George Wallace
Army.ca Dinosaur
- Reaction score
- 185
- Points
- 710
D. Nicholson said:... I would think Freedom of the Citymay fall into this catagory
???
Cadets.....Freedom of the City....... ???
D. Nicholson said:... I would think Freedom of the Citymay fall into this catagory
George Wallace said:???
Cadets.....Freedom of the City....... ???
George Wallace said:???
Cadets.....Freedom of the City....... ???
rwgill said:Yes, in fact there are Army Cadet Corps which are older than many CF Units. There are two (#2 Bishop's College and #7 St. Thomas) which are older than the Dragoons. Bishop's College was formed in 1879 and has run continously since then.
www.armycadethistory.com Check it out when you have time.
Cadet Warrant-Mann said:I read a sea cadet drill manual and they also have movements for use of bayonets to put on their .22s, but I have never actually heard of or seen this. It seemed kind of cool
Yes cadet units do receive the Freedom of the City. In some cases, cadet units receive it before their Reg F and Res affiliated units. In many areas, Cadet Corps may be the only military representation.George Wallace said:Still doesn't answer the ....Freedom of the City..... ???
RCSCC Undaunted website said:#22 RCSCC UNDAUNTED was granted the Freedom of the City of Calgary Alberta by order of the city council in recognition of 85 years of service to the youth of Canada, Calgary and the Canadian Cadet Movement.
The Freedom of the City means, in the physical sense, the granting of the privilege for all time for a specific military unit to march through the city with "drums beating, colours flying, and bayonets fixed." It is a most prized honour, for it recognizes the honourable record of the military unit, and demonstrates the affection and esteem with which it is held by the community and the trust the citizenry has in the military to protect its democratic institution.
The granting of "The Freedom of the City" is therefore a private matter between civic officials and the specific unit. The decision to grant this symbolic freedom rests with the municipal authorities. While it is not unprecedented, it is rare for a city to grant the honour to a foreign military unit. "Freedom of the City" may also be bestowed on a unitof the Royal Canadian Sea, Army and Air Cadets, often to mark a long history of service in a community.
Pea said:I participated in Freedom of the City parade at VACSTC in 2002. It was neat to see how serious the parade was taken by all in attendance.
George:
http://64.233.167.104/search?q=cache:iL9EvxsiJu4J:www.regions.cadets.ca/pac/news-nouvelles/pdf/backgrounders%252005/BGfreedom.pdf+cadet+freedom+of+the+city&hl=en&gl=ca&ct=clnk&cd=1
D. Nicholson said:Off base there's always a few parades, in 2002 D&C and the Band did a Veteran's memorial in a liquor store parking lot.
Pea said:Thank you. That was the parade I was a part of then, while in D&C Summer 2002.