Canadian soldier
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Born:
January 23, 1921, New Bedford, Massachusetts, U.S.
Died:
October 12, 2008, Montréal, Quebec, Canada (aged 87)
Role In:
Korean War
Normandy Invasion
World War II

Léo Major (born January 23, 1921, New Bedford, Massachusetts, U.S.—died October 12, 2008, Montréal, Quebec, Canada) decorated Canadian hero of World War II and the Korean War, known for being the only Canadian to win the Distinguished Conduct Medal in two separate wars.

Major was born to French-Canadian parents (while his father was working for the American Railroad Company) in the U.S. but moved with his family back to Montréal when he was very young. Major enlisted in the Canadian army when he was 19 years old and was sent overseas in 1941. He was amongst the Canadian forces that landed on the beaches in the Normandy Invasion on June 6, 1944, and that same day he was instrumental in capturing a German Hanomag half-track. A couple of days later he was injured by a phosphorus grenade while fighting a group of German SS soldiers, and he lost partial vision in his left eye; he refused to be evacuated back to England because he needed only his right eye to sight a rifle.

Germany invades Poland, September 1, 1939, using 45 German divisions and aerial attack. By September 20, only Warsaw held out, but final surrender came on September 29.
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Later that year, at the Battle of the Scheldt, Major was sent to retrieve a patrol of fresh recruits who had failed to return to base. As he was out, Major captured 93 German soldiers on his own. He was supposed to receive the Distinguished Conduct Medal for this action, an award second only to the Victoria Cross for gallantry in action, but he allegedly refused on the grounds that he considered Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery too incompetent to even hand out medals. Shortly thereafter, he was caught in an exploding mine and broke his back, but again he refused evacuation and eventually recovered. Major did accept the Distinguished Conduct Medal after he single-handedly liberated the Dutch town of Zwolle by tricking the local German garrison into believing that there was a much larger Canadian force attacking the town and lit the SS headquarters on fire.

After World War II he settled into civilian life as a pipe fitter, but he volunteered for service in the Korean War in 1950. In November of 1951, he was tasked to recapture Hill 355, which had been taken from American troops by the Chinese army. Taking a group of about 20 other snipers and scouts, Major and his men infiltrated the Chinese camps and commenced firing, scattering the Chinese army. For three days they held the hill against counterattacks, sometimes calling down supporting artillery fire so close to their position that their commanding officer could hear the bombs exploding through the walkie-talkie. Major was awarded a bar to his Distinguished Conduct Medal for this action.

After his military career, Major returned many times to the town of Zwolle, establishing close ties with the townsfolk and having a road named after him. He is buried at the Last Post Fund National Field of Honour in Pointe-Claire, Quebec.

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