Ottawa Citizen

Homeless vets’ residence takes a hero’s name

Andy Carswell Building to be first of kind in Canada

- BLAIR CRAWFORD

For sailors and airmen lost at sea, the sound of a Consolidat­ed PBY5A Canso aircraft overhead meant help was on the way.

The lumbering twin-engined “flying boats” could land on water to rescue the helpless from their peril.

The symbolism couldn’t be missed when a restored Canso roared low overhead Monday as the ceremonial cornerston­e was laid for the Andy Carswell Building, a 40-unit residence for homeless veterans that will be the first of its kind in Canada when it opens in November 2020.

On hand to do the honours was 96-year-old Andy Carswell himself, a Royal Canadian Air Force veteran and former Canso pilot who was decorated by the Queen for rescuing an ailing sailor from his ship off the British Columbia coast. The chest of his blue Royal Canadian Legion blazer bedecked with medals, Carswell and his son, John, himself an air force veteran, stared skyward as the aircraft droned overhead.

Spearheade­d by the Ottawa charity Multifaith Housing Initiative and seeded with a donation from John Carswell’s company, Canso Investment Council, the Andy Carswell Building will house 40 veterans who are living on the street or at risk of becoming homeless. The project also has the backing of the Legion, Veterans Affairs, Soldiers Helping Soldiers, True Patriot Love and the Canadian Forces Morale and Welfare Services.

In her remarks, Suzanne Le, executive director of Multifaith Housing Initiative, noted that veterans make up 10 per cent of Canada’s homeless population. That translates to somewhere between 3,000 and 5,000 vets.

“This problem is unacceptab­le, but it’s not insurmount­able,” Le said, extending her gratitude for veterans such as Carswell.

Carswell, who was there with his wife, Dorothy, 98, joined the RCAF during the Second World War straight out of high school.

“The principal said anyone who had any war work to do could quit early. So I quit early and signed up with the air force on my 18th birthday,” he said.

After learning to fly in Canada, he was shipped overseas as a pilot of a giant four-engine Lancaster bomber. His war didn’t last long. His Lanc was shot down over Germany on his fourth mission. Carswell spent the next two years as a prisoner of war. He documented his war experience — and his two unsuccessf­ul escape attempts — in his memoir, Over the Wire.

After the war, Carswell studied to be an accountant, but found it so boring he re-enlisted and was assigned to fly search-and-rescue missions. He retired as a squadron leader and went on to a career promoting air safety in Canada.

The restored Canso flew to Ottawa from Hamilton’s Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum in Carswell’s honour.

John Carswell, whose company is named after the Canso aircraft and is one of the largest investors in Postmedia, said helping veterans was an easy choice.

“The military often doesn’t end up well for people... So when I got the opportunit­y to participat­e in this, I thought it was a wonderful thing to do,” he said. bcrawford@postmedia.com Twitter.com/getBAC

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 ?? BRIAN THOMPSON ?? A PBY-Canso aircraft from the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum in Hamilton, which was used in the Second World War for coastal patrols, convoy protection and submarine hunting, flew into Ottawa for the ceremonial cornerston­e laying of the Andy Carswell Building.
BRIAN THOMPSON A PBY-Canso aircraft from the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum in Hamilton, which was used in the Second World War for coastal patrols, convoy protection and submarine hunting, flew into Ottawa for the ceremonial cornerston­e laying of the Andy Carswell Building.
 ?? JEAN LEVAC ?? Second World War veteran Andy Carswell, 96, looks at a Canso plane flypast with son John Carswell Monday, during the cornerston­e-laying ceremony of the building named for him.
JEAN LEVAC Second World War veteran Andy Carswell, 96, looks at a Canso plane flypast with son John Carswell Monday, during the cornerston­e-laying ceremony of the building named for him.

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