Captain John Alexander Dewart
John
Alexander Dewart was born on July 16, 1892 in the south of Dummer Township to
parents John Dewart and Margaret Madill.
His parents were farmers and John jr. was the youngest of 7
children. John grew up on the family
farm near Warsaw, but later left to pursue a career as a school teacher.
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At
the outbreak of the War, John Dewart was working as a principal of a school in Niagara
Falls. He was also active in the local
militia, the 44th Lincoln and Welland Regiment. On September 17, 1915, Dewart enlisted for overseas
service in the Canadian Expeditionary Force at Welland, Ontario. He was 23 years old, stood five foot ten
inches tall. His looks gave away his
Irish heritage as he was recorded as having a fair complexion, blue eyes and
red hair. He indicated that at the time
he had been a member of the 44th Welland Militia for 5 years and his
religion was Methodist.
Dewart
was commissioned as a Captain in the 86th Machine Gun Battalion of
Hamilton and sailed overseas with them on May 19 1916. Upon arriving in England he was reassigned to
the 2nd Company, 1st Canadian Machine Gun Battalion where
he was reduced in rank to a Lieutenant. He
would later arrive in France on November 29 1916 with this unit, and within a
week, he was positioning his guns in the front line trenches in front of the
city of Givenchy, France.
The
next 5 months would be spent holding the line below the German positions on
Vimy Ridge. There Dewart would have spent
regular intervals in the trenches and in the rear training for the upcoming
assault on the Ridge. The Battalion War
Diaries show that Lieutenant Dewart was the officer commanding Machine Gun
section D. On the opening day of the
attack his machine gun crews followed closely behind the attacking troops
providing support. Lieut. Dewart wrote home after the battle on April 22nd
1917, describing his experience:
“I had the
good fortune to come through the recent battle untouched. I took my section
over in the advance along with the infantry, and was the only officer of the
company to do so. It was a wonderful show. Our fellows did well, but the
artillery was past imagination. My men
captured quite a number of prisoners. I went into the dugouts and found them
full of Huns, but they would not fight, but begged for mercy. We made them
carry out our wounded. I established my
headquarters in a German officer’s dugout, and we found eggs, bacon, bread,
etc., also plenty of cigars and cigarettes, so we are in luck as we went over
light.”
In
a letter home a week later on May 4th, Lieut. Dewart’s cheery outlook of the
Vimy campaign changed considerably after enduring relentless enemy shelling and
countless German counter attacks trying to regain lost ground:
“I have
been through the whole performance since the beginning, and believe me, at
times there seemed remote chances of ever seeing Canada again. The last tour
was the worst I have ever experienced, and I was in a terribly hot corner. However, we pulled through without a very
large number of casualties. In one case while repelling a counter-attack, there
were men wounded on both sides, and I would have had a wound too, but for a
flask which was in my hip pocket and broke the force of the shrapnel
bullet. The fighting was of the bitterest
nature, and Fritz is dying gamely. His picked troops, Guards, etc. were opposed
to us, and contested every inch of ground, but nothing can stop our boys. Fritz
is losing men in the thousands, launching counter-attacks which never succeed
on account of our artillery and machine guns. Our air service too, is
wonderful, and our aviators are doing marvellous work. The fighting now is in the open, but it is
much worse as there is no protection against shell fire, and the amount of
stuff flying around would make one wonder how anyone could live through it.”
During
the Battle of Passchendaele in November of 1917, Dewart was wounded and later awarded
the Military Cross for Bravery. After
the war, a Red Cross man who came to his aid while wounded, related a story and
produced a piece of shrapnel that had been buried in Dewart’s thigh. He told a story that after dressing Capt.
Dewart’s wound, the Red Cross man ordered four German prisoners to carry him on
a stretcher to an ambulance. German
planes also were operating overhead and dropped a bomb on the ambulance
destroying it and causing the Germans to drop their precious cargo and
scatter. Captain Dewart’s wound was
reopened from this action and bled profusely; Soon after the German prisoners
were compelled to come back and compelled to carry the wounded man back to the
nearest dressing station and safety. It
must have been a superficial wound, because there is no indication of a
hospital stay at that time for Lieut. Dewart.
Examiner May 08 1919 |
On
December 3rd 1917, Lieut. Dewart was sent to the Queen Alexandria Military
Hospital in Millbank England with bronchial complications and a bad cough. He was granted two weeks leave, but left for
the front on December12th after appealing to a Medical Board to be
let out early. His conditions came back
a few months later and prompted him to enter No.7 Casualty Station on April 26
with bronchitis. His illness was serious
enough to be sent to No. 20 General Hospital in Camiers where he stayed unitl
being discharged on May 10.
He
was later severely wounded in the Battle of Cambrai, when the 1st Canadian
Division crossed the Canal de Nord, on September 27, 1918. He attended No. 14 General Hospital at Wimereux
on the 29th and was later sent to the 3rd London General
Red Cross Hospital in London with what was later described as a superficial
gunshot wound, 2 inches square, in the
right buttock. He spent 30 days until being moved to the I.O.D.E. Hospital in
Hyde Park on October 29th. He
then attended Perkins Bull Hospital in Putney South Wales on November 16
1918. Lieut. Dewart was ultimately transferred
to No.7 Casualty Clearing station at Matlock, Bath for his final convalescence. He was discharged to duty with no disability
on the 5th of December 1918.
Lieut.
John Dewart returned home in January of 1919.
He resided in Toronto for a time working for the Imperial Oil
Company. He returned to Peterborough
sometime in the early 1920’s and married Emily Ballard of Madoc, a fellow
teacher, on July 31, 1923.
Sources:
1901 Ontario East Census: Dummer
Township, Peterborough County. Page 14, Family 14 No.140
Original data: Canada. "Complete
Military Service File of John Alexander Dewart" RG 150, Accession
1992-93/166, Box 2494 – 41.Item number 352938 . Library and Archives Canada,
Ottawa.
Archives of Ontario. Registrations
of Births and Still births-1869-1913. MS 929, reels 1-245. Toronto, Ontario, Canada
1911 Census. Douro Township.
Peterborough East, Ontario, page 4, Family No.34.
Peterborough Evening Examiner. “Record
of Former Peterboro Man”. May 08 1919. P.5
Peterborough Evening Examiner. “Warsaw
Boy Came Through Vimy Ridge Untouched.” June 13 1917. P.7
Peterborough Evening Examiner. “A
Shrapnel Memento. December 06 1921. P.3
This is fabulous! He's my great grandfather and I didn't know this about him. I only met him once when I was about 4. Thank you so much. I'll make sure his great great grandkids understand this story.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the nice comment, I do have a picture of Captain Dewart taken in the late 50's-early 60's in a Veterans parade in Lakefield. I'll be sure to add it to the website.
ReplyDelete