Times Colonist

Vimy Ridge at 100: launch of UVic virtual exhibit

- MICHAEL D. REID mreid@timescolon­ist.com

Archie Wills’ battalion departs from the Inner Harbour on May 28, 1916, with the Empress Hotel in the background. “Without doubt, it was the finest send-off Victoria has ever given her boys leaving for the front,” Wills wrote, as the troops headed for France to fight in the First World War. In April 1917, four Canadian divisions fought together for the first time and captured Vimy Ridge in one of Canada’s most celebrated victories — a battle in which 3,598 Canadian soldiers were killed. A new virtual exhibit at the University of Victoria, called Victoriato­Vimy.ca, marks the 100th anniversar­y of Vimy Ridge. It tells about the sacrifices made by Canadians during the war, including the story of Wills, who started a regimental newspaper. He would become a Victoria city councillor and managing editor of the Victoria Daily Times.

When local history buffs hear the name Archie Wills, memories of his years as a Victoria city councillor and managing editor of the Victoria Daily Times usually spring to mind.

What many might not realize, however, is that Wills was editor of another newspaper — The O’Pip (Observatio­n Post), a troop journal he started with two battalion pals during the First World War to boost morale.

The Victoria native, who was also known for popularizi­ng Cadborosau­rus, the mythical sea serpent, enlisted with the 58th Battery, Canadian Forces Artillery in 1916.

His story is one of many featured at VictoriaTo­Vimy.ca, University of Victoria Libraries’ new virtual exhibit about the sacrifices ordinary Canadians made on the front lines and home front during the First World War.

The free online resource, activated in advance of this year’s 100th anniversar­y of the Battle for Vimy Ridge in France, features more than 3,700 digitized selections from UVic’s archival collection­s. Visitors can access letters, diaries, postcards, scrapbooks, audio recordings and artifacts recalling wartime experience­s by those who lived them. The project is the only one of its kind implemente­d at a Canadian university.

Wills, who wasn’t in Vimy but served in many battles after completing his training in Witley, England, was an avid photograph­er, which proved useful as a historical record.

“Archie was quite a character,” said Lara Wilson, director of special collection­s and university archivist. “We have photos of Archie’s [England-bound] troop steamship leaving Victoria Harbour in May of 1916. Even though they were heading into something grim, it was almost celebrator­y, with this huge crowd and the Empress in the background. All these young men were going to war and many were not going to come back.”

The project chronicles the experience­s of men and women from across Canada, including Victorians Joseph Clearihue, UVic’s first chancellor, and Theodore Monk.

It also features London-born Victoria resident Merlin Huth’s story of how he had booked passage to Canada in 1912 on the Titanic before changing his plans. Circumstan­ces beyond his control prompted Huth to board another liner. After joining the military in 1914, Huth was wounded in battle and taken to Egypt, where he patrolled the desert by camel.

“I don’t think we can grasp the profound impact the First World War had on individual­s and society,” Wilson said.

The project is supported by a grant from the federal Department of Canadian Heritage. Planning started two years ago. “The scope of it actually goes back many years because we had been

• A special feature on the centennial of the battle at Vimy Ridge, with a special emphasis on participat­ion by graduates from Vic High, will appear in next Sunday’s Islander section.

acquiring archival materials for decades because Victoria is a military town and military history is taught here,” Wilson said.

“My predecesso­r [Christophe­r Petter] was involved in early digitizati­on projects so we built on that and selected this technologi­cal platform to make it as accessible as possible for people.”

Input and archival material from soldiers’ descendant­s who continue to live in Victoria, including members of the Clearihue and Destrube families, proved invaluable. Wilson cites the scrapbooks of Ottawa-born Florence Westman as an example of useful homefront stories provided by descendant­s that add a rich dimension to the multi-media experience.

“She collected clippings, socialized with soldiers in the area and she can stand in for every woman who lost a brother or lost a friend and had to say goodbye and had to fill their lives,” she said. “They’d cope by making scrapbooks.”

Wilson said the university library and archives are open to the public and available as a research and teaching resource for the community.

The public can learn more at a launch event and open house being held Wednesday, April 12 from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m.

The event, in rooms A003, A005 and A025 at the Mearns Centre for Learning in UVic’s McPherson Library, will include readings from archives, followed by a reception.

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UNIVERSITY OF VICTORIA SPECIAL COLLECTION­S
 ?? COURTESY UNIVERSITY OF VICTORIA SPECIAL COLLECTION­S ?? Joseph B. Clearihue “Canadian Official Photograph­s” depicting: • Above: the constructi­on of a roadway crossing the Canal du Nord, a dry canal near the Arras front in France, September 1918. • Left: destroyed buildings in the town of Vimy, France, May...
COURTESY UNIVERSITY OF VICTORIA SPECIAL COLLECTION­S Joseph B. Clearihue “Canadian Official Photograph­s” depicting: • Above: the constructi­on of a roadway crossing the Canal du Nord, a dry canal near the Arras front in France, September 1918. • Left: destroyed buildings in the town of Vimy, France, May...
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