because it had a great record of involvement in both of the major wars of the past century.

 

 

 




 

 

This summer when I visited the Hall of Valour I was surprised to see an old friend named Ron Roe as the curator. I had initially come to do research on local town heroe Roy Brown who shot down the Red Baron Manfred Von Richthofen. But, in a short matter of time Ron had me quickly immersed in the history of the Hall of Valour.

 

The concept of the Hall of Valour was "framed" by the Hon. Judge Matheson, of Kingston - the same man who created the design concept of Canada's current flag.   Mr. Bob Campbell was the Chairman of the Board, and Commander Jacques Levesque was the Vice-Chairman. 

 

The Hall of Valour creates and maintains a record of all those who served in Canada's Armed Forces.   The books of Honour contain mini-biographies of those who won medals of valour in combat.  In addition, those who earned the Victoria Cross are recognized by having plaques with their citations in both English and French, created and displayed in view on the walls of the Hall.

 

 

 

Few people are aware that Alexander Dunn, the first Canadian to earn a Victoria Cross did so during the Charge of the Light Brigade during the Crimean war. He was amongst the first group of 60 soldiers ever to receive the Victoria Cross.  At the end of the first year the Museum started a database of mini-biographies of the Veterans, and realized they had some 3,000 in hand.  The number has grown over the years and they now have over 7,500 individual biographies.

 

In addition, they have a library of books written by both published and self-published authors.  There is also a library of both Videos and DVDs produced by the War Amputees in their "Never Again" series in both languages and available for loan.

 

 

 

 

This might be a lot to digest for some of today’s youth who have no idea what it is to lose their rights. But someday one of them might have a question and the Hall of Valour will be able to provide them with the answers they want to know.

As Plato once said "Only the dead have seen the war" and hopefully today's generations that have never experienced freedom taken away from them will realize war is not the answer.

My personal dream is a world where no war exists because as my Grandfathers friend Bernie used to say to him while they fought in the trenches:

“If we don’t end this war Fred, war will end us."

Lest we forget - 11-11-11

 

 

 

 

 

 

If you find yourself in Eastern Ontario this summer please drop in and visit The Canada Veterans Hall of Valour. It is located at 267 Edmund Street in Carleton Place, Ontario.  Admission to the Hall of Valour is free, but they will gratefully accept donations.

If you see Ron, tell him I said hello. He and his staff will tell you many a  tale of war heroes you never heard about in history books. Those would be the silent heroes that fought for our freedom. The ones we need to remember.

 

 

 Lanark Highland Games- Amazing Grace

 

 

    " If we don't end war, war will end us."
H. G. Wells

 

Linda Seccaspina 2011

 

Images:

Images 1, 2, 4, 7, 8, 9 by Linda Seccaspina- Memorial Park, Carleton Place and Heritage Hotel, Carleton Place, Ontario.

Image 3- Google Images

Image 5&6-  From the Hall of Valour Site ( I lost my whole photo session argh)

Image 9- is small photos of my grandfather in WW1. He is also the middle photo in the newspaper article.

 

The Canada Veterans Hall of Valor

(Open 3rd week of May to October)

267 Edmund Street
Carleton Place, ON., Canada
K7C 3E8



 

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Comments

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I'm glad you remember and that you post here. Those photos are amazing!! I liked your grandfather's friend Bernie.
ms linda ... remembering and saluting ... VET DAY !!! ... WWI end ... 11th hour, of 11th day, of 11th month, and for the very first time, on the 11th year !!! ... rated ... luvya, lew
You are clearly the one chosen to remember and to remind us all with this beautiful tribute.
rated with love
Fabulous post Linda! My father and father in law didn't tell a lot of stories, but we were always proud of them.
A great follow up post to the Veteran's Day one from last year...don't ever forget...
Thanks Zanelle.. I post once a week and miss you guys but am happy what I do now.:)

Va Bexar: Yes it is and kids today buzz over it like it does not matter

Romantic Poetess.. and you remind us of all the love in the world

Peggy: Sometimes I think they choose what to tell us

Rugrat.. thanks!
This post is not only a wonderful tribute to all who have given their most, but especially to your grandfather.
R
Such a beautiful post Linda! Thanks for sharing this~
Veterans day what a farce. I would dare say our ancestors are rolling over in the early graves that their self sacrifice put them in. They died for words, sacred words, like freedom, Justice, and Equality and now they watch from muted graves while globalist corporations make a mockery of the ultimate sacrifice that they willingly gave. Obamas drones fill the sky's of their corporate victims countrys machine gunning woman and children. We murder world leaders at the whims of corporate board rooms and we shred the constitutions that they gave their lives for in the name of some Television Villains (Al Qaida) that coincidentally enough were founded by the CIA. You will be lucky that the dead do not rise from their graves on this day with fixed bayonets and show you just what they think of what the West has become.
Fantastic post, Linda. And the pictures too. -R-
I'm grateful for these towns across the country that have kept up these institutions like the "Hall of Valour." Those soldiers went to hell and back.

