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C M Y
THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR l THE SPEC.COM THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2012 BA1
FROM THE BATTLE OF RIDGEWAY IN 1866 to Afghanistan, the Royal Hamilton Light Infantry
has defended Canada even before it became a country.
IN THIS 150TH ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL REPORT, we look at the Rileys in words, pictures, multi-
media and song. Go to thespec.comfor extensive online content including the music video
Private Riley by Spectator reporter and songwriter Mark McNeil that features the RHLI band.
The uniforms of Corporal Phil Howie, who served in Afghanistan, and Corporal Brian Buckle, in 1860s dress, span the 150-year history of the RHLI.
THEROYALHAMILTON LIGHT INFANTRY AT 150
STORIEDREGIMENTFEATURED INPRINT,
ONLINEAND IN SONG
BARRYGRAY,THEHAMILTON
SPECTATOR
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C M Y
THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR l THE SPEC.COM THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2012 BA3
Welcome to a special section on a special day for a
special regiment.
The Royal Hamilton Light Infantry is commemorating its
150th anniversary and today is especially notable in a
years worth of activities. A $250-a-plate fundraisertonight will commemorate the Rileys at the John Weir
Foote V.C. Armoury.
The event will:
n Raise money for Operation Yellow Ribbon, a charity
that helps soldiers returning from duty;
n Host the local launch of a RHLI postage stamp and the
soft release of the CD, Semper Paratus II by the RHLI
band;
n Feature the premire performance of the song Private
Riley by composer and Spectator reporter Mark McNei l
with the RHLI band directed by Major Michael Rehill.
PRIVATE RILEY
To see a video of the Private Riley song, go to
thespec.com. Annotated lyrics can be found
on Page 4 and 5 inside.
To hear and purchase the song for $2 go to
markmcneil.bandcamp.com. Money raisedwill be donated to Operation Yellow Ribbon.
SPEC
You see them in their neatly pressed
red tunics and bright white pith
helmets.
They march at downtown parades
and play concerts at Dundurn Park.
Theyre the go-to music providers
when royalty is in town.
And when Lincoln Alexanderwas
remembered in a poignant memorial
service a couple of weeks ago, the
Royal Hamilton Light Infantry was
there to march along with his
casket-bearers.
But today the band is celebrating
being recording artists as well. The
Operation Yellow Ribbon Gala dinner
tonight will be the official soft launch
of the RHLI bands second CD, Semper
Paratus II.
The band has a proud history almost
as long as the regiment itself.
It was formed in 1866 by Peter
Grossman and was known as the 13th
Battalion Band. But Grossman only
lasted a few years until George R. Rob-
inson, a graduate of the British armys
Royal Military School of Music, camealong.
There was a bit of a false start. Rob-
inson left in a huff over a disagree-
ment. But he returned a year later to
lead the band to glory over the next 45
years.
Robinson became one of Hamiltons
most famous musicians the band-
shell at Gage Park is named after him.
He took a group of forgettable horn
blowers and turned them into a tightly
disciplined unit that not only became a
source of pride in Hamilton but re-
nowned in military band circles across
the continent.
It was a tradition carried on by Rob-
insons son, William, and something
the current bandleader, Major Michael
Rehill, takes great pride in.
After a hiatus of several years with-
out a military band the RHLI got by
with a bugle corps rather than a full-
fledged military band Rehill man-
aged to talk the regiment into re-
forming the ensemble in 1992.
I argued we could really use a mili-
tary band. The regiment had a tradi-
tion of a military band and they went
for it.
Since then Rehill, who is renowned
for his military band arrangements,
has brought the Robinson pride backto the band with dozens of perfor-
mances every year.
It is really an honour to direct the
band, he says. Hamilton has such a
rich musical history.
THE ROBINSON LEGACY MARCHES ON
THE RHLI BANDn Thirty-seven players
n Instruments include brass,
woodwind and percussion.
n Forty to 50 performances a year at
tattoos, parades, royal visits,
ceremonies and concerts.
n Formed in 1866 and known as the 13th
Battalion Band.
n Director of music is Major Michael
Rehill (shown above).
