Monday, December 12, 2016

(WWI US Army) Corporal Lloyd Miller Company "D" 342nd Machine Gun Battalion, 89th Division, 1st US Army

Corporal Lloyd Miller WWI US Army Company "D" 342nd Machine Gun Battalion, 89th Division






Photo taken at Camp Funston Possibly by John E Schroeder who was taking photos of Fellow Soldiers (note there is a web page that has a bunch of people having their photo taken in front of this style of building



http://cdm16795.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/compoundobject/collection/wwiuh/id/4760/show/4746
Map



I have been looking for a long time at the above 3 photos trying and hoping to see if one was Lloyd

Red lines are towns mentioned above

I had found a battle map and cycled the area (the yellow line) in 2005 and years later after I found the above statement I realized that in the trees near Flirey there is an old trench still there and I was about to go and take a look when I was spooked by sounds a rock falling and or something moving through the trees at the time I thought it was an animal but now I am not so certain. Because Beney was the place where I had eaten my lunch and was the only food establishment I found that day.  I am amazed that when I needed food the most that day it was very close to where Lloyd was injured.





Lloyd was about to be shipped home from Brest France but passed away from his injuries and was buried in Hospital Cemetery (left) after the war as the it is the French tradition is to bring the dead back to one central War cemetery he was re buried in the American site near Fere-en-Tardenois  (Right)  Which is the cemetery for those that fought in the Oise-Aisne Offensive.  There is a cemetery for the St Mihiel offensive in Thiaucourt so not certain why he was buried in the “wrong” one.


Eighty-Ninth Division (National Army)
Popularly known as the "Middle West Division." Insignia, a black "W" in a black circle. Different colors are placed in the lower part of the "W" according to the various branches of the service. Organized at Camp Funston, Kansas in Sept. 1917. The division was composed of National Army drafts mainly from Kansas, Missouri and Colorado. In May, 1918, the division moved to Camp Mills, L.I. On June 4th, division headquarters and the majority of the division embarked from New York and the last units arrived in France on July 10th. Upon arrival in France the division was ordered to the Reynel training area (Haute-Marne) except the divisional artillery which was ordered to the Camp Souge, near Bordeaux for training. The division remained in the Reynel area until Aug. 5th when it was moved by bus to the Toul front where it occupied the line between northeast corner of Bois de Bauchot to the middle of the Etang de Vorgevaux and was supported by the 55th Fld. Arty and 250th Regiment French Fld. Arty.

On Sept. 12th the division participated in the St. Mihiel offensive as the right division of the 4th American Corps and advanced to a depth of twenty-one kilometers including the captures of the towns of Beney, Essey, Boullionville, Pannes and Xammes. On Oct. 7th the division was relieved in the Pannes-Flirey-Limey sector by the 37th Division and was moved by bus to the Recicourt area and became part of the 1st Army Reserve. On Oct. 12th the division moved forward in rear of the 32d Division as part of the 5th American Corps in the Argonne offensive and on Oct. 20th the division went into the line along the Sommerance-Romagne road just north of the Kreimhilde defense positions. The division attacked on November 1st and continued in the assault until the armistive was signed when it had crossed the Meuse north of Stenay.



The division was placed under the 7th Corps of the 3rd Army and on Nov. 24th began its march into Germany. The division was assigned the area bounded by Kreise of Prum, Bitburg, Trier, and Saarburg with division headquarters at Kyllburg where it was joined by the divisional artillery which had been serving with the 28th Division. On May 19, 1919, the division sailed for the U.S. and debarked at New York. It was then sent to Camp Funston, Kansas, where it was demobilized shortly afterwards.

The division captured from the enemy the following, 5,061 prisoners, 127 pieces of artillery, 455 machine guns. The division advanced thirty-six pieces of artillery, 455 machine guns. The division advanced thirty-six kilometers against resistance. Battle deaths 1,419, wounded, 7,394; number taken prisoners 1 officer and 24 men. The following decorations were awarded to individuals of this division: Congressional Medal of Honor, 8; Distinguished Service Crosses, 119, Distinguished Service Medals, 2; Croix de Guerre, 55; Belgian Cross L'Ordre Leopold, 1; Belgian Croix de Guerre, 2.

