• Thanks for stopping by. Logging in to a registered account will remove all generic ads. Please reach out with any questions or concerns.

One of 3 surviving First World War vets has died

Nfld Sapper

Army.ca Fixture
Subscriber
Mentor
Reaction score
79
Points
680
From ctv.ca

One of 3 surviving First World War vets has died
Updated Thu. Feb. 22 2007 10:48 AM ET

Canadian Press

TORONTO -- Lloyd Clemett was the youngest of a band of brothers to heed the call to battle and sign up to fight in the trenches of the First World War.


The enthusiastic teen set his sights on the battlefields of France, but three older enlisted siblings, his young age and fate ensured his safe return to Toronto when peace was declared on Nov. 11, 1918.


Late Wednesday, Clemett died in the city where he was born, raised a family, and lived for more than a century. He was 107.


His death leaves only two known surviving Canadian veterans of the First World War.


"It was something you had to do, so you went and you did it'' was the explanation Clemett offered when asked why he went to war, his son David Clemett said in an interview.


"It's really something that he never elaborated on, he never talked about when I was growing up. It was just a fact, that at some point in time he was in the First World War.''


The only indication his father had served in the conflict was a brass-bound war chest containing his service uniform, tucked away in the basement of the family home in north Toronto. It was only in recent years that Clemett shared his war stories with family.


Like so many others anxious to join their countrymen in the trenches of France, Clemett told the army he was 18 - the official enlistment age - when he signed his papers in January 1916.


"He went when he was 16, he got sent over to England and was working with the lumber group over there, doing timber,'' said his niece, Merle Kaczanowski.


"It was at the very last, when they needed more people, he actually did get shipped over to France.''


Ten per cent of the roughly 600,000 Canadians who enlisted to fight in the First World War died on the battlefields of Europe - 170,000 more were wounded.


The war would ultimately claim 15 million civilian and military lives on both sides of the conflict.


Although Clemett's true age was discovered in England, his older brothers also did their best to ensure their younger sibling was kept out of harm's way.


"His brothers intervened, they said, 'No, no, Lloyd stays with us, he's not going anywhere,' '' said Clemett. "I think that's how he ended up in the forestry division.''


When his division was shipped to Aubin St. Vast, France, Clemett volunteered several times for the frontline. The sound of artillery fire in the distance only fuelled his company's desire for combat.


"That made them that much more compelled to go to the front,'' said his son.


One month before his 19th birthday, Clemett received his orders to join the others on the frontlines - but fate intervened.


"The day that the Armistice was signed was the day his battalion was supposed to go to the front lines,'' said David.


"Disappointed'' at having never seen action in the war, Clemett returned home, along with his three brothers, and took a job as a railway agent.


A life-long hockey fan, Clemett played for the Brampton Maple Leafs in the 1920s and also coached a woman's softball team.


Clemett opened a lawnmower repair business and kept it afloat during the Great Depression, married his wife Catherine in 1936, and raised two sons in Toronto.


Clemett finished out his working years as a meter reader and repairman before retiring in 1965.


When his wife passed away in 1993, Clemett continued living, alone, in their Millwood Road home.


"He was in pretty good physical shape up until (about the age of 103),'' said David.


"He'd whittle baskets out of peach stones. He'd read a western paperback book every day, bake his own cookies, muffins and bread.''


Clemett's failing vision and hearing saw him move into the veteran's residence at Sunnybrook and Women's Hospital in Toronto in the fall of 2003, where he lived out his remaining years.

<edited to add>

THEY SHALL GROW NOT OLD AS WE
THAT ARE LEFT GROW OLD;
AGE SHALL NOT WEARY THEM NOR
THE YEARS CONDEMN.
AT THE GOING DOWN OF THE SUN
AND IN THE MORNING,
WE WILL REMEMBER THEM.

http://www.legion.ca/asp/music/LastPost.WAV


 
16 years old and living the grand adventure, iwonder how many vets joined for the King and Country, the chance to fight, or the chance to live the adventure of a life time.  My grandfather joined the Second War as way to earn money and to live away from home and then made it a 30 year career. 


I think the man in this case heard the sound of the trumpeter and ran to join the cause. He lived a quiet life afterwards and I thank him for his life and serving my country. I hope he sees his old friends and wife now in the next adventure.
 
Rest in peace. 

Here's Mr. Clement's story recorded in the Memory Project: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/special/memoryproject/vetstor/clement.html
 
RIP
Thank you for your courage and service.  We are better off now because of Canadians like him.  :salute:
 
From cbc.ca, just and update

One of Canada's last three surviving veterans from the First World War, Victor (Lloyd) Clemett, has died. He was 107.

Born on Dec. 10, 1899, in Toronto, Clemett died late Wednesday night at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre.

During an interview with CBC News late last year, Clemett was asked about the secret to his longevity, and responded, "Just taking it easy, not running too wild and having a good time."

Clemett enlisted in the army in 1916, a month after turning 16, following in the footsteps of his three older brothers who had already left for the battlefields.

Remarkably, all four would later return home — though one suffered shrapnel injuries to the head. He would survive to the ripe old age of 96.

Clemett was sent to England, where a concerned colonel transferred him to the forestry brigade upon learning the teen's young age.

When the brigade was deployed to France a year later, Clemett repeatedly volunteered to go to the front lines and was headed there when armistice was declared on Nov. 11, 1918.

"It was all over a month or so before I reached the front line. I was within the sounds of the heavy guns and that was it," he said.

'No hurrahs' at war's end

There was no disappointment, but no excitement either when his battalion heard news that the war was over.

"No hurrahs," he said of the reaction. "The war was over. That was all there was to it."

He said he never regretted joining the army and realized how lucky he was to return home, but lamented that the war was in vain.

"The war accomplished nothing. Eventually things settled down and we get into the old style of life again," said Clemett.

Clemett would later choose not to sign up for the Second World War, with his wife and two boys to think about.

Orphaned at young age

Clemett, his three brothers and two sisters were orphaned at a young age, forcing them to move in with relatives in the small Ontario community of Omemee, about 120 kilometres northeast of Toronto.

At age eight, he began working, first at a creamery wrapping butter and later at a leather tannery.

When he returned from the war, he ended up back in the Toronto area for most of the rest of his life.

Though he dreamed of becoming a civil engineer when he returned from the war, he ended up working at Canadian Pacific.

In the late 1920s, he started a lawn mower sales and service business in Toronto that survived the Great Depression, and through the decades he worked in a variety of service and repair jobs.

His wife, Catherine, passed away in 1993, but Clemett continued to live at their family home in North Toronto until just over two years ago when he moved into a veterans' residence at Sunnybrook.

Two surviving WWI veterans

Clemett's death leaves two WWI veterans, Percy Wilson and John Babcock.

The federal government has agreed to hold a state funeral for the last veteran. A state funeral is one of the highest honours Canada can bestow, and are normally reserved for prime ministers and governors general.

But families must agree to it and both surviving veterans have indicated disinterest.

Clemett's family had also said he would rather have a simple memorial service because he doesn't think national attention should be directed at a single person.

He's getting his wish — a private funeral service will be held for family and close friends.
 
Nfld Sapper said:
Clemett's family had also said he would rather have a simple memorial service because he doesn't think national attention should be directed at a single person.

Now thats "the good olde days". :salute:
Sleep soundly Sir.
 
RIP Sir, for you who served, so that many others may enjoy the fruits of freedom.
Let us remember those who have served before us,
And those who will continue to serve, after us.

:cdn: :salute:
 
Sir, may you rest in peace, for you helped our fight for freedom, and for that , we are forever grateful.  :salute:  :cdn:
 
FormerHorseGuard said:
16 years old and living the grand adventure, iwonder how many vets joined for the King and Country, the chance to fight, or the chance to live the adventure of a life time.  My grandfather joined the Second War as way to earn money and to live away from home and then made it a 30 year career. 


I think the man in this case heard the sound of the trumpeter and ran to join the cause. He lived a quiet life afterwards and I thank him for his life and serving my country. I hope he sees his old friends and wife now in the next adventure.

It was for king and empire not country.
 
rest in peace honoured sir  :salute:
you will not be forgotton  :cd

THEY SHALL GROW NOT OLD AS WE
THAT ARE LEFT GROW OLD;
AGE SHALL NOT WEARY THEM NOR
THE YEARS CONDEMN.
AT THE GOING DOWN OF THE SUN
AND IN THE MORNING,
WE WILL REMEMBER THEM.

                                                  scoty brandt
 
Thank you

:salute:

Statement from Prime Minister Harper on the death of WW1 veteran Victor "Lloyd" Clemett
22 Feb 07

Prime Minister Stephen Harper today released the following statement of the death of Victor “Lloyd” Clemett:

“Today, I learned of the death of Victor ‘Lloyd’ Clemett of Toronto, one of Canada’s last surviving veterans of the First World War. On behalf of all Canadians, I would like to extend my sincere condolences to Mr. Clemett’s family and friends. As a nation, we honour his service and mourn his passing.”

“Mr. Clemett was one of approximately 650,000 Canadians who served in our military forces during the First World War. Nearly 60,000 of them made the ultimate sacrifice by giving their lives to protect freedom and democracy. Each year, on November 11, we remember these men and women, as well as the thousands of others who perished in Canada’s other military conflicts around the world.”

“With the passing of Mr. Clemett, another link to Canada’s proud military history has been severed. All Canadians, no matter where they live, must continue to remember that the sacrifices of Mr. Clemett and his comrades helped shape strong, prosperous and democratic nation we enjoy today.

Mr. Clemett was 107 years old and his passing now leaves only two surviving Canadian WW1 veterans.

 
Could you imagine Jean Chretien issuing a statement like that? We were "Boy Scouts"

I salute these men :salute:

I remember my Grandma, born 1900, telling me how many of her brothers, cousins and friends were lost in the First World War, and she was not a demonstrative woman.

RIP my friend!
 
Thank You Mr. Clemett, for allowing me and all Canadians who came after you, to have and enjoy a life of freedom in such a great country. You will never be forgotten.

May you Rest in peace.
 
Thank you Mr. Clemett for what you have given all of us Canadians in common. Freedom. May all Canada's soldiers of today proudly carry your torch. “Be it ours to hold high”

R.I.P, sir  :salute:
 
Back
Top