Mystery surrounding last Canadian killed in First World War lives on
OTTAWA — George Lawrence Price was just one of the estimated 66,000 Canadians who died during or as a result of the First World War.
By many accounts, his service during what was hoped to be “the war to end war” was unremarkable, except that he is widely believed to have been the last Canadian — indeed the last Commonwealth soldier — killed before armistice took effect at 11 a.m. on Nov. 11, 1918.
But it’s where Price was laid to rest that links the beginning of the deadly campaign to its bitter end and is perhaps the most poignant reminder of the futility of war, says Tim Cook, the Canadian War Museum’s First World War historian.
Official records indicate that Pte. Price took a sniper’s bullet in the chest at approximately 10:50 a.m. on the last day of battle while on house-to-house patrol in Ville-sur-Haine, Belgium, just outside Mons. The 25-year-old runner for A Company, 28th Canadian Infantry Battalion, died of his wounds a few minutes later, just two minutes before the fighting was to end. He was later buried at what is now Belgium’s St. Symphorien Military Cemetery.