Garand, G

Killed in Flying Accident 1944-05-20

Birth Date: 1920

Born:

Son of Rose Garand, of Montreal, Province of Quebec; husband of Gisele Garand, of Verdun, Quebec.

Home:

Enlistment:

Enlistment Date: Unknown

Service

Army

Unit

5 Sqn- Squadron

Base

Rank

Lieutenant

Position

Lieutenant

Service Numbers

PassCansoFrom RAFC:On 20 May 1944 Canso 9773 of 5 (BR) Sqn, RCAF, failed to return from depth charge practice after take-off from Torbay, Newfoundland. One of the four passengers was a Lt. G. Garand (Army). Later discovered that the Canso carried 50 lbs dynamite and unserviceable pyrotechnics for disposal. On 30 May 1944 funeral service held for RC personnel and 3 June 1944 memorial service for Prot personnel. This info comes from 5 (BR) Sqn diary

This incident involved multiple aircraft:

  1. Canso A Serial: 9773

All the above aircraft in the above list are referenced in this report.

Canso 9773

Consolidated Canso Catalina PBY PB2B A-10 OA-10 Black Cat

RCAF Canso A (Serial No. 9754), No. 162 Squadron, F/L David Ernest Hornell aircraft.
Hornell pby Yarmouth 1943 (003).jpg image not found

The Consolidated Catalina and Canso were close cousins. The Canso was the true amphibious version of the design and therefore included a conventional undercarriage to allow for either water or land use. The Canso provided more than two decades of valuable service to the RCAF. The Catalina variant came first and was produced beginning in 1935 for the United States Navy. The amphibious version, designated PBY-5A, came in service early in 1941 and the RCAF began using the aircraft on anti-submarine patrols that same year. After the Second World War, the RCAF used Cansos for search and rescue, Arctic survey missions and various transport operations.RCAF

YouTube Canso PBY

Wikipedia Wikipedia Canso PBY

General Harold A Skaarup Web Page


Canso 9773

Canso A 9773

Served with No. 5 (BR) Squadron in Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, or Quebec, coded "G". Missing on 20 May 1944, on mission to dispose of unserviceable dynamite and pyrotechnics. All crew and 4 passengers (at least one Army) killed. Took off from Torbay, Newfoundland for this mission.

1943-03-18 Taken on Strength Eastern Air Command 2019-08-20
1944-May-20 Accident: 5 Squadron Loc: Cape St Francis Newfoundland Names: Byers | Campbell | Clow | Herman | Mcgimsie | Murray | Nolan | Poole
1944-07-21 Struck off Strength Written off, after going missing on operations. 2019-08-20