SEMPER PARATUS IIn The second CD by the RHLI band
n Features 16 pieces depicting the
history of the regiment.n The CD includes a newly discovered
composition from longtime bandleader
George R. Robinson, for whom the
Gage Park bandshell is named.
n Cost: $15, available through the RHLI
SPECIALTO
THEHAMILTON
SPECTATOR
The renowned RHLI band, pictured in 1940, remains a source of local pride.
It started with a story I worked on
about a teenage RHLI soldier named
Private James Henry Morrison, whodied in 1866.
Earlier this year as part of Royal
Hamilton Light Infantry 150th anniver-
sary ceremonies he was honoured
in a graveside ceremony as being the
first RHLI fatality, the first of more
than 1,100 battle deaths to follow over
the next century and a half.
He was only 17 when he died. It
seems hed joined the regiment to make
a little extra money after his f ather
died and he was left to care for his
mother and sisters.
He probably never dreamed hed
find himself in a dingy cattle car en
route to Ridgeway near Fort Erie to
help take on a group of Civil War-hardened Fenians who were striking
out at the British-controlled, pre-
Confederation Canada.
He and his fellow soldiers were
poorly trained and equipped. They
had little food or water. In desperation
in the sweltering heat, many drank
ditch water, which made them sick. Its
believed this caused the severe illness
that killed Morrison weeks later. After
writing that story, I found myself
thinking about all the other RHLI
soldiers in similarly horrific circum-
stances on battlefields such as Dieppe,
Vimy or Kandahar.
So I thought there was a song in this.
Songs are part of my other life awayfrom The Spec, where I have worked
since the early 1980s. I have four al-
bums out. I perform regularly and
have made more than a dozen appear-
ances at Hamiltons largest outdoor
music event, the Festival of Friends.
I called the song Private Riley be-
cause members of the RHLI call them-
selves Rileys and I thought a compos-
ite soldier would be a good way to tell
the bigger story about the regiment.
I believed it would help get across
the truth about warfare, that while
technology, battlefields an d enemies
change, individual soldiers essentially
remain the same young people sent
off to do horrible duty.After I finished the song, I played it
for various audiences and it was well-
received. Then one day, I pulled senior
editor Carla Ammerata aside and saidI had an idea for a Spectator website
item a slide-show video to go along
with a new song Id recorded in my
home studio about the RHLI for its
150th anniversary. She loved the idea
and it soon had enthusiastic support
all the way up to publisher Dana Rob-
bins.
Then I thought: Wouldnt it be fitting
to have the RHLI band play on the
recording? I met with Major Michael
Rehill, who has been bandleader for 20
years, and Tim Fletcher, the co-ordina-
tor of 150th anniversary activities for
the RHLI. They were ecstatic about the
idea and said th ey would do whatever
it took to help out. Rehill agreed towrite a military band arrangement
that could be mixed into the song Id
already put together. Fletcher said he
would gather whatever information I
needed.
Meanwhile, back at The Spec other
people were thinking that an eight-
page RHLI commemorative section
and other web items should also be put
together to go with the song video.
So today, in the pages of The Specta-
tor and on thespec.com, just before
Remembrance Day, we commemorate
the proud 150th anniversary of the
RHLI. And all the Private Rileys who
have served through its rich history.
A SOLDIER AND A SONG
MARK MCNEIL
The Hamilton Spectator
Young Riley who died in 1866 inspires
composition about RHLI heroesHAMILTON
SPECTATORFILEPHOTO
In 1962, the RHLI pays tribute to those who died at Dieppe.
905-526-4687
Editorial content:Mark McNeil
Video and photography:Barry Gray
Graphic design:Dean Tweed
Thanks: To RHLI bandleaderMaj.
Michael Rehill for arranging and
conducting the RHLI band for the song
Private Riley; drummer MCpl.
Genevieve Wongand other membersof the band;Sgt. Tim Fletcher (ret.), Sgt.
Stan Overy (ret.), Capt. Jordan
Spoelstra, 2nd Lt. Richard Moll and
Blake Gamble for research assistance;
Dan Medakovic for mixing and
mastering the song and Steve Parisien
for transcription assistance.
BEHIND THE SCENES
THE ROYAL HAMILTON LIGHT INFANTRY
SEMPER PARATUSALWAYS READY FOR 150 YEARS
At Thursdays RHLI Operation Yellow Ribbon Gala,
a new Canada Post stamp celebrating the 150th
anniversary of the Royal Hamilton Light Infantry
will be officially unveiled in Hamilton. It showcases
four uniforms from the regiments history.
