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Canadian Virtual War Memorial

Wilfrid John Daze

In memory of:

Private Wilfrid John Daze

August 10, 1918

Military Service


Service Number:

788567

Age:

19

Force:

Army

Unit:

Canadian Infantry (Central Ontario Regiment)

Division:

3rd Bn.

Additional Information


Son of Camill Alphonse and Mary Louisa Daze, of Arnprior, Ontario.

Commemorated on Page 395 of the First World War Book of Remembrance. Request a copy of this page. Download high resolution copy of this page.

Burial Information


Cemetery:

LE QUESNEL COMMUNAL CEMETERY
Somme, France

Grave Reference:

6.

Location:

Le Quesnel is a village about 26 kilometres south-east of Amiens and 8 kilometres south-west of Rosieres and a little north of the main road from Amiens to Noyon. LE QUESNEL COMMUNAL CEMETERY is situated on the northern side of the village on the road to Caix.

Information courtesy of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

Digital Collection

Send us your images

  • Circumstances of death registers– Source: Library and Archives Canada. CIRCUMSTANCES OF DEATH REGISTERS, FIRST WORLD WAR. Surnames: Davy to Detro. Microform Sequence 27; Volume Number 31829_B016736. Reference RG150, 1992-93/314, 171. Page 215 of 1036.
  • Other– page from "The Red Vineyard".....
  • Photo of Wilfrid John Daze– second page of The Red Vineyard" mentioning Pte Daze
  • Newspaper clipping– SOURCE: The Ottawa Journal; Thursday, August 29, 1918
  • Grave Marker– Photo courtesy Wilf Schofield, England.

Laying on Private Daze's grave on 4 July 2008 was a page of text enclosed by two sheets of hard plastic. The text reads:

'I stepped over to the wounded lad and a glance told me he had not much longer to live. I knelt quickly on one knee and pulled out the little round ID disc attached to the string around his neck. I looked at it and saw the letters RC.  I remember throwing off my shrapnel helmet (tin lid, the lads call it) and it rattled hard on the road, though the noise was deadened by the rumble of passing traffic.

Then I spoke to the lad, telling him I was a Catholic priest. Finding him conscious, I told him to make a good act of contrition for all the sins of his past life and then I would give him absolution. Then, as a great procession lumbered by, I pronounced the words of absolution and anointed him there on the roadside. In a little while he passed away peacefully.

I copied from the little leather disc his name, number and battalion: Private W.J. Daze, No. 788567, 3rd Canadian Infantry Battalion. A few days later, I got his mother's address from the 3rd Battalion Orderly Room and wrote her how grace had come to the lad.'
  • Grave Marker– Photo courtesy of Wilf Schofield.

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To learn more please visit our help page. If you have questions or comments regarding the information contained in this registry, email or call us. For inquiries regarding the names and information found in the RCMP Honour Roll, please email the RCMP.

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