Canadian’s Passchendaele Victoria Cross to go on sale a century after it was won
OTTAWA — Passchendaele. More than 500,000 people, including 15,000 Canadians, were killed or wounded during the prolonged fight, as weeks of rain and shell fire churned the battlefield into a sea of mud.
Yet amid the horror that enveloped a small part of Belgium in the summer and fall of 1917, were nine Canadians who would be awarded the Victoria Cross, the British Empire’s highest medal for bravery.
Now one of those Victoria Crosses, awarded to 24-year-old Cpl. Colin Barron for his actions exactly 100 years ago Monday, is set to go up for auction on Dec. 5.
“What’s fascinating about Barron is not just the calibre of the citation, but one might even call it a suicidal mission to do what he did,” said David Erskine-Hill, a medal specialist at Spink, the London auction house selling the cross.