Commanding generals: Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood, Aug. 27, 1917 to Nov. 26, 1917; Brig. Gen. Frank L. Winn, Nov. 26, 1917 to April 12, 1918; Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood, April 12 to May 24, 1918; Brig. Gen. Frank L. Winn, May 24, 1918 to Sept. 14, 1918; Maj. Gen. Wm. M. Wright, Sept. 14, 1918 to Oct. 24, 1918; Maj. Gen. Frank L. Winn. Oct. 24, 1918 to Nov. 11, 1918

The division was composed of the following organizations: 177th and 178th Inf. Brigs; 164th Arty. Brig. 353d, 354th, 355th and 356th Inf. Regts.; 340th, 341st 342d Machine Gun Bns; 340th, 341st, 342d Fld. Arty. Regts; 314th Trench Mortar Battery; 314th Engr. Regt. And Train; 314th Fld. Sig. Bn.; 314th Hqs. Train and M.P.; 314th Amm. Train; 314th Supply Train; 314th Sanitary Train (Field Hospital and Amb. Cos. Nos. 353, 354, 355, 356).    http://www.newrivernotes.com/topical_history_ww1_oob_american_forces.htm


Organization and Employment of Divisional Machine Gun Units

Contributed By Wilson A. Heefner

The infantry divisions in the American Expeditionary Forces contained 260 machine guns, 36 of which were used as antiaircraft weapons within the division field artillery brigade. The remaining 224 guns were distributed among a machine gun company organic to each infantry regiment and among three machine gun battalions.

Assigned to each of the two infantry brigades within the division was one machine gun battalion, commanded by a major, and composed of four machine gun companies; these companies were identical in organization to the regimental machine gun companies. Each battalion had an assigned strength of 28 officers and 748 enlisted men and was authorized 64 heavy machine guns, divided equally among the companies.

The machine gun company, commanded by a captain, had an assigned strength of six commissioned officers and 172 enlisted men, and carried 16 guns, four of which were spares. Within the company there were three platoons and a headquarters section. A first lieutenant led the first platoon, while second lieutenants led platoons two and three. Each platoon with four guns was made up of two sections, each having two guns and led by a sergeant. Within each section were two gun squads, each with one gun and nine men, led by corporals. The gun squad had one combat cart, pulled by a mule, to transport its gun and ammunition as close to the firing position as enemy fire allowed. From there the crews moved the guns and ammunition forward by hand.

The third machine gun battalion was a division unit, under command of the division commander. The battalion had a strength of 16 officers and 377 enlisted men and was motorized. However, it had only two companies, identical to the other machine gun companies in terms of personnel and weapons. Each gun squad used a special motor car to transport its personnel, weapon and equipment. The battalion was generally in division reserve, ready to carry out missions as the division commander ordered.1

The machine gun units of the 5th Division entered combat with the 1914 model of the French-made Hotchkiss machine gun. The gun and mount weighed 88 pounds, fired 8-mm. Lebel Mle 1886 rounds from a 30-round metal strip, and had a rate of fire of 600 rounds per minute. It was gas-operated and air-cooled, and had a maximum effective range of 3800 meters. The Hotchkiss served in both ground combat support and antiaircraft roles.2

In training and in combat each of the four machine gun companies within the infantry brigade was attached to one of the brigade's six infantry battalions; attached to each of the other two infantry battalions within the regiment was the regiment's organic machine gun company. In the 5th Division those attachments remained effective throughout the entire training period or campaign. In the attack, the attached machine gun companies accompanied their battalions by bounds, maintaining close liaison with the infantry battalion commanders. Machine gun companies that were attached to infantry battalions designated as division or brigade reserve for a particular mission were usually placed under direct command of their respective brigade commanders, to fill gaps of fire and to protect the brigade flanks.3

