Vancouver Sun

‘WE WERE NOT THE SUCCESSFUL BIDDER’: A RARE VICTORIA CROSS AWARDED TO A CANADIAN HERO DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR ELUDES THE GRASP OF THE WAR MUSEUM AND COULD LEAVE THE COUNTRY.

- BLAIR CRAWFORD

OTTAWA • The Canadian War Museum lost a bid to keep a rare Second World War medal in Canada on Wednesday, with a private U.K. collector paying $550,000 for the Victoria Cross at a London auction.

The medal, awarded to Canadian Lt.-Col. David Currie, was purchased by an unknown buyer who plans to take the medal out of Canada.

The collector bought Currie’s VC and an assortment of other medals and memorabili­a at a public sale at auction house Dix Noonan Webb.

Yasmine Mingay, director of public affairs for the Canadian War Museum, confirmed the museum took part in the auction, “but we were not the successful bidder.”

The auction house said Wednesday that the buyer intends to apply for a Canadian Cultural Property Export Permit, which is needed before the medals would be allowed to leave Canada.

The medals are currently in a safe-deposit box at a bank in Kemptville, Ont., in the care of Tanya Ursual, an antiquitie­s dealer who acted as the auction house’s Canadian representa­tive.

“The buyer is a private U.K.-based collector. That tells me it’s not a museum,” Ursual said. “If it’s a private collector, my guess is they’re going to stay quiet about it.”

Currie, of Sutherland, Sask., was a major in the 29th Armoured Reconnaiss­ance Regiment (The South Alberta Regiment), when he landed in France a few weeks after the D-Day invasion.

In August 1944, Allied forces had encircled tens of thousands of German soldiers in an area known as the Falaise Pocket. Currie was given a handful of tanks and supporting infantry and ordered to seal a gap in the Allied lines to cut off the Germans’ escape.

The Canadians held the line, killing and wounding 800 enemy soldiers and taking 2,100 more prisoner.

“Throughout three days and nights of fierce fighting, Major Currie’s gallant conduct and contempt for danger set a magnificen­t example to all ranks of the force under his command,” his Victoria Cross citation reads.

Currie was the only Canadian to earn a VC in the D-Day and Normandy campaigns and one of only 12 Canadians so honoured during the Second World War. The simple bronze cross on a purple ribbon is the Commonweal­th’s highest honour for bravery in battle.

Currie, later named Sergeant of Arms of the House of Commons, died in Ottawa in 1986.

 ?? TONY CALDWELL / POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? A private U.K. collector has paid $550,000 for the Victoria Cross, left, awarded to Canadian Lt.-Col. David Currie in the Second World War. Currie was the only Canadian to earn a Victoria Cross, the Commonweal­th’s highest honour for bravery in battle,...
TONY CALDWELL / POSTMEDIA NEWS A private U.K. collector has paid $550,000 for the Victoria Cross, left, awarded to Canadian Lt.-Col. David Currie in the Second World War. Currie was the only Canadian to earn a Victoria Cross, the Commonweal­th’s highest honour for bravery in battle,...

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