| General H.D.G. Crerar | ||||||
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Henry Duncan Graham Crerar, born in Hamilton, Ontario, on April 28th, 1888; died in Ottawa on April 1st, 1965. Canadian Army officer and diplomat.
Harry Crerar was educated at the Royal Military College in Kingston,
Ontario, from 1906 to 1909 and joined the Militia in the years preceding
WWI. During the war, he served with distinction as a Canadian Field Artillery
officer on French and Flanders battlefields, being awarded the Distinguished
Service Order. When hostilities came to an end, Crerar was a lieutenant
colonel of the Canadian Corps' General Staff. Back in Canada, Crerar opted for a military career and joined the Permanent
Force as Staff Officer Artillery in Ottawa. In 1923, he matriculated at
the Camberley Staff College in England. Upon graduating, rather than returning
to Ottawa, he accepted a posting as General Staff Officer 2 with the War
Office in London. In 1929, Crerar was appointed General Staff Officer
1 at the National Defence HQ in Ottawa, and started working on a major
reorganization of the Canadian Militia. In 1934, Crerar was once again in Great Britain, following courses at
the Imperial Defence College in London. Back to NDHQ, he became Director
of Military Operations and Intelligence. He had then a reputation of being
a brilliant mind and was perceived as the best officer on the Canadian
General Staff. In March 1939, after serving a few months as Commander
of the Royal Military College, Crerar was recalled to Ottawa to prepare
a mobilization plan, as the possibility of another war increased. As WWII began, Crerar was posted in London as Brigadier General Staff
at the Canadian Military Headquarters. He was responsible for ensuring
that the required equipment, barracks and training plans were in place
when Canadian troops arrive. In July 1940, he was called back to Ottawa
as Vice-Chief General Staff, but promoted a few days later to Chief General
Staff by Defence Minister J.L.
Ralston. He took immediate measures to improve the efficiency
of National Defence HQ and set up emergency recruitment and training programmes
for territorial defence, as volunteers were already pouring in, the National
Resources Mobilization Act having been adopted on June 21st, 1940. He
also put together a training programme for officers and soldiers slated
to serve overseas. Crerar returned to England, where, on December 23rd, 1941, he was appointed
General Officer Commanding, I Canadian Corps. He would, therefore, find
himself right in the middle of the crisis that followed the Dieppe raid
on August 19th, 1942, since the Canadian troops that took part in that
ill-fated operation were with I Canadian Corps. No Canadian officer had
his say in the planning and Crerar's only option was to try to rationalize
the losses and draw lessons from the failure. Crerar lacked battlefield experience and thought he would have an opportunity
to gain some as I Canadian Corps joined the 1st Canadian Infantry Division
in Italy in October 1943. His hopes did not materialize, being recalled
to England as soon as March 1944, to take over the command of the 1st
First Canadian Army, replacing General McNaughton.
The 1st Canadian Army was mustered in Normandy on July 23rd, 1944, and,
under Crerar's command, played a major role as the Allies circled German
troops in the Falaise Gap in August 1944. Ill health forced Crerar to
be replaced temporarily by Major-General Guy
Simonds during the Battle of the Scheldt (October-November
1944). In February 1945, the 1st Canadian Army, with Crerar back at the
helm, was once more on the front line. During the Rhineland campaign,
he found himself at the head of a 450,000-men strong army, including allied
units under 1st Canadian Army command. Crerar retired from the military in 1946. Later, he occupied diplomatic
postings in Czechoslovakia, the Netherlands and Japan. Harry Crerar was an outstanding General Staff officer. He left his mark on the largest army Canada ever levied, structuring the HQ, organizing training for the troops that were to join its ranks, and commanding the 1st Army during the last major campaigns. After the war, he was the one in charge of the demobilization process.
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Vice-Marshal G.M. Croil |