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SGM George Hilton Soles

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SGM George Hilton Soles Veteran

Birth
Fort Stewart, Hastings County, Ontario, Canada
Death
26 Jul 1945 (aged 51)
Vancouver, Greater Vancouver Regional District, British Columbia, Canada
Burial
Vancouver, Greater Vancouver Regional District, British Columbia, Canada Add to Map
Plot
ABRAY-*-03-013-0002
Memorial ID
View Source
George Hilton Soles, DCM is the son of Richard Hilton Soles and Elizabeth Margaret Storie.

Sgt Major Soles served in World War I with the 72nd Battalion of the Canadian Expeditionary Forces.

George was the only Canadian soldier to be awarded the Distinguished Conduct Medal and Two Bars during the First World War. His awards are not recorded on his headstone. He served with the 72nd Battalion CEF, the Seaforth Highlanders of Canada. He later became a Constable with the British Columbia Provincial Police Force.

His parents moved from Ontario to the Columbia Valley (Parson) around the turn of the century.

George attended school in Carlow Twp, Ontario with other members of the Storie and Soles families. The entire Soles family left Carlow Township, the were loggers and settled in the Columbia Basin, East Kootenay Region of British Columbia, to continue their trade.

He enlisted into the Canadian Army in March 1915. At the time of his physical he stood 5' 8" tall, was of dark complexion with grey eyes and brown hair with a 38" chest when expanded. He was initially assigned to the 48th Battalion.

Narrative regarding his war experiences:

The original medal was awarded for an action at Cambri (France): in George's own words, "There was a little village; I forget the name that we had taken. There were two trenches, a kid of a pincher like affair, skirting the village with a main trench in the centre of the village. I had been wounded in the head, and figured the best I could do was to make for a dressing station. I started back, threw away all my equipment, and was well into the village trench when I suddenly saw a German sentry. He was standing guard at the entrance of a deep dug-out. I had to pass him, but I didn't have a rifle. I scouted back a few yards, found an abandoned German rifle, and sneaked back, put it against the German's back, and said "Hands up". He couldn't understand English, but he knew the feel of cold steel. He dropped his rifle, and elevated. There was a pile of hand grenades near the sentry, and I could see the entrance to the dug-out. "How many"?" I signaled, holding up my hand fingers spread, and pointing to the dug-out with the rifle. Fritzie wasn't dull. He put up eight fingers and two thumbs, four times, closed both hands, and then held up two fingers. "Forty-three, including the sentries. I thought well I might as well take them along, because if I don't Fritizie will get me after I pass. So I pointed to a box of hand grenades standing near the sentry, and then motioned for him to tell his comrades to come up, or else. And he understood. He yelled something in German; I guess it meant come up and give up. Any, way, up came forty-two Germans, unarmed and with their hands reaching………I took them along and later was awarded the D.C.M. That's all there was to it."

From an article in a BCPP magazine. "Corporal Soles was awarded a bar to his medal by exposing himself to heavy fire from a British Tank. The latter, owing to mist and smoke, had by mistake opened fire on British troops, and Corporal Soles went out with his tin hat hoisted on his bayonet signaled the tank gunners, and re-directed their fire."

"The third occasion on which Corporal Soles was decorated was when he was acting as Sergeant-Major of "A" Company. He had 120 men with him when he staged a brilliant counter attack on the Germans coming out victorious, but with only seventeen men and himself left to tell how it was done."
George Hilton Soles, DCM is the son of Richard Hilton Soles and Elizabeth Margaret Storie.

Sgt Major Soles served in World War I with the 72nd Battalion of the Canadian Expeditionary Forces.

George was the only Canadian soldier to be awarded the Distinguished Conduct Medal and Two Bars during the First World War. His awards are not recorded on his headstone. He served with the 72nd Battalion CEF, the Seaforth Highlanders of Canada. He later became a Constable with the British Columbia Provincial Police Force.

His parents moved from Ontario to the Columbia Valley (Parson) around the turn of the century.

George attended school in Carlow Twp, Ontario with other members of the Storie and Soles families. The entire Soles family left Carlow Township, the were loggers and settled in the Columbia Basin, East Kootenay Region of British Columbia, to continue their trade.

He enlisted into the Canadian Army in March 1915. At the time of his physical he stood 5' 8" tall, was of dark complexion with grey eyes and brown hair with a 38" chest when expanded. He was initially assigned to the 48th Battalion.

Narrative regarding his war experiences:

The original medal was awarded for an action at Cambri (France): in George's own words, "There was a little village; I forget the name that we had taken. There were two trenches, a kid of a pincher like affair, skirting the village with a main trench in the centre of the village. I had been wounded in the head, and figured the best I could do was to make for a dressing station. I started back, threw away all my equipment, and was well into the village trench when I suddenly saw a German sentry. He was standing guard at the entrance of a deep dug-out. I had to pass him, but I didn't have a rifle. I scouted back a few yards, found an abandoned German rifle, and sneaked back, put it against the German's back, and said "Hands up". He couldn't understand English, but he knew the feel of cold steel. He dropped his rifle, and elevated. There was a pile of hand grenades near the sentry, and I could see the entrance to the dug-out. "How many"?" I signaled, holding up my hand fingers spread, and pointing to the dug-out with the rifle. Fritzie wasn't dull. He put up eight fingers and two thumbs, four times, closed both hands, and then held up two fingers. "Forty-three, including the sentries. I thought well I might as well take them along, because if I don't Fritizie will get me after I pass. So I pointed to a box of hand grenades standing near the sentry, and then motioned for him to tell his comrades to come up, or else. And he understood. He yelled something in German; I guess it meant come up and give up. Any, way, up came forty-two Germans, unarmed and with their hands reaching………I took them along and later was awarded the D.C.M. That's all there was to it."

From an article in a BCPP magazine. "Corporal Soles was awarded a bar to his medal by exposing himself to heavy fire from a British Tank. The latter, owing to mist and smoke, had by mistake opened fire on British troops, and Corporal Soles went out with his tin hat hoisted on his bayonet signaled the tank gunners, and re-directed their fire."

"The third occasion on which Corporal Soles was decorated was when he was acting as Sergeant-Major of "A" Company. He had 120 men with him when he staged a brilliant counter attack on the Germans coming out victorious, but with only seventeen men and himself left to tell how it was done."


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