Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada)

 - Class of 1944

Page 19 of 90

 

Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 19 of 90
Page 19 of 90



Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 18
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Page 19 text:

LOYOLA Page 5 COLLEGE REVIEW SGT. FABIAN RICHARD DAWSON, ‘47 ABIAN RICHARD DAWSON was born on April 15, 1924. At 2.38 p.m. on the 28rd of April last he lost his life during flying operations ten miles Southwest of the Hamlet of Harrogate in Yorkshire, England, and was buried four days later in the morning in the R.A.F. regional Cemetery at Harrogate. Between the lines of this stern official epitaph granted him by the Air Force a wealth of memories must linger for those who knew him. In the spring of 1938 Richie Dawson entered First High and caught almost at once the Loyola spirit. The Review of '39 tells us that “his achievements in Bantam Football and Hockey are surpassed only by his Monday morning smile.” He never lost that smile. Nor did he lose the spirit when he left Loyola to offer his services and eventually his life for the principle that men are created free and equal and must remain so, for he was among the top ten in a class of 400 to graduate from Mont Joli Gunnery School. Above all he was a real Catholic—what greater epitaph could be pronounced. In one of his last letters he told of serving Mass and receiving Holy Communion on Easter Sunday and confided to Phil Ready, his life- long friend, that his one hope was that God would take him in the state of sanctifying ке Our hearts go out in sympathy to the Dawson family for we know full well what a loss is theirs. RIP. y y 7 ALBERT PICOTTE ous PICOTTE was with us a bare two years before God called him, but in that short space of time he had endeared himself to the College, and in particular to the class with which he was to have graduated this year—an endearment and a friendship which these few words will be very inadequate to express. And it is hard to write these words about one who was so close to us all at every class and in every activity at Loyola. He came to us from the Collége de Montréal where he had been from the age of twelve, and which he left with the highest academic distinctions in 1942. His classmates, both past and present, can testify to the keenness of his mind and the quickness of his wit. But that is not what we will remember in particular about him. It is his good humour and never-failing smile, his readiness to help, and work with others; well he knew that truth, “un saint triste est un triste saint , and we all have much to learn from him. He died on May 16th, just nine days short of his twenty-first birthday, and the Solemn Requiem High Mass was offered on the 19th by Fr. Rector, assisted by two a his professors, and served by four of his class-mates. We can be sure that he is now at rest; as one was heard to say, he was so happy that he must have had a premonition of his death. We will miss him on Convocation night, and our hearts will be heavy as his name is called. But then we forget. He was called before us, and he was ready. He has aliit graduated in the final Convocation—the only one that really counts,—and he will be looking down on us. R.I.P.

Page 18 text:

