Royal Canadian Legion

The Royal Canadian Legion

Abbreviation RCL
Motto "Memoriam eorum retinebimus" (Latin)
"We Will Remember Them"
Formation November 25, 1925 (1925-11-25)
Type Ex-service organisation
Legal status Nonprofit Organization
Headquarters Dominion Command
Location
Region served
Worldwide
Membership (2014)
300,000
Grand Patron
David Johnston
Honourary Grand President
Larry Murray
Dominion President
Tom Eagles
Affiliations Royal Commonwealth Ex-Services League
Slogan ″There is strength and power in numbers″
Website www.legion.ca
Formerly called
Canadian Legion
Royal Canadian Legion badge
Royal Canadian Legion Cadet Medal of Excellence

The Royal Canadian Legion is a non-profit Canadian ex-service organization (veterans' organization) founded in 1925.[1] Membership includes people who have served as military, Royal Canadian Mounted Police, provincial and municipal police, Royal Canadian Air, Army and Sea Cadets, direct relatives of members and also affiliated members. Membership is now also open to the general public.

History

In Canada, several veterans' organizations emerged during World War I. The Great War Veterans Association, founded in 1917 by Lillian Bilsky Freiman, was the first national organization for veterans, and by 1919 it was the largest veterans' organization in Canada. Following World War I, 15 different organizations existed to aid returning veterans in Canada. Field Marshal Earl Haig, founder of the British Empire Service League (now known as the Royal Commonwealth Ex-Services League), visited Canada in 1925 and urged the organizations to merge.[2] In the same year, the Dominion Veterans Alliance was created to unite these organizations.[1][2]

In November 1925, the Canadian Legion was founded in Winnipeg, Manitoba, as the Canadian Legion of the British Empire Services League. The Canadian Legion of the British Empire Services League was incorporated by a special act of parliament the following year.[1] The Legion grew steadily through the 1930s and then expanded rapidly following World War II.[2] In 1960, Elizabeth II granted The Legion royal patronage and it became The Royal Canadian Legion.[1]

Recognition

On 10 November 1975 Canada Post issued "The Royal Canadian Legion, 1925–1975" designed by Rudy Kovach. The 8¢ stamps are perforated 13 and were printed by British American Bank Note Company.[3]

National Headquarters

The National Headquarters of The Royal Canadian Legion in Ottawa, Ontario features a Wall of Remembrance.

Memorials

The Royal Canadian Legion Branch 593 erected a memorial in Ottawa dedicated to those who died in the First and Second World Wars and the Korean War.[4]

Legion museums

Royal Canadian Legion Hall of Honour at the Canadian War Museum, containing the original plaster model for the National War Memorial by sculptor Vernon March

A number of military museums are co-located and affiliated with Royal Canadian Legions.

Name Town/City/Region Province Type Summary
Herman J. Good V.C Branch No.18 Royal Canadian Legion War Museum Bathurst Gloucester New Brunswick Military information, information
Royal Canadian Legion Military Museum Grand Falls-Windsor Newfoundland and Labrador Military information, information, operated by the Royal Canadian Legion Branch 12
Royal Canadian Legion Military Museum Dartmouth Halifax Regional Municipality Metro Halifax Nova Scotia Military information
Hall of Remembrance Military Museum Perth Eastern Ontario Military website
Royal Canadian Legion Branch 72 Museum Pembroke Eastern Ontario Military website, information, open by request and for special events, local branch of the Royal Canadian Legion
Kensington Veterans Memorial Museum Kensington Prince Prince Edward Island Military website, adjacent to the Royal Canadian Legion, includes uniforms, medals, hand weapons, flags, photographs and maps
Royal Canadian Legion Museum Saskatoon West Central Saskatchewan Military website, uniforms, medals and memorabilia of the Royal Canadian Legion

Legion halls

A Legion hall in Baddeck, Nova Scotia.

