Beginnings
The British Columbia Regiment (Duke of Connaught's
Own) was formed on October 12, 1883 in Victoria and New
Westminster, and is older than the City of Vancouver in which it
serves today.
The first authorized regimental band was formed on November 9,
1883. With the conversion of the Regiment from Artillery to Rifles
in 1900, the Band evolved into a brass band and a drum and bugle
corps. Bugle-Majors have been part of the Regiment's heritage ever
since.
When the Regiment marched off to war, the Band went overseas and
several of its World War I drums sit with honour in the Regimental
Museum. Serving the Regiment throughout World War II, the 1950s, and
the early 1960s, the Band was well known and won many band
competitions. Unfortunately, in the cuts to the Canadian military
establishment with unification of the Army, Navy, and Air Force in
the late 1960s, the Band was disbanded and the band members were
absorbed into the Regiment.
Revival
Twenty years passed before the current RSM (Band), Don Shale, and
former Band Officer, Major Jim Barrett, decided to try to
re-form a regimental band in 1987. After obtaining permission from
the Regiment, the Commanding Officers' Committee of retired
colonels, and Major Fred Smith (ret.) of the British Columbia
Regiment Association, the Band was re-formed as a voluntary band. It
played its first performance for the men's Christmas Dinner that
year. Warrant Officer Claire Archer was the new band's first Band
Director, assisted by Bugle-Major John More. As the Band grew,
Captain Ken Whitney, CD, took over the Band Director's position in
1988. The Band played for regimental dinners, Remembrance Day, and
enjoyed an annual trip to Powell River playing for the British
Columbia Regiment Cadet Corps located there. When Captain Whitney's
duties with the Cadet Corps pulled him away from the Band, Acting
Captain Ron Pajala, CD, assumed the role of Band Director in 1990.
Over the following ten years under Ron's leadership the Band grew to
40-50 members. Major Ken Whitney returned in 1999 as Assistant Band
Director, becoming Band Director shortly thereafter, until succeeded
by Acting Honourary Captain Norman Stanfield in 2003.
The Regiment also formed a Pipe Band, under Pipe-Major Gordon
Barrett. The Pipe Band wear Irish kilts and caubeens.
The Regiment is proud of its bands and volunteer bandsmen who act
as visible ambassadors of the Canadian Forces and The British
Columbia Regiment in the eyes of the community.
(Thanks to Major J.D.
Barrett for contributing to the above
narrative.)