Since the usual plan of maneuver of an infantry battalion called for three of its four rifle companies to be used as the attacking force, with the fourth company serving as a reserve, the machine gun company commander would usually place one of his three machine gun platoons in support of each maneuver company.4

Machine guns were used for both indirect and direct fire missions. When in the former role, the guns were placed to cooperate with the field artillery units in neutralizing suspected enemy observation posts and machine guns during the attack and to sweep the approaches for possible enemy counterattacks after the capture of the final objective.5

The guns were most effectively used in overhead fire missions to support the infantry attacks. In this role the guns were placed 300 to 1000 meters to the rear of the front line. When they employed their guns in that fashion, the machine gun officers often ran into opposition from the rifle company commanders, who preferred to have the guns farther forward, fearing that their infantrymen would be at risk of stray low rounds as they advanced under the overhead machine gun fire. However, over time the infantrymen came to accept this arrangement as they saw the reliability of the machine guns proved again and again in combat. Furthermore, they soon discovered that the machine guns were high priority targets for enemy fire, and that it was advantageous to have the guns at some distance from the infantry positions.

Since enemy machine guns posed the greatest threat to the attacking troops, the machine gun crews made every effort to locate the enemy guns and to concentrate their fire upon them. As the attack moved forward and the overhead fire became less effective, some of the gun squads would carry their guns and ammunition forward either into or on the flanks of the advancing infantry. A proportion of the guns was held back as a reserve under command of the machine gun officer.6

Machine gun tactical doctrine dictated that in the defense the Hotchkiss guns should only rarely be located within 100 yards of the front line and that at least two-thirds of the guns should be echeloned back through the whole defensive position, located so that adjacent guns would be mutually supporting. From such positions all guns could fire in defense of the front line, and in the event of an enemy breakthrough the rear guns could continue to defend even if the enemy overran the forward guns.7
http://www.worldwar1.com/dbc/divmguns.htm

 (Structure as of the Battle of Saint-Mihiel)(30 August to 16 September 1918)

First Army General John J. Pershing (10 August 1918 – 16 October 1918)
IV Corps   Lieutenant General George Windle Read
89th Infantry Division Major General Frank L. Winn
178th Infantry Brigade Brigadier General Thomas G. Hanson
342st Machine Gun Battalion Major
Above is made of Led by a Guns Men
4 Company Captain 16 6 officer 172 men
3 Platoon Lieutenant 4
2 Section Sargent 2
2 Gun Squad Corporal 1 9 men
Below is notes from the Company D 342nd Machine gun Battalion 89th Division book that is in JPEG format.

-This Company was organized on Sept 7, 1917
-Colt Automatic Machine guns arrive Oct 5, 1917
-Field Maneuvers and occupied the divisional machine gun trenches on smokey Hill Flats near Camp Funston
-Left Camp Funston Kansas 3:40PM May 24, 1918 Arrived at Camp Mills via Canada May 27, 1918 6:00PM
-Sailed June 4 from New York Harbor on S.S. “Coronia” 6 officers, 166 Enlisted Men
- Arrived Liberpool June 15, 1918
- Disembarked June 17
- Knotty Ash Camp (rest Camp no 10)
- Depart for Southhampton June 19
- Crossed the English Channel night of 20-21 arriving at La Havre France
- Travelled by rail to the Reynel Training Area Vesaignes France June 23, 1918
Equipped with Vickers Machine Guns
Left Vesaignes for Toul first part of August 1918
Relieved the 82nd American Division in the Lucey Sector North west of Toul
Battalion occupied trenches opposite Mt Sec
August 6 to 20 occupied the Nauginsard Woods at Newton Cross Roads
This relieved the 342th MG Bn of the 82nd Division.  1st platoon at Mandres, 2nd at Bois de Chanot, 3rd at Nauginsard
Evening of Aug 15 was first casualties from shrapnel of a H.E. Shell
Aug 20 Company relived the MG co of the 355 inf at Bouconville  (1st&2nd at Bois de Faux 3rd Raulecourt)
Aug 26 relieved 356 inf MG Co in the trenches at Bouconville and Rambucourt opposite Mt Sec.  No casualties holding the lines at Bouconville although we were sniped at daily until relieved by the French Machine Gunners on the night of Sept 10-11
Proceeded to Bernecourt to spend the day getting all equipment in first class condition for the first big drive.
Sept 11-12 started for the trenches near Flirey France where the battalion was to fire a barrage on the morning of the 12th however the roads were so congested that we were unable to reach our position at the specified time.
When the rolling barrage began to lift we went over the top with the 2nd wave being in support of the 356th Infantry.  The 2nd morning of the drive found us advancing from Bouillonville through Beney, Stopping for a short time near Beney woods, we were subjected to intence shelling, in which 5 of our men were wounded  (1st sgt. Hennessy, Corp Miller, Pvts Holy, Harrell and Lamb)

