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Michael O'Leary said:Claims for battle honours to War of 1812 units? - OK
Issued by the Canadian Government? - Well, there was no equivalent Canadian Government at the time, but of the present one chooses to honour 1812, so be it.
Connecting the dots to current units? - There's the issue. To what degree do we rewrite history to justify these ... or do we actually admit the only connection is that the current units now recruit in the same cities and counties.
The unspoken question is the one from the leaders in each of these recipient units. And what they want to know is how to explain, in some detail, the actions of the individual perpetuated units of Canadian Militia, without lamely falling back on cursory descriptions of what "the Militia troops" did, en masse, at some of these actions. And now that it's been pushed past the political level to the CF, you say it's DHH's job to clean up the mess foisted upon the CF and try to make sense of it all. How very 1984.
1. Canadian Government
We can go around in circles sometimes with this stuff. "Tangier" was awarded by the United Kingdom for a action pre-dating the union and 220 year after the fact. The Canadian Government has done the same. Royal assent is the common thread. The Provinces had legislative bodies creating Canadian units prior to 1867. As you know, the 1855 Militia act was from the united province of Canada carried over into confederation. It did not appear out of thin air. The 1855 act was preceded by militia acts all the way back to 1791 for Ontario (Canada West/Upper Canada).
2.Connecting Dots
Joining the dots is a completely different topic and I would be delighted if DHH took a leadership role in defining this. But perpetuation is perpetuation and lineage is lineage. One establishes precedence, the other does not.
1812 perpetuation is government policy. Policy is implemented by the bureaucracy (DHH). That is how it works. DHH can figure it out by themselves or call in inter-departmental and outside stakeholders/experts. So far they have chosen to Fly Solo. I offered pro bono to help but no takers at DHH.
1812 perpetuation decisions by DHH seem to be a jungle juice of reasoning. Some factors appear to be: 1.Regiments that unofficially claimed to perpetuate historical units (ex. RNBR, QYR); regiments with lineage to the county units (ex. 4/RCR = Oxford); the place where 1812 units were recruited geographically (22e Regt = Canadian Fencible Regiment); and the place where 1812 units were embodied (ex. PWOR = Incorp. Militia, Halifax Rifles=Nova Scotia Fencibles).
There are some choices I wonder about, but handling future perpetuation claims may them clean up.
Educating Units.
Education of unit COs is exactly what I am talking about re: communicating. An important point is COs were given a choice to accept or refuse 1812 perpetuation. If a unit refused, the offer went to another unit. I believe all accepted.
The ONLY reason I am posting here is to offer what I have learned to create a little more understanding. I am thankful for the kind email messages from your forum members about the Royal Newfoundland Regiment 1812 claim I shared. It underlines your point of the need for more info and how relieved people are when there is some logic and evidence on the table.