BX December 11, 1915
Sig. E. Vansickle Is In Hospital – Former Boy Knight Reported to Have Been Wounded at the Front
Word has been received in the city of the wounding of Signaller Ernest Vansickle, who is now confined to No. 13 General hospital. It will be remembered that he and his father, WH. Vansickle, left with the 19th Battalion, with Major Newman. The father is now with the Brantford bomb-throwers. Signaller Ernest was a company leader of the Boy Knights and has always, from a youngster, tried to do his share along military lines. His mother resides at 59 Grey Street.
BX August 8, 1916
Father and Son Wounded
William Henry Vansickle and his son, Ernest, both of whom are in hospital from wounds, the former at Gosport, the latter at Ramsgate, where he may have to lose an arm by amputation.
BX September 29, 1917
Returned Invalided Soldiers
The following Brantford men are expected to leave Halifax on Saturday, Sept. 29 by the intercolonial and Grand Trunk. They may reach Toronto Sunday Morning, Sept. 30. Cpl. E. Van Sickle, Privates H. Reeve, W. O’Heron, E. Hall, H. Baird, C. Wells.
BX October 3, 1917
Veterans Were Not Met Here – No Word of Their Coming had Preceded Them – Were Unwelcomed
As a result of a laxness somewhere no word was received here yesterday as to the time of arrival of the expected party of returned veterans, so they arrived home unwelcomed. A deputation of returned soldiers, members of the Soldiers’ Aid Commission and citizens, met the 7.33 train from Toronto but the men were all home by that time. Seven men in all arrived, four of them at 6.52 and the other three during the afternoon.
The party was not long held in Toronto as they just reached there at noon yesterday. The London bunch went through Brantford about the middle of the afternoon and a few relatives of the men expected were on hand but no Brantford men came with the party and the expectation was that they would arrive as usual at 7.33.
The men who returned yesterday are as far as is known the following: Corp. E. Vansickle, Private Harry Baird, H. Reeve, W. O’Heron, and E. Hall. In this party Lance Corp. Vansickle had probably suffered the most. He had been wounded 23 times at Vimy Ridge, as the result of a bursting shell. Pte. Harry Baird, who before enlisting was a brakeman on the G.T.R., has been at the front for three years. He is also badly off, having suffered seven wounds and is still suffering from shock.
Ald. M.M. MacBride returned from Toronto on the same train as the veterans last evening and he was thanked for assisting one home with his baggage. One of the veterans who came in last evening stated that he saw more lights in Brantford than he has seen in three years. He also remarked on the pleasure the men took in cleaning up huge platters of white bread when they reached Halifax. White bread and butter were great luxuries overseas and were enjoyed to the full on the return.
A veteran states that the Bantam Battalion has been found unfit for active service, conditions owing to their size, as a result of which, he states about half of them are returning to Canada, the balance having been absorbed by the Engineers.