Lloyd’s story in the Diary of the 342nd Machine Gun Battalion ends here the diary goes on to describe how they became an Army of Occupation in Germany.  The last entry is March 6, 1919, The Company moved to Hermeskeil, Germany to establish the Division Agricultural School


https://www.google.ca/maps/@45.3085078,-60.2314623,4z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m2!6m1!1s107m9e3oxSOyCozwTW3-qHRU6hLU?hl=en
Probable route after Injury
Field Hospital in Minorville
Evacuation Hospital in Royaumeix
Hospital in Toul
Train to Brest which was the base of major US Navy operations that would have transported troops home.


Aug 20, 1918 Base Hospital  no 45 departs for Toul France
Sept 9, 1918 Most of the nurses arrive in Toul
Sept 12-16 The Saint-Mihiel offensive bgins and 8,000 wounded pass through the doors of Base Hospital No 45 in just 4 days.
Oct, 1918 Influenza epidemic strikes Toul area and base hospital 4 treats over 4,000 influenza patients

In the summer of 1917, shortly after the United States entered World War I, a group of Richmond physicians, nurses, and enlisted men mobilized to form Hospital Unit E, Richmond’s first organized medical effort for the war. This unit would expand to become the United States Base Hospital No. 45 (Medical College of Virginia Unit). Commanded by Dr. Stuart McGuire, then-dean of the Medical College of Virginia, the hospital’s 17 officers and detachment of 200 men reached the shores of France on July 21, 1918. A contingent of 106 nurses arrived early in September.
The home of Base Hospital No. 45 was the converted infantry barracks in Toul, France. Located eight miles from the front, it had the distinction of being the first base hospital located in the zone of advance. There was rarely an empty bed at the hospital, and while 17,438 casualties were admitted during the war, only 350 lives were lost. Relieved of duty on January 29, 1919, the last personnel of Base Hospital No. 45 arrived in Richmond on April 26, 1919. Cited by the Army Surgeon General for their “Readiness for service, devotion to duty, and professional excellence,” Base Hospital No. 45 reflected the valor and resolution of those medical professionals to whom lives were entrusted.

In honor of the 100-year anniversary of the Great War, this online exhibition presents a glimpse into the operations of Base Hospital No. 45, as well as the lives of the men and women who composed the staff of the hospital.
https://gallery.library.vcu.edu/exhibits/show/basehospitalno45

https://www.flickr.com/photos/library_of_virginia/sets/72157608734378870/    Photo collection of the hospital


Friday, November 25, 2016

Maps of Miller and Scott Ancestors


Miller and Scott full map


Scott Family in Canada


Scott Family in UK


Travels of the Palatine Germans


Travels of John C Miller


Phillip George Fey (Civil War)



WW Miller and Robert A Love (Civil War)


Travels of Lea Miller


Lloyd Miller (WW1)

New life for this blog,




I have been interested in my family history for some time and I have discovered that on the Scott side has been documented by Larry Scott and the Miller side has been traced by Cheryl Miller.

As I look at both I noticed that we have some military history in those trees.  If I had made a few different decisions I might have added to them.

I have been digging and discovering and in effort to share I will be posting what I find here on this site.  That way I have a place to edit when new info is found instead of keeping it to myself on my computer.

