Tom Driscoll Receiving A Medal
- 98.612.01
- Item
- ca.1940
Part of Biggar Photograph Collection
Tom Driscoll in a Royal Canadian Air Force uniform, receiving a medal from another man in uniform. Other Officers can be seen sitting in the background
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Tom Driscoll Receiving A Medal
Part of Biggar Photograph Collection
Tom Driscoll in a Royal Canadian Air Force uniform, receiving a medal from another man in uniform. Other Officers can be seen sitting in the background
Tom Driscoll, R.C.A.F. From Biggar, Saskatchewan
Part of Biggar Photograph Collection
A portrait of Tom Driscoll in his Royal Canadian Air Force Uniform
Two men in uniforms of a captain and a private in the Canadian Armed Forces.
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Kunkel Collection
Part of Military Collection
Large group of soldiers outdoors in their uniforms
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Part of Military Collection
The #28 Veterans Guard of Canada in full uniform
#28 Veterans Guard of Canada
Walter Essex in WWII RCAF uniform.
Part of Biggar Photograph Collection
Two men in military uniform, leaning against a stone wall
Wedding Portrait of Jack and Vera Gartner
Part of Biggar Photograph Collection
A man in military uniform and a woman in a wedding dress and holding a bouquet
William "Bill" McBurney Elliott
Bill Elliott, son of Stan Elliott, married Margaret Esson and became a lawyer in Regina. The photo shows him wearing his RCAF uniform. He was a pilot and served overseas in 1944, 1945, and 1946.
William Yeates Hunter - Portrait
Portrait of William Yeates Hunter in uniform with hat and a riding crop.
Bio/Historical Note: Major (Manitoba Regiment) William Yeates Hunter (b.1868) of Saskatoon was KIA 19180928 and is buried at Reninghelst New military cemetery southwest of Ieper, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium. He was the son of Dr. William Frith Hunter and came from Margate, Kent, England, to homestead on NW21-49-4-W3, west of Shellbrook. Hunter served more than 13 years in the British Army and was with the 8th Kings (Liverpool) Regiment in the South African War. Hunter completed a BA at the University of Saskatchewan in 1915 and was a professor of English when he enlisted at Winnipeg, Manitoba, early the next year, leaving a wife Ethel Helen later of Montréal, Québec. Hunter was serving as an area commandant of part of liberated Belgium when he was killed (most likely by enemy bombs).