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Tag: 42nd Battalion

42nd Battalion (Royal Highlanders of Canada) organized in February 1915 initially under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel G S Cantlie. Mobilized at Montreal and also recruited in Montreal. Embarked from Montreal 10 June 1915 aboard HESPERIAN, and later disembarked England 19 June 1915 with a strength of 40 officers, 978 other ranks. Arrived in France 9 September 1915 with the 3rd Canadian Division, 7th Canadian Infantry Brigade and later reinforced by 20th Canadian Reserve Battalion.

42nd Battalion marching through the Grand Place, Mons, on the morning of 11 November 1918. MIKAN No. 3522364
42nd Battalion marching through the Grand Place, Mons, on the morning of 11 November 1918. MIKAN No. 3522364

Returned to England 8 February 1919. Arrived in Canada 9 March 1919. Demobilized 11 March 1919. Disbanded by General Order 149 of 15 September 1920. Colours deposited in 5th Regiment (RHR) Armoury in 1919 Pipe band. Perpetuated by The Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment) of Canada.

  • Private Robert E Sherwood in the Great War

    Private Robert E Sherwood in the Great War

    Private Robert E Sherwood of the Royal Highlanders of Canada became an award winning Pulitzer Prize playwright following the Great War.

    Pulitzer Prize Winner

    Private Robert E Sherwood
    Private Robert E Sherwood

    Early Life of Robert Sherwood

    Born in 1896, his mother Rosina E Sherwood and father Arthur Murry Sherwood of Westport, NY, USA. A great-grandnephew of the Irish nationalist Robert Emmet, executed for high treason after leading the Irish rebellion of 1803. His relatives also included three other notable American portrait artists: his aunts, Lydia Field Emmet and Jane Emmet de Glehn, and his first cousin, once removed, Ellen Emmet Rand.

    OP-0228 (R5966, Volume number 1) Dug Out on the Somme 1919. Painting's support laid down onto secondary support of cardboard., This is item 3 in the Hamilton inventory. MIKAN No 2835979
    Dug Out on the Somme 1919. This is item 3 in the Mary Riter Hamilton inventory.
    MIKAN No 2835979

    Enlistment of Pte Robert E Sherwood

    Six months Officer’s training in the USA, but apparently rejected due to his height. Following some time spent at Harvard University, Robert Emmet Sherwood 2075473 enlisted 3 July 1917 with Royal Highlanders of Canada (RHC) in Montreal, 2nd Reinforcing Company, 5th Royal Highlanders of Canada.

    Long and short of the 85th Battalion, Halifax, 1915. On the left is Pte. Henry Percival Barnes of Halifax, NS, who was a member of the regimental brass band. The man on the right has not been positively identified. MIKAN No. 3192645 Private Robert E Sherwood
    Long and short of the 85th Battalion, Halifax, 1915. On the left is Pte. Henry Percival Barnes of Halifax, NS, who was a member of the regimental brass band. The man on the right has not been positively identified. MIKAN No. 3192645

    A huge man, Robert stood between 6′ 5″ and 6′ 8″ tall, 167 pounds, with white complexion, brown eyes and fair hair. He had an appendix scar. A newspaper reporter by profession. He bequeathed all to a Mrs James Mulford Townsend of Whitehall Building, Battery Place, NYC.

    Groucho Marx

    Reminds me of Bob Sherwood, the playwright, he’s an old friend of mine; and he’s six-foot-five and very thin. I said to him one day ‘Bob, what do you say to people when they ask you how the weather is up there?’ He said ‘I spit in their eye and tell ‘em it’s raining.’– Groucho Marx

    Montreal General Hospital on 31 July 1917 (left knee), and discharged to duty on 3 August 1917.

    Private Robert E Sherwood entered Western Front on 22 February 1918.

    During March of 1918, Robert met Will R Bird in the trenches.

    Will R Bird

    The next night I was told to take a carrying party to a certain point and get some wire. Ten men were in the group. One of them was very tall and had a white bandage around his neck. When I asked him what was wrong, he said he had boils. It was not a very dark night and I was afraid the white would be seen, so went to his officer and asked if he might be excused. the officer agreed at once when I explained. So I told the man he would not be on any carrying parties until he could shed his bandage, He was unusually grateful and spoke like an educated person. I saw him twice in the daytime and had a long chat with him, finally asking his name.

    It was Robert E Sherwood. Later it would be a name known all over America.

    Will R Bird – Ghosts Have Warm Hands

    For several weeks Sherwood served as part of the working party digging trenches in Arras on Vimy Ridge. This usually done at night, when each man responsible for enlarging the trench by three or four yards. During this period his regiment presented to George V and Sir Douglas Haig. The king went over to Sherwood and asked him how tall he was. This was followed by other questions and he was very surprised to find out he was not a Canadian.