LOYOLA COLLEGE Page 4 REVIEW MAJOR DANIEL CHARLES YOUNG lw death of Major Young, who was wounded in the legs and chest during the battle for Ortona, brought to an end a distinguished military career that had started e Bol years before. He joined an Eastern Townships unit, Ayer's Cliff Cavalry Regiment, at the age of thirteen, and had taken qualification examinations in artillery, cavalry and infantry. Although keen on track meets and football at college, and well known as a skier, his chief interest always lay with his militia. He became a cavalry officer with the Royal Canadian Dragoons at St. Johns, entered the Small Arms School at Ottawa, and took the Artillery course at Petawawa, so that he was quali- fied as a major at the age of twenty-three although he did not hold that rank till he was twenty- seven. At the outbreak of the war he left the Canada Cement Company to go on active service. He was then a major in the Duke of York's Hussars, but transferred with a reduction in rank to lieutenant to the Royal Twenty-Second Regiment of Quebec. He went overseas with the rank of captain and then went to Sicily with the invasion forces where he obtained his majority fifteen days before he was wounded. Major Young climaxed his career by relieving Major Paul Triquet, V.C., during his heroic stand at Moro, December 14th to 19th. In Major Triquet's own words: “The Germans were everywhere, and five hundred yards from our objective, where we ran short of ammunition, we were stopped by heavy, accurate mortar fire. We held until reinforcements arrived. Those rein- forcements were headed by Major Young. This stand at Moro made possible the Ortona cam- paign, but was the occasion of Charles suffering severe wounds. Confined to a military hospital in Italy for more than a month, he failed to respond to treatment, and died a day or two before his 31st birthday. Attesting his popularity with his men, fellow officers and friends are the six hundred Masses said for him in all parts of the world. R.I.P. x Ж P O. WILLIAM E+ M«NICHOLL, R«C,A.F.,, 42 Tus four years that Bill McNicholl spent at Loyola, 1934-1938, gave an inkling of the manly spirit and leadership that were to come to the fore as Captain of his crew. Bad weather € him and his men to make a forced landing off the coast of Newfoundland in mid-winter. A letter from Bills chaplain, Fr. Metayer, vividly portrays his excellent character and spirit. The letter in part reads: Bill was an excellent Catholic and he received communion a few days before the accident in which he lost his life with seven of his companions. God did not take their lives violently but after days at sea on a raft. His Providence, no doubt, wanted them to be best prepared for their eternity. As Captain of his crew Bill was certainly conscious of his responsibility and we know after the messages they were sending, he was cheering up the others—that he made them all pray. Speaking of servicemen who thus give their lives Fr. Metayer said: They do not leave us forever but remain with us. They are not in the dark but we still are, they actually live their true lives while we e ourselves to die. The dead are invisible, they are not absent. They look upon us with eyes filled with eternal glory, they see actually their mother’s eyes and their father’s eyes burnt with tears and they are very close to them because these tears shed with Christian resignation were the cause of a shortened Purgatory before entering into the eternal glory. I've lost with Bill not only a friend but the real type of man we need so much in the Armed Forces we need so much nowadays. Masses have been said for those boys and your son here in my chapel. We shall not forget them. R.I.P.



Page 20 text:

LOYOLA COLLEGE Page 6 REVIEW REVEREND THOMAS J. MacMAHON, $.J. : F ATHER MacMAHON was born in Hamilton in 1874, the son of a prominent member of the police force. After graduating from Hamilton Col- legiate, young MacMahon was articled as a law clerk to the firm of Lynch, Staunton and O'Heir. At this time he also took part in the discussions of a Catholic Debating Society and gave promise of great things as a speaker. In 1894 Mr. MacMahon went to Montreal to teach English in a French Canadian College and there learn French. He did not like this position, however, and after two weeks went over to St. Mary's College. Shortly after arriving at St. Mary's he made the momentous retreat which made the budding lawyer decide that his vocation was not to the bar but to the priesthood and to the Jesuits. When Thomas MacMahon entered the Novitiate at Sault-au-Recollet, he was the first English- speaking subject in two years. As a novice he was much liked, showing then the characteristic for which he was to be noted throughout his life of being an excellent community man. In 1897 he was sent to the Missouri Province for a two-year study of the classics. Returning to Montreal, he spent seven years of conscientious study at the Immaculate Conception College, with six years of teaching at Loyola between his Philosophy and Theology. Father MacMahon was ordained to the priesthood by Archbishop Bruchesi wd 815%, 1910, and in 1911-12 made his tertianship in Canterbury, England. The early part of the following year he ably assisted Father Alex. Gagnieur, then Rector of Loyola, as Minister and Prefect of Studies and Discipline. When Father Gagnieur fell ill about the middle of the year Father MacMahon succeeded him as Rector. It was during the last year of his term as Rector that Loyola moved from Drummond Street to the present location in Notre Dame de Grace. Work had been begun two years before, and in 1916 the entire student body moved to Sherbrooke Street West. In Father MacMahon's second term as Rector, 1930-1935, he had the beautiful chapel building erected. The present Loyola may be considered almost entirely as a monument to his administration. The rest of the years that Father MacMahon devoted to the priestly ministry were spent on the Mission Band. During these years he gave very many missions in all parts of Canada and preached retreats to priests, religious, and laymen in this country and in the United States. He was extremely well-liked as he was a noble character, inaccessible to much of the petti- ness of human nature, unacquainted with selfishness and ambition and a complete stranger even to vanity and self-complacency. He was a fine manly man, a good religious who led a life of great singleness of purpose and unflinching devotion to duty. His fidelity to regular observance was ап inspiring example. On the social side he left the memory of sunny ways and witty sayings. Everywhere he passed he was remembered as an excellent community man. NI

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