Episodes

  • 13 - The Timberwolves’ Legacy: Indigenous Contributions in WWI Canada
    Feb 4 2026

    The 107th Battalion — known as The Timberwolves — was one of the most remarkable and overlooked units in Canada’s First World War history. Made up largely of First Nations soldiers, these men brought extraordinary skill, resilience, and cultural strength to a war that demanded everything from them… and then asked for more.

    In this episode, we uncover the story Canada rarely tells: how Indigenous soldiers carved roads through the impossible, built the very infrastructure of the Western Front, and fought with a loyalty that was never fully returned at home. Through history, testimony, and truth, we explore who the Timberwolves were, what they endured, and why their legacy matters now more than ever.

    This is the story of courage in the shadows, and the fight to bring it into the light.

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    57 mins
  • 12 - Poison Wind: Canada and the First Gas Attack
    Jan 22 2026

    When the air turned poisonous, the Canadians didn’t retreat; they stood and fought.This episode dives into the first poison‑gas attack at Ypres and the brutal legacy it left behind. From the shock of the green cloud to the lifelong scars of gas exposure, we follow the Canadians who faced a weapon the world had sworn never to use. A visceral journey into terror, survival, and the moment modern war crossed a line it could never uncross.


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    1 hr and 13 mins
  • 11 - Knighthood, Chaos, and the Vanished Cemetery - Listener's Choice
    Jan 13 2026

    Four snapshots from Canada’s Great War: the lost Levi Cottage Cemetery now buried within Tyne Cot; Sir Arthur Currie’s fraught rise to knighthood; the deadly work of CEF runners threading messages through chaos; and the 107th Battalion, the Timberwolves, carving identity in the mud of the Western Front. A brief episode with the weight of a century behind it.

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    45 mins
  • 10 - Beaumont-Hamel: Courage, Loss & the Newfoundland Regiment
    Jan 7 2026

    Beaumont‑Hamel marked one of the darkest moments in Newfoundland’s history.

    On the morning of July 1, 1916, the Newfoundland Regiment advanced across open ground during the first day of the Battle of the Somme, straight into unbroken German fire. Within minutes, the unit was devastated, suffering catastrophic losses that echoed across every community back home.

    Beaumont‑Hamel became a symbol of extraordinary courage, profound sacrifice, and a tragedy that shaped Newfoundland’s identity for generations.


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    1 hr and 8 mins
  • 9 - Once A Patricia, Always A Patricia
    Dec 31 2025

    From Frezenberg to Kapyong, the Second World War, and the Medak Pocket to Afghanistan; this episode explores the courage, identity, and legacy of the Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry. Featuring the incredible story of Major Mike Levy.Once a Patricia, Always a Patricia is a tribute to more than a century of service, sacrifice, and identity, and to the enduring spirit that binds Patricias long after the fighting ends.

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    1 hr and 11 mins
  • 8 - Voices in the Frost: The Story of the 1914 Christmas Truce
    Dec 24 2025

    In December 1914, British and German soldiers stepped out of their trenches to share songs, handshakes, and a brief moment of humanity in the frozen silence of No Man’s Land. This episode explores the Christmas Truce through the voices of the men who lived it; a fragile flicker of peace that stayed with them for the rest of their lives.

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    1 hr and 19 mins
  • 7 - Life in the Trenches: In Their Own Words
    Dec 20 2025

    In this episode, we step inside the trenches of the Western Front, where soldiers lived every day with mud at their boots, fear in their lungs, and the constant thunder of artillery overhead. Through their routines, their hardships, and the rare moments of fragile humanity, we explore what life was truly like for the men who endured one of the harshest environments of the First World War.

    From stand‑to at dawn to long nights of labour, from lice and rats to letters from home, this episode brings you into the world in which they survived, one day at a time.

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    1 hr and 17 mins
  • 6 - Shot at Dawn: The Other Side of Valour
    Dec 13 2025

    In this episode of Memory and Valour, we confront one of the darkest legacies of the First World War: soldiers executed by firing squad. Beyond Vimy Ridge and Passchendaele lies another roll call—twenty‑five Canadians condemned for “cowardice,” “desertion,” or “disobedience.”

    Through voices like Private Walter Underwood and Medical Officer Maberly Esler, we uncover the machinery of discipline, from Field Punishment Number One to the ultimate sanction of execution. Were these acts of necessity, or miscarriages of justice?

    Step into the trenches, hear the men who lived under the shadow of discipline, and remember those who were shot at dawn.

    www.memoryandvalour.ca

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    1 hr and 21 mins