Canadian soldiers gather around an improvised stove. The interwoven branches in the bottom left corner could have been used to hold up trench walls or laid on the ground to offer better footing in the mud. This undated image may have been taken before the first gas attack in April 1915, as none of the soldiers are wearing respirators. #CanadaintheTrenches1915 https:// amzn.to/43IXdBu
This image captures the moment when L/Cpl. William Alexander McLean (426144) of the 10th Battalion, Canadian Expeditionary Force, moved forward and received the Distinguished Conduct Medal from Lieutenant‑General Sir Edwin Alderson in early August 1916. The two men face one another in an open field near Locre, the soldier rigid with discipline, Alderson leaning in slightly as he fastens the ribbon to the soldier’s tunic. Both can be seen wearing the heavy, practical uniforms of 1916 — puttees wrapped tightly around their legs, tunics squared, steel helmets put aside for the ceremony — while the soldier’s expression, though somewhat obscured, did manage to exude a mixture of pride, exhaustion, and solemnity typical of those brave men decorated in wartime. Behind them, soldiers stand at attention, their formation creating a quiet frame of witness to the moment. The site chosen for the ceremony added depth to this momentous scene. Locre (Loker), a small Flemish village west of Kemmel Hill...