Most small towns and villages in Canada have at least one Legion Hall. Often the Legion Hall is a major community centre, combining the functions of a pub, pool hall, dance hall, bingo hall, banquet hall, and so on.[5]

Legion Halls are numbered, for example "Branch 99 Royal Canadian Legion". This is not a nationwide numbering system as you might expect, however; each provincial Command has its own numerical sequence. "Branch 99", therefore, can refer to any of several Legion Halls, as follows: Belleville, Ontario; Cowansville, Quebec; Lipton/Dysart, Saskatchewan; Coronation, Alberta (a branch that has closed); or Emo, Ontario (in the Manitoba/Northwestern Ontario Command).

The Royal Canadian Legion Maple Leaf Post-84 is located in Royal Oak, Michigan.

Services and activities

Poppy Campaign

The Legion is responsible for Canada's remembrance poppy campaign which distributes plastic lapel poppies to be worn in the lead up to Remembrance Day. The poppy is worn on the left lapel, or as close to the heart as possible.[6] The current lapel poppy has been manufactured since 1922—originally under the sponsorship of the Department of Soldiers Civil Re-establishment.[6] Until 1996, the poppy material was manufactured at sheltered workshops operated by Veterans Affairs Canada.[6] Poppies are distributed through retail outlets, workplaces, Legion branches, malls and other locations across Canada. Typically, the poppies are offered up for donation as a symbol of Remembrance,using an honour system, with the poppies being left in open places with a receptacle for leaving a donation toward the campaign. Funds raised are used to support ex-service members in need [6] and to fund medical appliances and research, home services, care facilities and numerous other purposes benefiting veterans.[7]

Memorial activities

Members of the Legion perform graveside memorial ceremonies for veterans at cemeteries throughout Canada. The Legion also performs ceremonies annually at the gravesites of Canadian and British servicemen interred in the United States, generally on a Sunday in May.

Legion Athletic Camp

In 1962 the Legion began a summer sports camp at the International Peace Garden which is run to this day, and has helped to train over 48,000 school age athletes. Several sports are offered over a five-week period. The program was founded by George Phillips and Fred Taylor (see www.legionathleticcamp..com).

Lest We Forget Project

The Legion supports the Lest We Forget Project in cooperation with the Canadian War Museum.

Legion Military Skills Conversion Program

In 2015, the Royal Canadian Legion, donated $830,000 to the BCIT School of Business to fund the Legion Military Skills Conversion Program. This program helps Canadian veterans and reservists convert their military skills and knowledge into a business credential.[8] (see www.bcit.ca/legion)

Membership

Membership in The Royal Canadian Legion was originally restricted to ex-service members of Canada's Armed Forces and Merchant Navy.[9] The organization is now open to members of the general public. There are four categories of membership.[10]

Ordinary membership

Ordinary membership is open to anyone who has served or is serving in one of the following:

Associate membership

Individuals who do not qualify for ordinary membership can be associate members if one of the following applies:

Affiliate voting membership

Commonwealth subjects who do not qualify for ordinary or associate membership are eligible for affiliate membership.

Affiliate non-voting membership

Non-Commonwealth subjects from an Allied nation who support the aims and objects of The Royal Canadian Legion can apply for affiliate non-voting membership.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "history". Royal Canadian Legion. Royal Canadian Legion. Retrieved 8 April 2012.
  2. 1 2 3 "Royal Canadian Legion". Canadian Encyclopedia. Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 8 April 2012.
  3. Canada Post stamp
  4. Royal Canadian Legion Branch 593 memorial
  5. "Royal Canadian Legion hall: Canadian Geographic Magazine".
  6. 1 2 3 4 "The Poppy Campaign". Royal Canadian Legion. Royal Canadian Legion. Retrieved 8 April 2012.
  7. "The Poppy". Veterans Affairs Canada. Government of Canada. Retrieved 8 April 2012.
  8. "Legion Military Skills Conversion Program". Fuller-Evans, Janaya. Burnaby Now. Retrieved 25 August 2016.
  9. "Membership Services". Royal Canadian Legion. Royal Canadian Legion. Retrieved 4 April 2012.
  10. "Who Can Join?". Royal Canadian Legion. Royal Canadian Legion. Retrieved 4 April 2012.
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