I am noticing that due to the Privacy acts and such I can't find much info from WW2 onward

Hope you enjoy.

(Post Wars - Canada) Leading Seaman 2nd class Bob Southwood (Submariner)

Bob Southwood - (From my Aunt Eve) “Bob was in the Navy from 1958 - 1963.  He was a Leading Seaman 2 and had his Submariners classification.  He served on HMCS Margaree, HMCS Stettler, (plus one other I think) destroyers and the last 16 months on the submarine HMCS Grilse.  His trade was electrical. So that meant climbing the masts when the identification lights went out plus lots of other goodies.”



 Website describing the Canadian Sub Program http://projectojibwa.ca/submarines/about-submarines/canadian-submarines.aspx

(WW2 Canada) Lester Leo Miller

Lester Leo Miller (WW2 Canada)



(WW2 US Army) Chestine W Miller

Chestine W Miller WWII US Army - he is from the US side of the family, WW Miller's second family

(WW1 USA) STEPHEN AMES MILLER (WW1 USA)

STEPHEN AMES MILLER (WW1 USA)

The 162d Depot Brigade was a training and receiving formation in the United States Army during World War I. Secretary of War Newton Baker authorized Major General Samuel Sturgis to organize the 162d Depot Brigade, an element of the 87th Division (National Army).[2] It was later detached and placed directly under Camp Pike as an independent unit.[3] [4][5] The depot brigade filled two purposes: one was to train replacements for the American Expeditionary Forces; the other was to act as a receiving unit for men sent to camps by local draft boards.[6][7]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/162d_Depot_Brigade_(United_States)

World War I[edit]
87th Division was a National Army division allocated to Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi.
Was activated at Camp Pike, Arkansas on 25 August 1917.
Went overseas in September 1918, was utilized as a pool of laborers.
Returned to the Continental US in January 1919 to Camp Dix, New Jersey, and was deactivated in February 1919.
Was reassigned to the Organized Reserve program in 1921, and allocated to Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/87th_Infantry_Division_(United_States)





(WW1, Canadian Army) Everett Ozro Miller

Everett Ozro Miller, Canadian Army WWI   



When I was at Vimi Ridge I was planning to look for his name on the wall but when I was there the monument was being renovated and could not get to the monument.  I was told by the guides that the names were of the fallen and I knew that he survived the war.  I had done some research on the Canadian Army and each step thought he would have been there.  When I found the papers it took me a year before I caught the word "Drafted" and was floored.  He didn't choose to go but his older brother did and joined the US army and didn't come back.  Then I found that he was Military Police, A job that is not celebrated by many I have heard. years later when I spoke with John Miller and found that "He never got to the continent"  To this day I wish that he would have talked about his time more as I wondered what mental minefields he would have had to deal with. 





Randy Miller (New Zealand) said his dad was injured and transferred to be a Military Policeman at the end of the war.  I had remember hearing he was at Vimi Ridge (all the Can Army was) but without knowing his unit number can't tell what he did.

Conversation with John Miller (son of Everett) May 2016 stated that his dad got a bad flu and was transferred to the Military Police when he was better.  “He never got to the continent”

Drafted on Jan 25, 1918 in Edmonton (via his draft papers I found)





