Related News

Carney government noncommittal about Canada meeting 2030 climate goals

Carney government noncommittal about Canada meeting 2030 climate goals

September 8, 2025
Forget swimming and yoga — according to research, this type of exercise adds years to your life

Forget swimming and yoga — according to research, this type of exercise adds years to your life

July 4, 2025
P.E.I.’s migrant workers grappling with fewer hours or layoffs due to Chinese seafood tariffs

P.E.I.’s migrant workers grappling with fewer hours or layoffs due to Chinese seafood tariffs

September 17, 2025

Browse by Category

  • Canadian news feed
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Music & Piano
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding

Related News

Carney government noncommittal about Canada meeting 2030 climate goals

Carney government noncommittal about Canada meeting 2030 climate goals

September 8, 2025
Forget swimming and yoga — according to research, this type of exercise adds years to your life

Forget swimming and yoga — according to research, this type of exercise adds years to your life

July 4, 2025
P.E.I.’s migrant workers grappling with fewer hours or layoffs due to Chinese seafood tariffs

P.E.I.’s migrant workers grappling with fewer hours or layoffs due to Chinese seafood tariffs

September 17, 2025

Browse by Category

  • Canadian news feed
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Music & Piano
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding
CANADIANA NEWS - AI Curated content
  • Home
  • Canadian news feed
  • Skateboarding
  • Golf
  • Hockey
  • Running & fitness
  • Music & Piano
  • WeMaple
No Result
View All Result
CONTRIBUTE
CANADIANA NEWS - AI Curated content
  • Home
  • Canadian news feed
  • Skateboarding
  • Golf
  • Hockey
  • Running & fitness
  • Music & Piano
  • WeMaple
No Result
View All Result
CANADIANA NEWS - AI Curated content
No Result
View All Result
Home Canadian news feed

Old caves yield new secrets from Canadians who went over the top at Vimy Ridge

Sarah Taylor by Sarah Taylor
November 9, 2025
in Canadian news feed
0
Old caves yield new secrets from Canadians who went over the top at Vimy Ridge
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

A hidden archive of art and last thoughts created by Canadian soldiers potentially facing their last moments before the battle of Vimy Ridge has emerged from the soft chalk tunnels beneath the battlefield more than a century after they were created.

You might also like

Thousands of knitted poppies cover buildings across Niagara for Remembrance Day

Canada could face ‘worst kind’ of flu season as experts warn evolving strain may be mismatch for vaccine

What’s in the federal budget for you? Your questions answered

Thanks to new technology and colour of the delicate tunnel surfaces, a team of dedicated preservationists were able to re-scan the site and uncover more than 30 new names and stories previously lost to faintness or error.

“It’s a rewarding feeling,” Zenon Andrusyszyn, the non-profit Canadigm Group’s artistic director and creator told CBC News.

Since 2012, the group has been working to help ensure these messages, etched in chalk, are permanently saved — as the fragile underground tunnels may potentially collapse, swallowing their legacy whole.

The Battle of Vimy Ridge in April of 1917 is widely seen as both a turning point in the First World War and a crucible for Canada’s national identity. The young country looked to prove itself on the world stage, forging a sense of unity and purpose that would shape its future.

Thousands of Canadian soldiers lived and trained within the network of caverns dating back to medieval times, known as souterraines, that sprawled for kilometres, sometimes barely 10 metres below the surface for weeks prior to the three-day battle for Vimy Ridge.

“They were all connected,” said Teresa Iacobelli, a First World War historian at the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa. “So the supply, as well as the men, are moving through this vast tunnel system.”

The tunnels also hid their movements from the enemy, and protected them from artillery bombardments above.

While they anxiously awaited battle, many of the soldiers spent their free time drawing, carving and sketching in the soft chalk walls, including a mailbox carved into the cave wall to store their letters in the event they died during the assault.

The result is an underground art gallery that ranges, from simple signatures and stick men, to elaborate carvings and portraits.

The new discoveries by Canadigm Group are being driven by handheld 3D laser scanners. They’re a significant upgrade from older, more cumbersome equipment that required heavy tripods that the group had used on its previous visits.

“The old scanner wouldn’t pick up anything but the geometry. So the new scanner picks up geometry and the texture of the wall,” said Dan Mansfield, the project’s technologist.

Because of the leap in technology, Mansfield said he “re-did almost everything in the cave,” to discover any markings they might have previously missed.

This meticulous digital resurrection brings faces and context to the soldiers, including Pte. Norman Allatt of Toronto, who wrote and drew messages, including a sketch of his girlfriend, who he later married after the war.

