Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

WW2 soldier killed in Netherlands identified

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Nov, 2020 08:50 PM
  • WW2 soldier killed in Netherlands identified

A Canadian soldier buried in a nameless grave in the Netherlands near the end of the Second World War has been identified 75 years later, the Department of National Defence said Monday.

Trooper Henry George Johnston's identity was confirmed under a program dedicated to identifying newly found skeletal remains and Canadian service members who were buried anonymously.

Sarah Lockyer, an anthropologist and casualty identification coordinator at the Department of National Defence, said research in archival and historical information confirmed Johnston's identity.

Johnston was buried as an unknown soldier in 1945 in the Commonwealth War Graves Commission’s Mook war cemetery in the Netherlands.

"The headstone had basic information on it. It was a soldier from a Canadian regiment and had a date of death," she said.

After training in Ontario, the Alberta-born Johnston arrived in the United Kingdom in July 1944. He was killed in Operation Blackcock in the Netherlands the following January, a fierce fight to push German troops east across a major river.

Starting with that information, researcher narrowed down the soldier's identity using historical documents.

"We're looking at any historical information that we can find. Things like war diaries, grave concentration and registration reports, casualty cards," Lockyer said. "For Trooper Johnson, that's exactly what happened."

National Defence Canada says Johnston's family was notified of his identification and provided with support.

The department says a headstone rededication ceremony will take place at the cemetery in Limburg, in the Netherlands.

"It's all about returning a name to an individual who has remained an unknown person," Lockyer said. "This individual died in combat, gave his life for Canada and the Canadian Forces at the time. And we kind of owe it to this individual to try as much as we possibly can to return his name."

There are more than 27,000 Canadian service personnel from the First and Second World Wars and the conflict in Korea without known graves, she said.

Lockyer said the Casualty Identification Program started in 2007 but it's become more systematic in putting names to graves and remains since 2019.

"We are now starting to put in much more regulated processes into making that happen," she said.

Johnston is the second Canadian soldier identified under this program this year. Lt. John Gordon Kavanagh's grave in the Netherlands was identified in January.

The department is working on identifying 47 unknown Canadian soldiers' graves and 45 sets of remains that have been discovered as well, Lockyer said.

Thirty-one Canadians' remains have been identified since 2007, Lockyer said.

The successful identification of Johnston shows that it's possible to identify soldiers buried in an unknown graves even without examining remains, she said.

"There's other ways that we can do identification as well, when there's enough historical and archival material that supports the identification of a previously unknown grave that now becomes one with a name on it," she said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Feds OK industrial carbon taxes in Ontario, N.B.

Feds OK industrial carbon taxes in Ontario, N.B.
A similar letter was sent to New Brunswick Environment Minister Jeff Carr.

Feds OK industrial carbon taxes in Ontario, N.B.

Feds pledge $1B for rapid-housing program

Feds pledge $1B for rapid-housing program
The Liberals expect the program will create 3,000 new affordable housing units across Canada.

Feds pledge $1B for rapid-housing program

Mourners pay tribute to Ginsburg as battle brews

Mourners pay tribute to Ginsburg as battle brews
Ginsburg, only the second woman to ever sit on the Supreme Court, died Friday at 87 of complications from cancer.

Mourners pay tribute to Ginsburg as battle brews

New president to lead federal public health agency

New president to lead federal public health agency
Last week, the federal public health agency's president, Tina Namiesniowski, announced she was stepping down.

New president to lead federal public health agency

WATCH: BC Election set for Oct 24th

WATCH: BC Election set for Oct 24th
WATCH: BC Premier John Horgan confirms that British Columbians will be heading to the polls on October 24th for the 42nd provincial election in the midst of the COVID19 pandemic. Says he struggled with the decision but says he believes now is the right time because it allows public to weigh in on the path forward.

WATCH: BC Election set for Oct 24th

'Monkey Beach' showcases power of Haisla spirituality, land

'Monkey Beach' showcases power of Haisla spirituality, land
A boat passes and a figure plunges into the water as blood swirls around, hinting at the mystery at the centre of Monkey Beach, an adaptation of the 2000 book by Haisla author Eden Robinson.

'Monkey Beach' showcases power of Haisla spirituality, land