CHARLOTTETOWN – A Prince Edward Island guy remains in France today to trace the actions of a business of Island soldiers who participated in the D-Day intrusion 80 years earlier. Greg Gallant, manager of the P.E.I. Regiment Museum in Charlottetown, stated it’s unfamiliar that about 250 Islanders served in a business of the North Nova Scotia Highlanders. The routine, referred to as the North Novies, was at the head of the Canadian advance from Juno Beach on the very first day of the Allied intrusion of Normandy. “The North Novies with other aspects of the 3rd Canadian Division pressed the outermost inland,” stated Gallant in an interview before his departure. “They got up until now that they needed to pick up worry of being cut off from the other soldiers.” The details you require to understand, sent out straight to you: Download the CTV News App The routine became part of the 9th Infantry Brigade, which was charged with taking the airfield at Carpiquet, about 18 kilometres from the Canadian beachhead. The advance systems were informed to stop and were then drawn back in order to dig in versus an anticipated counterattack from the Germans. It would take control of a month before Carpiquet would be taken following extreme and frequently vicious battling that would evaluate the nerve of Canadian soldiers. Captain (Ret.) Greg Gallant, manager of the Prince Edward Island Museum in the Queen Charlotte Armouries, and Joyce Phillips, volunteer scientist with the museum, discuss its display of the North Nova Scotia Highlanders, in Charlottetown, Saturday, June 1, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Brian McInnis The Normandy fights throughout the summer season of 1944 declared 5,000 Canadian lives while another 13,000 were injured. Gallant, who becomes part of a little group from the Island checking out France today, is taking his very first journey to the location where his late uncle, Allan Doucette, combated and was injured. “We’re going to enter as far as the (North Novies) did and cover a few of the area that they covered and attempt to get some photos of a few of the tombs of the guys from P.E.I.,” Gallant stated. He kept in mind that 5 Island soldiers were amongst a number of Canadians who were performed following their capture by the notorious 12th SS Panzer Division. “The guys from P.E.I. were eliminated in various places, one at Authie and a couple down the roadway, so there were a number of various scenes that soldiers discovered,” stated Gallant. “My uncle took a piece of shrapnel in his neck when an 88 mm shell exploded near to where they were burying the dead that they had actually discovered.” Gallant stated that numerous Islanders are uninformed of the function played by Canada’s tiniest province throughout the Second World War, and he thinks it’s essential to highlight the contributions of the males and females who served. That’s why he worked to develop a series of posters to celebrate the Island’s contribution to D-Day that presently decorate 4 bus shelters in downtown Charlottetown. The panels commemorate the Army, Navy and Air Force, along with 3 P.E.I. soldiers who passed away on June 6, 1944. He has a restricted spending plan, Gallant stated the strategy is to move the posters to a couple of other bus shelters in the city later on this month, and he likewise hopes to provide some copies to regional legions and to schools. “It’s to produce awareness,” he stated. “There are still a couple of veterans here in P.E.I., however their numbers are quite thin.” This report by The Canadian Press was very first released June 5, 2024. – By Keith Doucette in Halifax For more Prince Edward Island news visit our devoted provincial page.