    42nd Battalion Officers inspect guns captured by them in Folie Wood during Vimy fighting. Royal Highlanders of Canada. MIKAN No. 3520003 Private Robert E Sherwood
    42nd Battalion Officers inspect guns captured by them in Folie Wood during Vimy fighting. Royal Highlanders of Canada. MIKAN No. 3520003

    Gassed

    Gassed in July of 1918 which caused a couple hours of vomiting at first. He reported sick and given light duty. In July 1918 Sherwood’s regiment experienced a German mustard gas attack. Although he had been given a gas mask he either had trouble putting it on or had taken it off too soon. He was hospitalized after having vomited for approximately two hours. Eventually released from hospital and sent back to the Western Front with the recommendation that he be assigned only “light duties”. He later recalled: “my youthful enthusiasm was drained out of me. I was scared stiff. I thought, In a few days or maybe, a few hours, how do I know? I’ll be up in that terror. Let’s face it I’m going to be killed in this war. And that’s the end of me.”

    Private Robert E Sherwood
    A mule with skin disease being treated at a Canadian Mobile Veterinary Section in France. August, 1917

    First complained about shortness of breath and palpitation of heart on marches, 1 August 1918. Over-exertion causing vomiting.

    Battle of Amiens

    Sherwood fell into a German trap on the first day of the battle. Both legs cut by barbed wire – his boils and skin rashes eventually led to being evacuated to England following treatment at No 7 CCS.

    Private Robert E Sherwood
    Learning how to put up wire entanglements at Chiseldon, Private Baxter Ogilvie Grant.

    Return to England

    Reading West Hospital, 3 September 1918. Easily tired, stitches in left side when awakening. Robert had lost over 40 pounds, his weight only 125 pounds. Discharged 10 October 1918.

    Personnel of the 42nd Regiment (13th Battalion, Royal Highlanders of Canada) moving up to the attack on Cambrai in the early morning. MIKAN No. 3355935
    Personnel of the 42nd Regiment (13th Battalion, Royal Highlanders of Canada) moving up to the attack on Cambrai in the early morning. MIKAN No. 3355935

    Princess Patricia Canadian Red Cross Hospital, Cooden Camp, Bexhill, discharged on 14 October 1918, and transferred to Bushy Park (The King’s Canadian Red Cross Special Hospital).

    Sherwood managed to celebrate in the week following the Armistice, for which he forfeited two days pay being AWOL.

    Return to Canada

    Private Robert E Sherwood discharged in Montreal as medically unfit on 5 February 1919. Sherwood had returned without his unit. The 42nd Battalion returned per SS ADRIATIC on 1 March 1919.

    Departure of 3rd Canadian Division per S.S. "Adriatic" from Liverpool, March 1st 1919. 42nd Battalion, Royal Highlanders of Canada Colours and Band. MIKAN No. 3523113 Private Robert E Sherwood
    Departure of 3rd Canadian Division per S.S. “Adriatic” from Liverpool, March 1st 1919. 42nd Battalion, Royal Highlanders of Canada Colours and Band. MIKAN No. 3523113

    Return to America

    On arriving home he told his mother that during his seven months with the 42nd Battalion, the personnel in his company had changed twice because every officer and enlisted man had been either killed or wounded during the fighting.

    “He was a troubled and uprooted young man. He was not only convalescing physically, he was convalescing from a war. Like hundreds of thousands of other young men, he was a different man, come back to a different country to start a different life. With difficulty he was adjusting himself to the lower-keyed realities of peace.

    For the first time he was confronted with the full meaning, to him and his family, of his father’s failure and retirement. Skene Wood was gone. So was the Lexington Avenue in which the Sherwoods had lived for thirteen years. So was the routine of going off to school or college which before the war had been part of his life. The question Sherwood faced, once he had recovered from his immediate past, was his future. He wanted to write and he needed a job.”

    John Mason Brown writes in his 1965 biography

    In 1920, Sherwood became editor of Life.

    The Road to Rome (1927)

    His first play, The Road to Rome (1927), criticizes the pointlessness of war, a recurring theme in many of his dramas.

    screened-road-a-unfinished by A Y Jackson

    Pulitzer prizes

    He received Pulitzer Prize for Drama (1936, 1939, 1941). Another Pulitzer Prize for Biography (1948).

    President Franklin D. Roosevelt

    Sherwood worked as speechwriter and consultant to President Franklin D. Roosevelt in the Second World War as Director of the Office of War Information. He lived in the Willard Hotel, maintaining a regular suite in DC from 1940 to 1945.

    The Best Years of Our Lives (1946)

    Academy Award

    The Best Years of Our Lives (1946) earned him an Oscar for Best Screenplay.

    Harold Russell in “The Best Years of Our Lives”. Harold Russell not an actor, he had been an Army instructor during the Second World War when he lost both hands in an accident while handling explosives.

    Sherwood died 14 November 1955 in NYC following a heart attack. He had been married twice, firstly in NYC on 29 October 1922 to Mary Judah (one daughter Mary Jameson) – they divorced in 1934. In Budapest, Hungary, he had married Madeline Hurlock (divorced wife of playwright Marc Connelly) on 15 June 1935.

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