Fonds F2144 - Queen's University. 6th Field Company Canadian Engineers.

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Queen's University. 6th Field Company Canadian Engineers.

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Fonds

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Dates of creation area

Date(s)

  • 1916, 1926-1965 (Creation)
    Creator
    Queen's University. 6th Field Company Canadian Engineers

Physical description area

Physical description

0.06 m of textual records

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Archival description area

Name of creator

(18 Feb. 1911-30 Dec. 1918)

Administrative history

In 1910 the Faculty of Applied Science of Queen's University formed the Militia Unit of the 5th Field Company Canadian Engineers, with something over ninety percent of the students in the Faculty as members of the company. The officers were Macphail, Malcolm, Ellis along with a number of students, including Edward Baker (later Colonel Baker of Canadian National Institute of the Blind).
The members of the company trained every Thursday at the Kingston Armouries undertaking engineer drill and spent two weeks in the spring at Barriefiel Military Camp.
On declaration of war in 1914 the Fifth Field Company was given the task of turning previously unimproved ground at Valcartier, Quebec, into a camp capable of mobilizing 30,000 men. In all 170 Queen’s men worked at Valcartier on a variety of jobs that included road repair, surveys for tent sites, and installation of a water supply system.
When other Companies of Engineers arrived at Valcartier, the Fifth was split into overseas and home sections. Fifty members of the Queen’s Company signed up to be sent abroad with the First Canadian Contingent for service with No. 2 Company of Engineers. The home service of the Fifth Field Company remained at Valcartier until October 1914, at which point members returned to Kingston and began recruiting for the second overseas contingent. Many of these returning members formed half of the 6th Company Engineers. Along with others from Ottawa and Montreal, the Kingston recruits made up the nucleus of the three field corps of engineers that formed the 2nd Canadian Expeditionary Force. All of the men trained in Ottawa before being sent overseas in the spring of 1915.
All of the Queen’s men serving in this Company maintained an awareness of their university affiliation throughout the period in their active enlistment. Although the special cohesion and camaraderie evident during the early days in training camp was gradually changed by the experiences of war into more of a general company spirit, there remained a strong bond between the original Kingston members of the Company.

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Scope and content

Fonds consists of the Doomsday book of the 6th Field Company Canadian Engineers. The book relates information regarding the unit based on their semi-regular) annual reunions. The minutes of those reunion meetings, menus, clippings, signatures of attendees as well as a small number of photographs of members during the war, as well after, are all bound into the book. While the book was purchased and its assemblage began in 1929, there are some documents that predate that year that are included.

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Language of material

  • English

Script of material

Location of originals

3732

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Open

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Copyright restrictions may apply.

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  • Shelf: 3732