(Btw, Jack was in Cowansville last week at Brome Lake while I was in Kingston). It's 11 :11 .. a moment of silence.
Thanks Out on a Limb.. My grandfather would be amused with my writing and then have lots of comments on what I said :)

HUGGGGGGGG Susie

Christine.. and thank you for the words that make me smile or cry

Scarlett: Brome Lake is where my dad lived out his last 13 years. He had a house on the hill and I used to walk down the dirt roads on weekends. I miss the peace and quiet and the people. There is just something different about them.
I can hear the Last Bugle now. Thanks for this.. It made me happy to put in all the Canadian content today.
Jack Heart.. its 11;20 now and by the looks of the front cover no one really cares anymore. I agree this world has turned into an ugly place but it will never stop me from remembering those who lost their lives. EVER. That's the way I roll Jack but I respect other opinions.
This is one of the best posts you've ever written. Thank you. What a wonderful way to honor veterans.
A wonderful post filled with love and respect. It's important to remember that there have been wars fought to keep us free from tyranny.

Like you, I dream of a world without war, it will not come with fighting or changed minds. Peace only comes with softened hearts. May we honor the veterans by seeing peace as possible.

Love and peace to you.
a moving and poignant tribute
Comment eaten again!!! I love this post...thank you for sharing with us!
Bleue: Respect is a HUGE deal for me.. lack of respect makes me sick.
Nothing but love peace and mucho happiness to you.

Sarah: Thanks so much
Thanks Brazen Princess


Jon: Big hugs to you
I will remember. I cannot forget. My great-grandfather's photo sits on my mantel, a reminder of what was lost.
Fantastic post, and great tribute to your grandfather as well as all the fallen soldiers, Linda. Thank you for all the work you put in this.
H.G. Wells quote, well chosen.
♥R
This post gave me chills. Bernie and your grandfather were so right: if we don't end war, it'll end us. So true. What a somber day of remembrance.
Both my grandfathers fought in WW I -- on the German side. Later, they became patriotic Americans. I'm not sure where that puts them on Veterans' Day.

Nice tribute, Linda.
kudos, Linda - thank you for this.
I'm no militarist Linda but it's important to remember those who gave their lives for what they saw as the betterment of society as a whole.

I had an uncle in the North Atlantic Squadron (dunno if that's it's real name, but that's what he called it). Aside from blowing up a whale they mistook for a sub, he claimed to have never seen shooting action. But now I wonder if like so many others he just didn't want to talk about it. Thanks for the post.
It's so important that we acknowledge the massive sacrifices of the military and their families...and we can best do that by assuring that the need for wars come to an end. That's the fight we should be engaging in. Beautifully written with love.
Fingerlakes: Too much lost for such a sad reason

Fusun: I was taught to respect and that I do

Maureen: sometimes it seems like they have not learned anything
John: My father in law fought for the Italian army who was with the Germans at that one in in WW2. Then he got caught and was in a prison camp for a year. They fought , that is the bottom line for me. They risked their lives.


Catherine; Thanks and sending hugs
Marsha.. why did they not listen to the 100's of thousands that protested the Iraq and Afghanistan war. Did we win? It just makes no sense.
This made me remember an uncle of mine who was a WWII vet who would try and tell us stories of how bad it was, until my aunt would interrupt him. Still we got little bits and pieces of the stories sometimes.
I'm glad you're giving new life to your Grandfather's story, and for the museum. The stories of our veterans still need to be heard, and we need to remember them with pride and gratitude on this day.
Great post!
This was wonderful. A very important post. I feel like we don't remember, especially wars that are rapidly becoming more and more bygone as the years go by, like World War I. Thank you for sharing a very vivid story of the horrors of that conflict, and the wonderful news of the Veterans Hall of Valour. RIP to Bernie, your grandfather, and the many, many others who suffered through this horrific war.
Kevin: there was horror most of us will never know. Pride respect for those that went into battle for us.

Alysa: I dont know if you read Maurene Andrades blog about Normandy today. That just gave me chills.
HUGG
Very moving and beautiful post for this day.
Thank you. We need to be reminded, often, of the selfless who had the courage to give up their lives so we could take freedom for granted.
With people like you around, they'll always be remembered. Very touching post Linda.
Thanks so much Miguela..:)

Chrissie.. it bothers me a lot that people take our freedom for granted

A. Walrond.. I am never going to change you know that..:)
Beautiful! A big thank you to all of our Veterans.
Thanks for the memories and the meaning of these brave souls who fought for us.
Wonderful post, Linda. How sad for your grandfather to witness the death of his friend Bernie in the trenches. It's lovely that they have individual bios for the soldiers. They deserve nothing but recognition and honor. Rated.
Sorry, just found this. Your pictures..again...spectacular and well placed.
Your Grampy's story about what war is really like would be a valuable addition to any memorial service. Mostly the men I know who have been to war don't talk about it. I hope telling the stories will help prevent future wars.