A COMMEMORATIVE STAMP
1862Members of the regiment
would have wornthis uniform when the
battalion was formed
in 1862. Notable is the
Shako hat and the Enfield
musket with bayonet.
The uniform would
have been used at the
Battle of Ridgeway in 1866.
Second World WarThe soldier in beret
is wearing a battledress style that was
introduced in 1939
and is typical
of what RHLI soldiers
would have worn
in the Second World
War, including on the
beaches of Dieppe.
1910By 1910, headgear
was changed to a pith
helmet with a red band,
symbolizing the battalion
having become a Royalregiment. This uniform
would have been worn
by a bugler and is similar
to what is used today
by RHLI band members.
AfghanistanThis uniform was designed
for desert warfare and uses
a computer-generated
camouflage pattern
that reduces the chanceof being detected by night
vision devices. It was used
in Afghanistan by members
of the RHLI over the last
several years.
SOURCES: CANADA POST, ROYAL HAMILTON LIGHT INFANTRY
DEAN TWEED // THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR
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C M Y
BA6 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2012 THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR l THE SPEC.COM
VAL PATRICK WAS 17, a Riley, and it
was Centennial Day 1967 in Hamilton.
He was part of a garrison parade
that formed inside the fortress-like
walls of the armoury on James Street
North to celebrate Canadas 100th
birthday. And he had no idea what
awaited him and the other soldiers of
the Royal Hamilton Light Infantry
outside.
I couldnt believe it. The band was
playing and the colours were flying
and the streets were lined for miles
with the parade going th rough the city.
People on the sidewalks were cheering
us. They were calling out, Rileys,
Rileys, says Patrick, 62, a retiredwarrant officer with the RHLI, who
later served with NATO forces in
Europe during the Cold War.
It was my proudest moment as a
young person ... It really drove home
how deeply rooted the RHLI is in this
city and what it means. Being a Riley is
symbolic and interwoven with what
this community is all about.
We are a tough town but were a
sophisticated town, too.
While much has changed in Hamil-
ton through its rise and decline as a
steelmaker over the 150-year history
of the Rileys, the militia has main-
tained its presence and character
through good times and bad.
We go back to before Confeder-
ation, we fought to defend this country
before it was a country.
An estimated 34,000 men and wom-
en have served as Rileys at various
times over the past century and a half.
All of them were part-time soldiers,
people who had other jobs. Many used
their military lessons for personal
development to help them in civilian
life.
Others found themselves on battle-
fields around the world. More than1,100 Rileys have paid the supreme
sacrifice. And 197 died Aug. 19, 1942, in
the ill-fated raid on German-occupied
Dieppe on Frances northern coast.
There were 582 Rileys who fought on
that day and fewerthan 10 are still alive
today. One of the last is Jack McFar-
land, 91, who was wounded and cap-
tured during the raid. Seventy years
later, he says he is still angry about the
poor planning that went into the mis-
sion.
Conversely, Corporal Jonas Raudys,
25, a National Steel Car employee, says
he was well-prepared and the plan-
ning was excellent for his recent tour of
duty in Afghanistan.For more than seven months, he
trained Afghan soldiers who are grad-
ually taking over the security of their
own country.
We basically taught them every-
thing from the basics of patrolling, to
holding and shooting a weapon, things
of that nature, he says.
HAMILTONS OWN IN GOOD TIMES AND BAD
Royal Hamilton
Light Infantry
member Val
Patrick. He
served with
NATO forces in
Europe.
Members of the RHLI march during the trooping of the colours ceremony attended
by Prince Edward at the Warplane Heritage Museum in September.
Hamiltons own continues // BA7
MARK MCNEIL
The Hamilton Spectator
IN WAR AND PEACE, THE ROYAL HAMILTON LIGHT INFANTRY AT HOME
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT:
n RHLI guns fire at Dundurn Castle on
Canada Day this year.
n Canadian vets walk among the graves
at the Canadian cemetery in Dieppe.
n John Williamson, shown in 2000 in
Lake Ontario, was among the RHLI
soldiers who landed in Dieppe.
n Moments of reflection at theCanadian cemetery in Dieppe in 1944.
n In 1941, Lieutenant Gordon Clifton
(with megaphone) oversees Bren gun
training.
n Sergeant William Phillips Strickland
in 1860s uniform.
n Flags are proudly raised as the RHLI
parades on Nov. 22, 1945.
