249 www.on.legion.ca ONTARIO COMMAND LINCEZ, Charles E. Charles was born in Shawinigan Falls, QC on August 14, 1916. He joined the Royal Canadian Air Force in 1939 and served in England during World War II. Private Lincez was discharged in 1945 and was awarded the Canadian Volunteer Service Medal with Clasp, the Defence Medal and the 1939-1945 Star. He was a member of The Royal Canadian Legion Kapuskasing Branch 85 for over fifty years. Charles passed away on March 5, 1991. LITTLE, William Lloyd Lloyd was born on August 9, 1915, in Artemesia Township (Warham area) of Grey County, Ontario. He married Evelyn McCutcheon of Wareham onAugust 22, 1942 and they moved to Toronto. He joined the Navy (Regular Force) on March 16, 1942 and started his service with Admiral Nelles in Ottawa. He then did training in Eastern Canada and went on the (Avalon) Kipawa ship, a minesweeper out of St. John’s, Newfoundland. On September 4, 1945, he was discharged from the Navy and returned to Toronto. A couple of years later, the family purchased the General Store in Proton Station and enjoyed many years of business in this beautiful area. The family grew to include four girls and one boy. Lloyd was a proud member of the Flesherton Legion Branch 333, and after their move to Durham, became a member of the Durham Branch 308. When he was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis in his early 60s, things had to slow down. Lloyd died at the Owen Sound Hospital at the age of 77, in January 1993. LIVINGSTON, Leslie Andrew Leslie was born on October 10, 1924, in North Bay, Ontario, to Wilfred A. and Pearl Livingston. At sometime, he moved to Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. In high school, he was in the cadet program. His trade was a steel worker. He enlisted in the Army (Regular Force) with the Sault Ste. Marie and Sudbury Regiment in November 1942 and went to Camp Borden for training on April 20, 1943. His trade was a driver operator. On a foggy day, on October 3, 1944, he was driving an armoured vehicle beside a canal near St. Omar, France. In the poor visibility, the vehicle slid off the road and into the canal. Efforts were made to rescue the crew, but Private Leslie Livingstone drowned in the vehicle. He is buried in the Cappelle Bouck Communal Cemetery in France. His name is inscribed on the Echo Bay cenotaph.
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