Monday, 19 August 1918 - Canada's Hundred Days - 12
Library and Archives Canada
5th Canadian Divisional Artillery
14th Brigade Canadian Divisional Artillery
61st Field Battery Canadian Divisional Artillery
Lt Virtue
60th Field Battery Canadian Divisional Artillery
Antigonish Cenotaph Project
Private Francis "Frank" Bouchie
Date of Birth: December 28, 1897* at East Havre Boucher, Antigonish County
Parents: Maurice (Morris) and Susan (Briand) Bouchie
Siblings: Half-sisters Marie Elizabeth, Margaret Louise, Catherine Jane (2nd); half-brothers John Henry & William; full brothers
Henry, Simon Joseph & David
Marital Status: Single
Occupation: Farmer
Enlistment: May 4, 1918 at Halifax, NS
Unit: 1st Depot Battalion, Nova Scotia Regiment
Service #: 3182200
Rank: Private
Previous Military Service: None
Next of Kin: Susan Bouchie, East Havre Boucher, Antigonish County (mother)
Date of Death: August 19, 1918 at Liverpool, England
Final Resting Place: Kirkdale Cemetery, Liverpool, England
*The 1911 Canadian census, Frank’s military service file and the signature on his attestation papers spell his surname as “Bouchie.”
The 1901 census recorded the family name as “Bouché.” Common usage today is “Boucher.” Date of birth obtained from 1901 census.
Frank’s attestation papers list his birthday as December 15, 1894.
Francis “Frank” Bouchie was born at East Havre Boucher, the son of Maurice and Susan (Briand) Bouchie. Susan was Maurice’s second
wife. His first spouse, Sophie Fougere, passed away sometime after 1885 and he remarried around 1887. Susan was the daughter of Joseph
Briand and Osite “Elizabeth” Coste (Decoste). Joseph, a fisherman by occupation, was born at Cape Jack, the son of Louis-Francois
Briand, a fisherman from Isle De Miquelon, a French territory.
Frank’s father, Maurice, was the son of Simon and Olivie (Pettipas) Bouchie, both of whom were East Havre Boucher natives. His
grandfather, Paul Bouchie, was born at Arichat, the son of Honore “dit Villedieu” Bouchie, an Acadian refugee from the Grand Pré area
of Nova Scotia. The Bouchie family resided on a family farm near Bennett Road, then known as Paint Road. Neighbours were the family of
Patrick Chisholm, the Anderson family, and Maurice’s elderly uncle, Fidel (Fedel) Bouchie, and his family. Fidel passed away on
November 24, 1904, at 85 years of age.
On November 5, 1917, Frank Bouchie completed his medical examination as required under the terms of the Military Service Act, which
the Canadian Parliament had passed earlier in the year. At the time, Frank weighed 125 pounds and was feet two inches in height, with
blue eyes and black hair. As three older brothers resided on the family farm, it was inevitable that Frank would be “called up” for
military duty.
On May 4, 1918, Frank attested with 1st Depot Battalion, Nova Scotia Regiment, the training unit for Nova Scotian conscripts, and was
assigned to Company “D.” He spent three months completing basic training at Camp Aldershot and by late July was ready to depart for
England, where he would join the 17th Reserve Battalion, the unit that provided reinforcements for the 25th and 85th Battalions, Nova
Scotia’s two front-line units.
On August 2, 1918, Frank departed Halifax aboard the transport Ixion. The crowded conditions on board provided ideal conditions for
the spread of contagious disease, and a significant number of the soldiers contracted influenza and pneumonia during the vessel’s
two-week passage. When the ship docked at Liverpool, England, on August 15, 1918, a total of 22 soldiers were admitted to hospitals
for medical treatment.
While officially taken on strength by the 17th Battalion upon arriving overseas, Frank never reported for duty. He was among the
soldiers who fell sick during the voyage and was immediately transported to the Toxteth Park Auxiliary Hospital, Liverpool, for
treatment of influenza and pneumonia.
At the time of his admission, notes in Frank’s service file indicate that he had a “high temperature,” with “moderately extensive
pneumonic involvement of [the] lungs.” While staff administered several medications and therapies over subsequent days, Frank’s
condition failed to improve. He died of pneumonia at 1:20 a.m. August 19, 1918.
Private Frank Bouchie was laid to rest in Kirkdale Cemetery, Liverpool, England. He was not the only Ixion passenger who passed away
only days after arriving overseas. Of the 22 soldiers admitted to hospital, four other young Nova Scotian conscripts died before
month’s end—Private Charles Abner Barss, New Harbour, Guysborough County; Private Warren L. Godfried, Little Harbour, Shelburne
County; Private Pearley Parker Goucher, Albany Cross, Annapolis County; and Private Lawrence A. Shannon, Lennox Ferry, Richmond
County.
© IWM BOX 864-186-11ME-57C-1918 Plotting reference 57C E 2 8 Key feature Inchy-en-Artois and Sains-les-Marquion
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