THE ROYAL HAMILTON LIGHT INFANTRY
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AND IN HOT SPOTS AROUND THE WORLD
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT:
n Its chow time for the Rileys at Camp
Borden in June 1951.
n Even when a war is raging (its 1942)
soldiers must make time for a shave.
n The RHLIs Kim Element, a peacekeeper
in Bosnia.
n RHLI Captain Nick Arakgi, right, arrives
in Kandahar and is greeted by General
Walter Natynczyk in 2008.
n In the aftermath of the Dieppe
catastrophe, captured soldiers are marched
through the streets of the city in northern
France.
PHOTOS FROM RHLI ARCHIVES AND HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILES
AT THE TOP OF THE PAGE:
n In June 1941, RHLI soldiers stand in
front of training centre at Camp
Borden.
C M Y
THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR l THE SPEC.COM THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2012 BA7
34,000The estimated number of Rileys
who have served over its 150-year
history.
1,100 to 1,200Estimated number of Riley
deaths from battle, almost en-
tirely from the First and Second
World Wars.
4Number of Rileys who died fromsickness acquired while fighting
the Fenians at Ridgeway. The
troops were poorly supplied with
food and water and many got sick
from drinking ditch water con-
taminated with farm runoff.
500-550Estimated number of Rileys who
died in the First World War. De-
tailed numbers are unavailable.
Rileys in the First World War
served in different larger units.
They did not march under Riley
colours until the Second WorldWar.
590Number of Rileys killed in the
Second World War.
1,157Number of Rileys wounded in the
Second World War.
582Number of Rileys who were in-
volved in the ill-fated raid at Di-
eppe on Aug. 19, 1942.
480Number of Riley casualties (dead,
wounded or prisoners of war) at
Dieppe.
197Number of Rileys killed at
Dieppe.
60Number of Rileys who served in
Afghanistan. None killed, one
injured.
175Current number of people in theRileys.
37Current number of people in the
RHLI military band.
RHLI BY THE
NUMBERS
SOURCE: RHLI
More than 60 Rileys served in Afghan-
istan, all of them returning home safe-
ly.
The commanding officer of RHLI,
Lieutenant-Colonel Dan Stepanuik, a
vice-principal at Ancaster High
School, spent seven months in Haiti in
2008 as part of a United Nations relief
effort after three hurricanes left the
country devastated.
He received a Chief of the DefenceStaff Commendation for leading
rescue efforts at a collapsed girls
school.
Jack Granatstein, a Canadian histo-
rian who specializes in political and
military history, says the RHLI has a
special place among militias in Cana-
da. It is among the oldest in the coun-
try and one of the most respected.
The RHLI had a terrific wartime
record (in the Second World War) in
Normandy and Northwest Europe. Itwas arguably one of the best regiments
in the Canadian army led by (Brigadier
J. M.) Rockingham and people like
(Brigadier-General) Denis Whitaker,
he said.
People like that established rep-
utations for courage and leadership
and that ripples through the commu-
nity. It has a positive effect on enlist-
ment, keeping the unit alive. You
proved you could do it in action, there-
fore the unit deserves to survive and
the unit must survive.
Mike McAllister, co-ordinator of the
Hamilton Military Museum, says
there is a fierce pride in Hamilton for
the RHLI that is similar to the way acommunity might feel toward a long-
established sports team.
The Rileys have the tradition, will
and desire to keep an important in-
stitution in this city going, he said.
McAllister believes much of the
passion for the Rileys stems from
lingering sad memories from Dieppe.
Dieppe was splashed across the
newspapers. Dieppe was talked about
for years afterwards. It crossed the
boundary into civilian life in a way thatalmost no other battle honour can ... it
joined people together because so
many loved ones were lost or affected.
The Dieppe raid is the kind of thing
that resonates across society and grabs
at peoples hearts for a very long time.
Hamiltons own continued from // BA6
It was my proudest moment as a young
person. It really drove home how deeply rooted
the RHLI is in this city and what it means.VAL PATRICK
905-526-4687
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