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*For more info on Our Three Lost Soldiers, Remembered, continue reading to view their bios.
*All three attended Harbord Street Collegiate Institute (as it was then known) before going on
to university or work, or just joining up to fight upon leaving high school--dependent on age
at the time of the war.
Please join us on November 11th, when we Remember the Fallen….
*Lt. Myer Tutzer Cohen , M.C. (Military Cross--the 2nd highest award for bravery in the armed forces-- the Victoria Cross is the highest)
*Lt. Col. Thomas Craik Irving, D.S.O. (Distinguished Service Order--a medal also right up there and just barely below the M.C.)
*Lt. Walter Howard Curry-- no medal awarded
Our new plaque, honouring Our Three Lost Harbord Soldiers, remembered, will be unveiled at the service
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The Harbord Club is
requesting your assistance in
helping us fundraise to
honour Three Lost Harbord
Soldiers. The monies are for
the design, preparation and
manufacture of a bronze
plaque containing the 3
names and will be affixed to
"Our Soldier". This plaque will
be unveiled on November
11th, 2014. Our aim is to raise
a minimum of $2500.00 for
the monument addition. Any
amount will be appreciated.
Thank you!
PLEASE DONATE!
You are Invited…
If you plan to attend the Service, please RSVP
before noon on Wednesday Nov. 5th by doing the
following:
#1. Call the school at 416 393 1650
#2. Ask to leave a message for either Syd Moscoe or
Belinda Felix.
#3. RSVP by leaving your name and say that you will be
attending the unveiling
#4. On Remembrance Day morning, please meet by
Our Soldier as we will commence promptly at
10:30 am.
#5. Please come to the Museum, located on the first
Floor by the office, for some light refreshments after
the unveiling
This is how you can
help!
Please, Please
Donate!!!
Make your donation to the Harbord Club
and make a difference!
All cheques of $50.00 and over for which
a charitable receipt is required should be
made payable to “Harbord Charitable
Foundation” and on the face of the
cheque in the Memo line insert the words
“For the Harbord Club”.
For any amount less than $50.00 or if a
receipt is not required, please make you
cheque payable to “Harbord Club”.
Thank you!
Please Help Us Out!
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LT. MYER TUTZER COHEN
Lieutenant Myer Tutzer Cohen’s name is missing from Harbord Collegiate’s list of those
who served and gave their lives in the First World War. It was only after receiving an email
from a Mr. Earl Chapman, a historian of The Black Watch, inquiring about Lt. Cohen and
whether or not we could confirm that he had been a Harbord alumnus. Mr. Chapman
then sent us a copy of an article from the Toronto Star dated November 17, 1917 reporting
on Lt. Cohen’s death in the battle of Passchendaele on November 3, 1917. The article
went on to state that he had been educated at Harbord Street Collegiate. He and his
family lived at 558 Huron Street, well within Harbord’s catchment area. He was awarded
the Military Cross for gallantry on October 19, 1917. The award was accepted by his
father, Moses Mark Cohen, at Government House in Toronto on April 19, 1918. Mr.
.Chapman’s email went on to say that: “Myer’a service is commemorated in the Church
of St. Andrew and St. Paul in Montreal, the Regimental Church of The Black Watch of
Canada. The church features a magnificent memorial window, said to be one of the
finest in Canada, which was dedicated to the 42nd Battalion (one of the three battalions
raised for service with the Royal Highlanders). In the window, above the head of David,
the Warrior King, is a six pointed Star of David inserted in honour of Lieutenant Cohen-a
tribute to the ‘ memory of a gallant young Jew who, in sharing the high and chivalrous
traditions of a proud and great Regiment , gave all he had for Canada’.
LT. COL. THOMAS CRAIK IRVING
Lt. Col. Thomas Craik Irving , attended Harbord Street Collegiate Institute, University of
Toronto, and McGill University. In August 1914, he was appointed a Captain in the
Canadian Expeditionary Force and Commanding Officer of the 2nd Field Company,
First Divisional Engineers, which he recruited in Toronto. He reached France in
February 1915 with his unit, and served through the battles of Ypres, Festubert and
Givenchy. Later in the year he was promoted to the rank of Major. He was awarded
the Distinguished Service Order for his services in the third battle of Ypres in June 1916.
In the following autumn , he was gazetted Lieutenant-Colonel and appointed to the
command of the Engineers of the 4th Division, which he commanded in the battles of
the Somme and Vimy and through the following campaign before Lens. On October
29th,1917, when the battle of Passchendale was in progress, he was killed in his
Headquarters by a fragment of a bomb dropped from and enemy’s aeroplane. At
the time of his death he was married to Jessie Edna Murray whom he had met while
stationed in England. He is buried at Brandhoek Military Cemetery. On January 1st,
1918, his name was Mentioned in Despatches for his services at Passchendale..
LT. MYER TUTZER COHEN
LT. COL. THOMAS CRAIK IRVING
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LT. WALTER HOWARD CURRY
Lt. Walter Howard, while serving in the 19th Battalion of the Canadian Expeditionary Force was
killed in action on August 27 ,1918 at the age of 27.
He was the son of James Curry and Mary Purdon of 10 Nassau Street.
He attended Harbord Street Collegiate Institute and the University of Toronto.
He first went overseas with a draft of Officers in September 1916 , arrived in France in
November 1917, originally being attached to the Royal Flying Corps until April 1918 when he
joined the 19th Battalion (infantry). Though injured in May he rejoined his unit in July. .Following
the battle of Amiens he was killed in action on the first day of the advance from Arras (
Amiens and Arras were part of the “Hundred Days Offensive”, a series of battles in which
Canada played a substantial role in the retreat and defeat of the German army. Lt. Curry is
buried at Achincourt Road Cemetery, Pas de Calais, France and has a memorial headstone in
Toronto’s Mount Pleasant Cemetery.
LT. WALTER HOWARD CURRY
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