1918                       http://www.canadaatwar.ca/page43.html

Jan. Conscription now in force.
March 21. German Offensive begins.
March 30. Canadian Cavalry attack at Moreuil Wood.
June 1    CMPC school was formed at Ottawa Basic course was 3 weeks in length
Aug 08. The Battle of Amiens. The beginning of what is known as Canada's Hundred Days.
Aug 26. The Battle of the Scarpe.
Sept 02. The Battle of the Drocourt-Queant Line.
Sept 27. The Battle of the Canal Du Nord and Cambrai.
Nov 02. The Canadian Corps capture the town of Valenciennes in its last major battle of the war.
Nov 10. The Canadian Corps Reached the outskirts of Mons.
Nov 11. At 10:58am Private George Price of the 28th Battalion is killed by a sniper. Two minutes later at 11:00am the armistice came into effect. The war was over.
After the Military Service Act was passed in 1917 tensions ran high throughout Canada. Not all Canadians were as enthusiastic about joining the war effort as the first Canadian volunteers had been. In fact many people objected to the idea of war completely. The conscientious objectors or unwilling soldiers sought exemption from combat. Instead, many joined the Non-Combatant Corps, where they took on other roles. Their duties consisted of cleaning and other labour. They did not carry weapons but were expected to dress in uniform, and they practised regular army discipline. Often the conscientious objector was abused, deemed a coward, and stripped of basic rights.[2] In the British House of Commons a resolution for the disenfranchisement of conscientious objectors was defeated by 141 to 71. Lord Hugh Cecil, who was a well-known churchman and statesman, said that he was “entirely out of sympathy for conscientious objectors, but he could not force them to do what they thought was wrong or punish them for refusing to do something they thought was wrong.”[3]
However, the government was making an effort to be sympathetic toward those who refused to take part in military service. Many communities set up local tribunals. If a man refused to serve he was put in front of a panel of two judges: one appointed by a board of selection named by Parliament, and the other by the senior county judge. The man was to plead his case, and if the panel was not convinced, the man asking for exemption was allowed to appeal.[4] If the judges found that it was best if the person stayed at home, then he was not sent overseas. Many Canadians were unhappy with the conscientious objectors' choice to refuse combat. Many people believed that if people were not willing to give service against the enemy, then the only choice for them was between civil or military prisons.[5]
Conscription posed a difficult question for the government. Conscription was unprecedented, and the problem proved to be that the government did not know who was best suited to become a soldier, a toolmaker or a farmer. The issue of manpower and ensuring that the proper men were being relocated to the most appropriate roles overseas was an issue that lasted the duration of the war.[6]

By the spring of 1918, the government had amended the act so that there were no exemptions, which left many English Canadians opposed as well. Even without exemptions, only about 125,000 men were ever conscripted, and only 25,000 of these were sent to the front. Fortunately for Borden, the war ended within a few months, but the issue left Canadians divided and distrustful of their government          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conscription_Crisis_of_1917



During the early years of World War I, Regimental Police were the only police element in the Canadian Army. The situation was such that the 2nd Canadian Division made its brigades responsible for the provision of "Trench Police" to perform traffic control duties.
The Canadian Military Police Corps was formed during October 1917, with a total of 850 all ranks.
The CMPC school was formed at Ottawa on 1 June 1918, and closed ten months later on 11 March 1919.
The CMPC itself was disbanded on 30 June 1920.


