The Peterborough Examiner

Halifax museum honours veteran

Exhibit features artifacts of the late Herb Peppard’s Second World War work

- KEITH DOUCETTE

HALIFAX — A Nova Scotia member of the famed Canada-U.S. Second World War army unit known as the Black Devils has been honoured with a new museum exhibit in Halifax.

Herb Peppard of Truro, N.S., died in June at the age of 98.

Peppard was one of the last survivors of the First Special Service Force, which fought in several campaigns between 1942 and 1944 in Italy and northweste­rn Europe. This year marks the 75th anniversar­y of the unit’s disbandmen­t.

“He was a very tough and courageous soldier, and in later life a loving husband and father,” said Ken Hynes, curator of the Army Museum Halifax Citadel, at a ceremony unveiling the new exhibit on Friday.

“His exploits during the war are the stuff of legend.”

The exhibit features artifacts of Peppard’s service, including medals, uniforms and personal stories. Peppard, who was a sergeant, was awarded both the U.S. Silver Star and Bronze Star Medals for gallantry in the field.

His daughter, Rosalee Peppard Lockyer, said she was overwhelme­d by the collection that honours her father as a soldier and as a man.

“He was never a puffed-up person,” she said. “He was a giver, an encourager … and not just his exploits as an exemplary soldier but his exploits as an exemplary human being are being shared here, so I’m just thrilled.”

The First Special Service Force was officially activated on July 20, 1942, under the command of Lt.-Col. Robert T. Frederick.

The shoulder patch insignia for the unit was a red spearhead, with “USA” written horizontal­ly and “CANADA” written vertically.

Preference for entry into the 1,800-strong force was given to men who had previously been employed as lumberjack­s, forest rangers, hunters or in similar, labour-intensive jobs.

Peppard, who was born in Truro on July 7, 1920, joined the military at the age of 20 after working five years in the town’s lumber mill.

In a videotaped interview several years ago with the Government of Canada’s Memory Project, Peppard recalled that he initially joined the artillery where he trained with an anti-aircraft unit.

“My reasoning was I’d be way back from the front lines and I’d be safer there,” he said with an ironic chuckle.

He said he later volunteere­d for the First Canadian Parachute Battalion and was in jump training at Fort Benning, Ga., when the call came for volunteers for a new unit — the First Special Service Force.

“They asked for volunteers and they got 97 volunteers to leave that outfit to go to the new outfit and I was among them,” Peppard said.

The elite commando unit’s most famous feat was its scaling of the 3,000-foot-high (915-metre) Monte La Difensa in Italy. The daring vertical assault was depicted in the 1968 movie “The Devil’s Brigade” starring William Holden, Cliff Robertson and Vince Edwards.

“The mountains of Italy seemed to be a disaster to me,” said Peppard, whose unit was forced to pull back in its first attempt. “It was raining and it was cold and it was damn scary because we were going up this narrow path and winding our way up the mountain and we came under artillery fire and mortar fire,” he said.

“We lost a third of our regiment that night.”

The unit went on to cement its reputation during nighttime reconnaiss­ance raids on the Germans near the Italian coastal city of Anzio, south of Rome, in 1944. Wearing camouflage and with their faces blackened by boot polish, the unit sowed confusion along the enemy lines.

It was during those raids that the force earned the “Black Devils” moniker, coined by their German adversarie­s.

In 2015, 42 surviving members of the unit, including Peppard, were honoured with the Congressio­nal Gold Medal — the highest civilian honour the U.S. Congress can bestow.

 ?? DARREN CALABRESE THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Rosalee Peppard, the daughter of Second World War veteran Herb Peppard, gets emotional at the unveiling of a First Special Service Force exhibit at the Army Museum Halifax Citadel in Halifax.
DARREN CALABRESE THE CANADIAN PRESS Rosalee Peppard, the daughter of Second World War veteran Herb Peppard, gets emotional at the unveiling of a First Special Service Force exhibit at the Army Museum Halifax Citadel in Halifax.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada