Journal Pioneer

Honouring veterans

Remembranc­e Day service at Credit Union Place honours the fallen, those who served and continue to do so

- BY DESIREE ANSTEY

Thousands made their way to Credit Union Place on Sunday to attend the annual Remembranc­e Day service. The ceremony marked the 100th anniversar­y of the signing of the armistice which marked the conclusion of the First World War. It also served as a reminder to honour the fallen and those who continue to serve in various Canadian military forces.

In the shadow of a towering white cross, retired Major Ron Hatton stands in formation with veterans of the Royal Canadian Legion at the Credit Union Place arena. His fingers are tightly curled around the flagpole, which he’s carried with honour for the past 15 years at the annual Remembranc­e Day ceremony.

Hatton was among the hundreds of military members assembled in the arena on Sunday morning, watched by thousands seated row on row to observe the end of the First World War in a two-minute silence – 100 years to the day – and remember those who have died in the line of duty. “You remember all the people that have passed away through age, all the people you flew with, but I feel sad for all those young people that died. It’s sad,” he choked up. “But some survived... They said those that enlisted were 20 and 21 today, but a lot of them lied about their age to get in the military.” Hatton enlisted as an electronic­s officer at 18.

He served 28 years in the Air Force, deployed in hotspots around the world before he retired from service and spent the next 13 years working with a defense company called General Dynamics.

“A highlight of my career was a rescue,” Hatton’s eyes came alive as he recalled the event with warmth. “We were about 2,000 miles away from shore on the south side of Iceland when we flew over a Danish fishing vessel that was sinking. The captain of the boat didn’t speak a word of English.

“He was from the Faroe Islands, and it just so happened we had the only Danishspea­king aircraft captain at the time, so they conversed, and we brought in a ship to rescue them. The whole crew was saved because we just happened to be there at the right time.” Hatton served three years in Iceland searching for submarines and tracking them. He brought his wife, Dorothy, along with their two children, to the land of fire and ice. It was there he attended the historic Reykjavik Summit in 1986.

“I was right there when U.S. President Ronald Reagan and

General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union Mikhail Gorbachev held a summit meeting. I enjoyed that, and I remember Reagan thanking everyone for their service and security,” shared Hatton. He acknowledg­ed, “Like a lot of military people at the air force base, I met my wife at the Summerside Legion during a dance. This is our 50th year of being together.

Dorothy said, ‘I followed you all around the world, now it’s time for you to follow me and move back home to P.E.I.” Although Hatton, now aged 75, has many fond memories of his time served, he still has a heavy heart over the young people that lost their lives through war.

“In those days at first it was a sense of adventure with friends, but soon that enthusiasm would dwindle,” he said. Corporal Trace Handrahan, of the P.E.I. Regiment, acknowledg­ed he can “only imagine” what the soldiers went through. “I came here to thank the veterans for their service because I find a lot of young people today are not fully aware of what went on,” said the 24-year-old. Handrahan compared his experience in the Reserves to that of a “band of brothers” and offered some sage words of advice.

“We must remember the people that courageous­ly died for our freedom and cherish the future they believed in.”

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 ?? DESIREE ANSTEY/ JOURNAL PIONEER ?? Members of the Canadian Army’s 4 Engineer Support Regiment, from left, and the P.E.I. Regiment gather to place their poppies in front of Summerside’s cenotaph in Memorial Square.
DESIREE ANSTEY/ JOURNAL PIONEER Members of the Canadian Army’s 4 Engineer Support Regiment, from left, and the P.E.I. Regiment gather to place their poppies in front of Summerside’s cenotaph in Memorial Square.
 ?? DESIREE ANSTEY/ JOURNAL PIONEER ?? Retired Major Ron Hatton, five from the left, stands in formation with veterans of the Royal Canadian Legion at the Credit Union Place arena.
DESIREE ANSTEY/ JOURNAL PIONEER Retired Major Ron Hatton, five from the left, stands in formation with veterans of the Royal Canadian Legion at the Credit Union Place arena.
 ?? DESIREE ANSTEY/ JOURNAL PIONEER ?? Hundreds of military members assembled in the arena on Sunday morning, watched by thousands seated row on row to observe the end of the First World War in a two-minute silence – 100 years to the day – and remember those who have died in the line of duty.
DESIREE ANSTEY/ JOURNAL PIONEER Hundreds of military members assembled in the arena on Sunday morning, watched by thousands seated row on row to observe the end of the First World War in a two-minute silence – 100 years to the day – and remember those who have died in the line of duty.

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