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Leading Aircraftman Archie Walker Jones
Monument

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Leading Aircraftman Archie Walker Jones

Birth
Balsam, Durham Regional Municipality, Ontario, Canada
Death
14 Oct 1942 (aged 47)
At Sea
Monument
Ottawa, Ottawa Municipality, Ontario, Canada Add to Map
Plot
Panel 1. Column 5.
Memorial ID
View Source

-In the early morning of 14 Oct 1942, the Newfoundland Railway passenger/rail ferry, S. S. 'Caribou', was sailing across the Cabot Strait when it was torpedoed and sunk by a German U-boat; it had departed from Sydney, Nova Scotia, on the evening of 13 Oct and was heading for Port-aux-Basques, Newfoundland. Aboard were 192 passengers (armed forces personnel, as well as civilians), a crew of 46, some livestock, rail cars and other cargo. The island of Newfoundland, a sea-faring country which was still a British colony at that time, was in a strategic location during the Second World War because it was so close to Canada. There were several military bases on the island where Canadian, British and American personnel were stationed; these servicemen often travelled on the ferries between Newfoundland and Canada.

-Of the 46 crew members of the S.S. 'Caribou', 31 died, including her captain and his two sons. Of the 118 Canadian, British and American armed services personnel, 57 died. And of the 74 civilians aboard the Caribou that early morning, 49 perished. 136 people in all were lost.


Leading Aircraftman Jones was one of the armed services personnel passengers, aboard the S.S. 'Caribou', who perished at sea.

He was one of eighteen airmen lost....

Pilot Officer John Hamilton BARRETT,

Pilot Officer Lionel Edgar LEGGE,

Aircraftman 2nd Class Lawrence William TRUESDALE,

Corporal William Palmer HOWSE,

Corporal Herbert Harold ELKIN,

Aircraftman 2nd Class Raymond CHATSON,

Aircraftman 2nd Class Thomas Henry CUMMINGS,

Aircraftman 2nd Class William Bruce WILSON,

Aircraftman 2nd Class Edward Allan THISTLE,

Aircraftman 2nd Class Raymond WATSON,

Aircraftman 2nd Class George William PARKER,

Aircraftman 2nd Class Donald Cameron GLOVER,

Leading Aircraftman Charles Michael McCARRON,

Leading Aircraftman Edward George WALKER,

Leading Aircraftman Dow Lester MITCHELL,

Leading Aircraftman Archie Walker JONES,

Leading Aircraftman Morris Nathan OIRING and

Aircraftman 1st Class Fred George COULSON.


Military Service-

Rank: Leading Aircraftman

Service Number: R/139598

Age: 48

Force: Air Force

Unit: Royal Canadian Air Force


A farmer by trade and residing in Invermay, Saskatchewan, Canada, he enlisted in the RCAF on 28 Oct 1941 in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. He had served in the Canadian Army during the First World War.


Husband of Mariette Jones of Port Hammond, British Columbia, Canada; father of six children: Archie Kenneth, Juel Victoria May, Ethel Lorraine, Donald Hugh, Arthur Keith and Joseph Ambrose. His parents, Joseph and Margaret (née Walker) Jones were deceased.


Leading Aircraftman Archie Walker Jones is commemorated on Page 85 of Canada's Second World War Book of Remembrance.

He is also commemorated by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

-In the early morning of 14 Oct 1942, the Newfoundland Railway passenger/rail ferry, S. S. 'Caribou', was sailing across the Cabot Strait when it was torpedoed and sunk by a German U-boat; it had departed from Sydney, Nova Scotia, on the evening of 13 Oct and was heading for Port-aux-Basques, Newfoundland. Aboard were 192 passengers (armed forces personnel, as well as civilians), a crew of 46, some livestock, rail cars and other cargo. The island of Newfoundland, a sea-faring country which was still a British colony at that time, was in a strategic location during the Second World War because it was so close to Canada. There were several military bases on the island where Canadian, British and American personnel were stationed; these servicemen often travelled on the ferries between Newfoundland and Canada.

-Of the 46 crew members of the S.S. 'Caribou', 31 died, including her captain and his two sons. Of the 118 Canadian, British and American armed services personnel, 57 died. And of the 74 civilians aboard the Caribou that early morning, 49 perished. 136 people in all were lost.


Leading Aircraftman Jones was one of the armed services personnel passengers, aboard the S.S. 'Caribou', who perished at sea.

He was one of eighteen airmen lost....

Pilot Officer John Hamilton BARRETT,

Pilot Officer Lionel Edgar LEGGE,

Aircraftman 2nd Class Lawrence William TRUESDALE,

Corporal William Palmer HOWSE,

Corporal Herbert Harold ELKIN,

Aircraftman 2nd Class Raymond CHATSON,

Aircraftman 2nd Class Thomas Henry CUMMINGS,

Aircraftman 2nd Class William Bruce WILSON,

Aircraftman 2nd Class Edward Allan THISTLE,

Aircraftman 2nd Class Raymond WATSON,

Aircraftman 2nd Class George William PARKER,

Aircraftman 2nd Class Donald Cameron GLOVER,

Leading Aircraftman Charles Michael McCARRON,

Leading Aircraftman Edward George WALKER,

Leading Aircraftman Dow Lester MITCHELL,

Leading Aircraftman Archie Walker JONES,

Leading Aircraftman Morris Nathan OIRING and

Aircraftman 1st Class Fred George COULSON.


Military Service-

Rank: Leading Aircraftman

Service Number: R/139598

Age: 48

Force: Air Force

Unit: Royal Canadian Air Force


A farmer by trade and residing in Invermay, Saskatchewan, Canada, he enlisted in the RCAF on 28 Oct 1941 in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. He had served in the Canadian Army during the First World War.


Husband of Mariette Jones of Port Hammond, British Columbia, Canada; father of six children: Archie Kenneth, Juel Victoria May, Ethel Lorraine, Donald Hugh, Arthur Keith and Joseph Ambrose. His parents, Joseph and Margaret (née Walker) Jones were deceased.


Leading Aircraftman Archie Walker Jones is commemorated on Page 85 of Canada's Second World War Book of Remembrance.

He is also commemorated by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.


Inscription

1942
ROYAL CANADIAN
AIR FORCE
LDG. AIRCRAFTMAN
JONES A. W.



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