Brigadier Angle Walkway

Kelowna, British Columbia
Type
Other

The Brigadier Angle Walkway, from Bernard Avenue to William R. Bennet Bridge in City Park, was named in honour of Brigadier H.H. (Harry) Angle, DSO, MID, ED.

Brigadier H.H. Angle was born in England in 1906 and moved to Kelowna at the age of 16. In 1932, he joined the Okanagan Mounted Rifles Militia, the forerunner to the British Columbia Dragoons (BCD). He sailed for England with the BCD in November 1941 and spent much of the next two years training with the Regiment for the eventual invasion of the European continent. As Lieutenant-Colonel he commanded the British Columbia Dragoons from April 1943 to February 1944, and then again from September 1944 to January 1946, earning the DSO. Following the end of the Italian campaign, he led his troops into battle in North-West Europe and into the final battle of the Delfzijl Pocket, liberating the Netherlands from German occupation. The British Columbia Dragoons moved to the Veendam area after this final battle and were instrumental in the establishment of municipal affairs in the area, thus establishing a bond between Kelowna and Veendam that continues to be celebrated to this day. He returned to Kelowna with the Regiment in 1946 where he was honoured with the “Freedom of the City” in recognition of the honour he brought to Kelowna through his stellar military service. In 1947, he served as magistrate for Kelowna, but was called upon the following year to serve as a military observer in Pakistan and sent to India in 1949 as Chief Military Adviser to a United Nations mission dealing with a border dispute between India and Pakistan. Tragically, Brigadier Angle was killed in an airplane crash in India in July 1950.

Inscription

[plaque/plaque]

Brigadier Angle Walk
Declared by Kelowna’s City Council
on March 14, 2005

To commemorate the service of Brigadier H.H. Angle, DSO, ED, MID

He was the Commanding Officer of the British Columbia Dragoons during World War II in Italy and North West Europe and served with the United Nations as a Peacekeeper during the India-Pakistan border dispute where he gave his life on July 17, 1950 at age 44 while flying between Karachi, Pakistan and New Delhi, India. He was declared Freeman of the City of Kelowna on January 7, 1946.

Location
Brigadier Angle Walkway

1600 Abbott Street
Kelowna
British Columbia
GPS Coordinates
Lat. 49.8859876
Long. -119.4996915

City of Kelowna
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