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“La Maison des Canadiens"

Louis

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“La Maison des Canadiens" or "Canada House", in Bernières-sur-Mer, France, is one of the most iconic buildings in Canadian military history. It was one of the first houses liberated by Canadian soldiers on D-Day, 6 June 1944, and has since become a familiar historic landmark, standing in the backdrop of the many black-and-white photographs showing troops landing on the sands of this village in Normandy.

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The house is, and has always been, two semi-detached homes in a single building. Attractive summer houses like this were once common along the Normandy coastline, until the Germans, after occupying France in the WW2, levelled hundreds of them to construct the concrete defences of the “Atlantic Wall,” designed to resist an Allied invasion. This particular house was one of the few left intact, perhaps because it was the favoured home of an occupying German officer.

The left-hand side is owned by the family of Hervé Hoffer, whose grandfather owned the home during the war but was evicted by the Germans.

In 1984, the 40th anniversary of D-Day — when large numbers of surviving veterans first began returning on pilgrimages to Juno Beach — Hoffer met some of the Canadians who had actually liberated his house.

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“The veterans were still young and healthy [in 1984], and many of them stopped to chat and have a beer,” Hoffer remembered. “Some asked if they could see inside the house. I made many friends, and my interest just grew from there.”

For decades after that moment, Hoffer lovingly maintained the spirit of his home's wartime history, and the memory of Canada's sacrifice. Today, visitors are almost always welcome, and inside they will find a living shrine to remembrance — a summer home festooned with maple leaf flags, regimental insignia and a large collection of wartime maps, photographs, uniforms and other artifacts.

The house has also become a place of pilgrimage for past and present members of the Queen’s Own Rifles (QOR), a Toronto-based army regiment whose members came ashore directly below the house. “The Queen’s Own Rifles were in this house 20 minutes after the landings started,” said Hoffer.

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There was also fighting inside the Hoffer house, as Canadians cleared the building of enemy troops. A veteran, who returned to visit in 2009, left this message in Hoffer’s guest book: “Ernie Kells (84), Queen’s Own Rifles — one of five soldiers who arrived at this house on D-Day. Sorry about throwing grenades into your cellar.”

Every year on 1 June, Hoffer would light and hang a paraffin lantern on the balcony of his house. After sunset on 6 June, he carried the lantern over the sand and down to the water, where waded to his waist in the English Channel before throwing the lantern into the sea — often with a bagpiper serenading. He called it “a symbolic gesture to the Canadians who came that day from the sea to give us back our freedom.”

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H. Hoffer (down pic) died in January 2017, leaving the house and its artifacts to his wife and children, and in the care of L'Association la Maison des Canadiens, a private organization dedicated to the maintenance of the house and its role in Canadian remembrance.

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From:
thecanadianencyclopedia.ca
seniorstravelblog.com
and others
 
And another story related to the House ...

Rosaire Gagnon was born on July 1, 1920 at Ste. Germaine, Dorchester, Quebec. Rosaire was working as a labourer for a wood contractor when he enlisted in the Canadian Army on July 18, 1940, joining Le Regiment de la Chaudiere.
In July 1941 Rosaire sailed for England. On DDay, June 6, 1944 he landed on Normandy's Juno Beach with his regiment as part of the 8th Canadian Infantry Brigade, 3rd Canadian Infantry Division.

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Later that day, photographer Frank L. Dubervill captured the above image of a smiling Sgt. Rosaire Gagnon along with an equally cheerful German POW in front of the home known as La Maison des Canadiens, Bernières-sur-Mer.

Just seven days later Rosaire would be dead, killed in action on June 13th near Rots where his regiment was engaged in heavy fighting with the 12th SS Panzer Division 'Hitlerjugend'. He was 24 years old.

From:
instagram
findagrave
 
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