“We’ve linked a name to a face. And that face is now, in the eyes of another individual, no longer just text on a wall. It’s a person,” Andrusyszyn said.

Canadigm Group’s preservation work is an urgent race against time.

The sprawling caves are located beneath working farms where agricultural heavy machinery rolls overhead on a daily basis, increasing the potential for a large section of the structure to give way.

Such an event would erase the art people like Mansfield consider sacred to Canada’s national identity.

“It’s like walking into a church alone,” Mansfield said. “You see these carvings on the wall that these soldiers had done in some cases, right before they died; within days, some of them were dead.”

“It was like sticking your finger into an electric socket,” he said. “The energy in that place is so deep into the red zone you can’t even begin to fathom it.”

“In my opinion, it is an unrecognized national treasure.”

Andrusyzyn said seeing the carvings, drawings and writing on the walls made by thousands of young men was deeply moving, offering a window into their thoughts as they anxiously waited to launch the assault on the German position, with their last thoughts often fixed on home.

“You get into that person’s psyche at the time and you have to think of the fact that, above ground, shells are going off,” he said.

“It really puts a different spin on your life, when you start putting it into that kind of perspective, you know? Life is fleeting.”

Read Entire Article
Tags: Canada NewsCBC.ca
Share30Tweet19
Sarah Taylor

Sarah Taylor

Recommended For You

Thousands of knitted poppies cover buildings across Niagara for Remembrance Day

by Sarah Taylor
November 9, 2025
0
Thousands of knitted poppies cover buildings across Niagara for Remembrance Day

To honour Remembrance Day, communities across the Niagara Region dress their museums, churches and legions in crocheted poppies as part of the Poppy ProjectChristine Girardi, an assistant curator...

Read more

Could a rise in Indigenous-led developments move the needle on Canada’s housing shortage?

by Sarah Taylor
November 9, 2025
0
Could a rise in Indigenous-led developments move the needle on Canada’s housing shortage?

Jeff Messina and his wife were ready to start the next chapter of their lives Newly married and eager to begin a family, they dreamed of owning a...

Read more

Canada could face ‘worst kind’ of flu season as experts warn evolving strain may be mismatch for vaccine

by Sarah Taylor
November 9, 2025
0
Canada could face ‘worst kind’ of flu season as experts warn evolving strain may be mismatch for vaccine

With flu cases now rising in Canada, medical experts are bracing for a difficult influenza season linked to the global spread of an evolving H3N2 strain that could...

Read more

What’s in the federal budget for you? Your questions answered

by Sarah Taylor
November 9, 2025
0
What’s in the federal budget for you? Your questions answered

This story is a direct reflection of audience members, like you, who had questions about the federal budget You can send your questions to ask@cbcca Prime Minister Mark Carney...

Read more

Advocates concerned temporary immigration cuts don’t address systemic issues

by Sarah Taylor
November 9, 2025
0
Advocates concerned temporary immigration cuts don’t address systemic issues

The Carney government’s first budget will significantly reduce the number of temporary immigrants it admits to Canada over the next three yearsThe cuts are being made to the...

Read more
Next Post
Thousands of knitted poppies cover buildings across Niagara for Remembrance Day

Thousands of knitted poppies cover buildings across Niagara for Remembrance Day

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related News

Carney government noncommittal about Canada meeting 2030 climate goals

Carney government noncommittal about Canada meeting 2030 climate goals

September 8, 2025
Forget swimming and yoga — according to research, this type of exercise adds years to your life

Forget swimming and yoga — according to research, this type of exercise adds years to your life

July 4, 2025
P.E.I.’s migrant workers grappling with fewer hours or layoffs due to Chinese seafood tariffs

P.E.I.’s migrant workers grappling with fewer hours or layoffs due to Chinese seafood tariffs

September 17, 2025

Browse by Category

  • Canadian news feed
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Music & Piano
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding
CANADIANA NEWS – AI Curated content

CANADIANA.NEWS will be firmly committed to the public interest and democratic values.

CATEGORIES

  • Canadian news feed
  • Golf news
  • Hockey news
  • Music & Piano
  • Running & fitness
  • Skateboarding

BROWSE BY TAG

Canada News CBC.ca Golf Hockey Lifehacker Ludwig-van.com Skateboarding tomsguide.com

© 2025 canadiana.news - all rights reserved. YYC TECH CONSULTING.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Canadian news feed
  • Skateboarding
  • Golf
  • Hockey
  • Running & fitness
  • Music & Piano
  • WeMaple

© 2025 canadiana.news - all rights reserved. YYC TECH CONSULTING.