At the outset of the First World War, the Canadian Army consisted of a tiny "Permanent Force" or Regular Army and a large Non-Permanent Militia. There was no organized Corps or Regiment of Military Police in the Army, a few units had a Regimental Police or Provost section consisting of a dozen or so men under the command of a Provost Sergeant. Camps and Garrisons had locally appointed personnel functioning as Military Police, however discipline was primarily a Regimental concern, through the normal chain of command.
Soldiers temporarily assigned to Military Police duties were expected to be locally recruited, often from gentlemen of large physical stature, who might or might not have civil police experiance. Camp Police are mentioned briefly in various Militia publications prior to 1914. Major General William Otter's The Guide: A Manual for the Canadian Militia describes very briefly, the duties and identification of military police. Generally, the duties of Camp Police were to maintain order, regulate civilian tradesmen, provide escorts for defaulters and enforce sanitary regulations.
In September, 1914, a small detachment of Military Police accompanied the First Contingent of the Canadian Expeditionary Force to England. Captain E.S. Clifford D.S.O. was appointed as Assistant Provost Marshal for the First Contingent. A section of Military Police consisting of a Warrant Officer and 9 Privates was with Divisional Headquarters. 1st Infantry Brigade Headquarters had a section of 4 Military Mounted Police. Upon arrival in England, the detachment underwent training with the British Military Police. Canadian Military Police appear to have adopted British methods, organisation and equipments. Unfortunately, detailed records of this period were lost due to a fire in 1917.
  The Canadian Military Police Corps (CMPC) was authorised on the 15th of September, 1917 by Militia General Orders 93 & 94. The initial establishment was set at 30 Officers and 820 Warrant Officers and NCOs. Only trained soldiers were to be selected and they were required to serve a one month probationary period before being transferred. Applicants were required to have exemplary service records, most having served with existing Military Police units. The CMPC School was formed at Rockcliffe near Ottawa in June, 1918. The first commanding officer of the school was Major Baron Osborne. The basic course was of three weeks duration, upon successful completion of the course Privates were promoted to Lance Corporal.
The following is an excerpt from the Report of the Minister, Overseas Military Forces of Canada, 1918:
   "The selection of personnel for Provost Service is a matter of great importance, even more so than in the case of policemen in civil life. The Military Police must be tactful, intelligent, and determined."
  Canadian Expeditionary Force (C.E.F.) Routine Order No. 486 on the 25th of April, 1918 authorised the CMPC as a unit of the C.E.F. Two detachments, Nos. 8 and 9, served with the C.E.F. overseas, the remaining 11 detachments were posted to their respective Military Districts in Canada. Colonel Gilbert Godson-Godson, DSO DCM, below left, was appointed as the first Provost Marshal of the Canadian Military Police Corps.
Military Police Detachments
No.1 Detachment..........London, Ont.
No.2 Detachment..........Toronto, Ont
No.3 Detachment..........Kingston,Ont.
No.4 Detachment..........Montreal, Que.
No.5 Detachment..........Quebec, Que.
No.6 Detachment..........Halifax, N.S.
No.10 Detachment.........Winnipeg,Man.
No.11 Detachment.........Victoria, B.C.
No.12 Detachment.........Regina, Sask.
No.13 Detachment.........Calgary, Alta.
   On the 31st of May, 1918, Privy Council Order 754 transferred the Officers and men of the Dominion Police (primarily responsible for the security of government buildings in Ottawa) to the Department of Militia & Defence. The Dominion Police became the Civil Branch of the Canadian Military Police Corps.
  The CMPC in Canada played a major role in enforcing the Conscription Act and apprehending deserters and draft evaders. Military Police were permitted to wear civilian clothes in order to carry out their duties.
By 1918, the CMPC had a strength of 3,356 all ranks, distributed as follows:
  CMPC Canada - 1853
  CMPC Civil Branch - 969
  CMPC Overseas (C.E.F) - 484
  CMPC New York City - 50
  The CMPC assigned to the Canadian Expeditionary Force were established at the Canadian Corps headquarters, in the Adjutant General's Branch. The CMPC were under the command of the Deputy Assistant Adjutant General (D.A.A.G.). Assistant Provost Marshals (A.P.M.) were appointed at Corps and Division levels.


Canadian Military Police Corps School
Rockcliffe Ontario 1918

  The Canadian Military Police Corps was disbanded on the 1st of December 1920. The Dominion Police returned to civil duties and were absorbed by the Royal North West Mounted Police in 1920. This amalgamation resulted in the formation of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.


The Military Police School Regimental Sergeant Major (left) and Commanding Officer

  During the First World War the primary duty of the CMPC in towns and camps was maintaining order and discipline. Very few of the original Military Police in the field had police experience, and early training was minimal. One of the most vital roles of the Military Police, traffic control, was not fully appreciated by the Canadian army until later in the war. Other duties included the guarding of VIPs, vulnerable points and setting up straggler collection points.



The 1918 flu pandemic (January 1918 – December 1920) was an unusually deadly influenza pandemic, the first of the two pandemics involving H1N1 influenza virus.[1] It infected 500 million people across the world,[2] including remote Pacific islands and the Arctic, and resulted in the deaths of 50 to 100 million (three to five percent of the world's population[3]), making it one of the deadliest natural disasters in human history.[2][4][5][6]
Disease had already greatly limited life expectancy in the early twentieth century. A considerable spike occurred at the time of the pandemic, specifically the year 1918. Life expectancy dropped by about 12 years.[7][8][9][10]       https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1918_flu_pandemic