Cyrus Wesley Peck
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Cyrus Wesley Peck, VC, DSO & Bar (April 26, 1871 – September 27, 1956) was a Canadian recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. Peck was one of seven Canadian to be awarded the Victoria Cross for his actions on September 2, 1918. The other six Victoria Cross recipients were Claude Joseph Patrick Nunney, William Metcalf, John Francis Young, Walter Leigh Rayfield, Bellenden Hutcheson and Arthur George Knight.
Peck was born in Hopewell Hill, New Brunswick, the family had immigrated from New England in 1763.
Peck was 16 years old when his father moved the family to New Westminster, British Columbia. Peck took military training and crossed the Atlantic to join the British Army then changed his mind. He returned to Canadian and would volunteer for the Boer War. He was not accepted for duty. He next moved to Klondike, Yukon. When First World War began he was in Prince Rupert, British Columbia and working in a salmon cannery.
In 1914 he went overseas as a Major in the 30th Battalion. Then in May of 1915 Peck joined as a a Lieutenant Colonel in the 16th (Canadian Scottish) Battalion, Canadian Expeditionary Force. He was 47 years old. He would become the commander of the Regiment during the Battle of the Somme (1916). Peck was awarded the DS and Bar and was mentioned five times in dispatches and was wounded twice.
In 1917 he was a solder candidate elected in the Khaki Election of 1917. He was elected in 1917 as a Unionist for the riding of Skeena. He was defeated in 1921. In 1924, he was elected to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia for the riding of The Islands. A member of the British Columbia Conservative Party, he was reelected in 1928.
On 2 September 1918 at Cagnicourt, France (the Drocourt-Queant Line), when Lieutenant Colonel Peck's command, after capturing the first objective, was held up by enemy machine-gun fire, he went forward and made a personal reconnaissance under very heavy fire. Returning, he reorganized his battalion and pushed them forward. He then went out, under the most intense artillery and machine-gun fire and intercepted the tanks, giving them the necessary directions, pointing out where they were to make for, and thus paving the way for an infantry battalion to push forward. To this battalion he subsequently gave the necessary support.
Following his political career he was appointed to the Canadian Pension Commission and held this post until 1941. He died September 27, 1956 of a heart attack.
Grave/memorial at New Westminster Crematorium, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Range 23. Block 54. Lot B. Headstone.
His Victoria Cross is displayed at the Canadian War Museum (Ottawa, Canada).
[edit] External links
- News Item (Canadian Scottish Regiment (Princess Mary's) regimental museum VC exhibition)
[edit] References
Toronto Public Library Scrapbook, film T6863, volume #14, item 124