Soft-cover red 18 x 24 cm notebook with about 150 pages with hand-written names, numbers, regiments and other information about enlisted men and women in World War 1 and World War 2
A red and green hardcover 280-page book containing the history and achievements of the Royal Canadian Lord Strathcona's Horse Regiment during World War II. There is no local content unless any of the men enlisted are from Indian Head and area.
A small (16 cm X 24 cm) red hardcover 170-page book containing the roll of honour, nominal roll and casualty chart for the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry for the years from 1939 to 1945. There is no Indian Head content except for the names of those enlisted in the PPCLI who came had lived in Indian Head.
A 20 cm X 25 cm certificate from the town of Moosomin to returning veterans of WWII thanking them for their service. The name of the veteran and date on the certificate are both highly faded and illegible.
A newspaper article clipped out of the Leader Post that reports on 17th Field Regiment and their involvement in the Battle of Otterloo, north of Arnhem in the Netherlands (see IHM.2020.0345 - memoirs of Sgt. Gordie Bannerman).
A newspaper article that has been clipped out. The article details the Canadian contribution to the Italian Campaign in WWII. Primarily focused on the invasion of Sicily
51 single-sided pages of email printouts from Stan Scislowski of Windsor, Ontario, to Doug Roberton of Indian Head, containing his memoirs of his WWII experience in Aldershot, England and then in action in Italy as a private in the Perth Regiment.
Photograph of an unidentified soldier with a stack of bombs. If taken on the same day as IHM.2020.0423, this would also be at the Krupp proving grounds.
Photograph of one soldier with a jeep in the background posing under a road sign - likely at Sneek, the Netherlands. Inscription on back says "Holland 1945 Len Martin"
Six soldiers of the 17th Field Regiment pose with a large Krupp artillery gun. Sgt. Peter Powless from Indian Head is identified in the photograph. The Krupp proving grounds were at Meppen, Germany, just 70 km southeast of Winschoten, the Netherlands, where the regiment was stationed after WWII.