No soldier photo found.

Born in Sarnia, ON. Enlisted with the First Kents. Joe and Edward Oliphant were in Ottawa when they saw the advertisement for the First Special Service Force and they signed up for the “Devils Brigade”. Edward was too old for overseas assignment  so he did not get a chance to go.

http://www.firstspecialserviceforce.net/photos-by-last-name.html 

Joe Glass was born in Sarnia, Ontario, in 1920. He quit school his sophomore year, and at the age of 17 became a steamboat deckhand on the Great Lakes. In 1940 he joined the Canadian Army in Chatham, Ontario.

Glass, who was a bayonet instructor at Ottawa, volunteered for a “suicide mission” so “he could get into combat quicker.”

That mission was the First Special Service Force.

During his FSSF training at Fort Harrison, Glass met and became buddies with another Devil’s Brigade member, Lorin Waling. The two were best men at each other’s weddings, and went on to become lifelong friends. 

Assigned to 1st Company, 1st Battalion, 2nd Regiment, Glass received his baptism of fire in December 1943, during the FSSF’s legendary midnight assault up the cliffs of Mount la Difensa in southern Italy.

In an exchange on la Difensa with a German sniper, he was injured when a round from a 9mm shell from a Schmeisser machine gun pistol struck his hand, and when rock chips flew into his face. After the capture of the mountain, the Force had to defend la Difensa against intense mortar fire in sub-zero temperatures.

Next came the siege of the Anzio beachhead, where Glass and Waling were part of the night-time scouting operations near the Mussolini Canal.

During the breakout of Anzio in March 1944, Glass was hit by a mortar.

“A big piece of shrapnel from an ’88’ went through my chest and out my back. My lung collapsed, it broke all my ribs connected to the backbone and I was paralyzed from the waist down. When I started coughing up blood, I told a friend of mine, ‘Say goodbye to my wife and kid.’ They picked me up and dragged me out of there, and then another shell hit me in the arm.”

He was then transported to the beachhead hospital in a Jeep.

But God was not ready for Joe yet.

In the hospital, the doctors wired his ribs onto his backbone and removed one rib to repair his lungs. Glass returned to Helena on 50-percent disability, working at various jobs over the years, including driving cab for Taylor Taxi, truck driving for Helena Sand and Gravel, tending bar at the Moose Club, selling insurance for Franklin Life and delivering milk for Ernie Krout Dairy.

In about 1958, Glass was part of a group who built and operated the Valley Speedway stockcar race track. He worked for Nalleys Fine Foods from 1959 to 1973, sold cars for Dodge City from 1974 to 1981, and then owned and operated B&J Bingo and Glass’s Fish and Chips for about 10 years.

Taken from the Helena Independant Record http://www.helenair.com/articles/2006/08/15/helena/a07081506_02.txt

 

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