BC May 9, 1918
Says Foe can Gain Objective if he is Willing to Pay Price – But it Will Be Higher Than Importance of Results Warrant – Lieutenant Colonel Genet Home – Spirit in England and France is Splendid, Says Local Officer
Lieutenant Colonel Harry Augustus Genet and Mrs. Genet arrived in the city last evening on a few days visit and are staying at the Kirby House. It was in the fall of 1915 that the Colonel left Brantford in command of the 58th Battalion and when he departed from the Western front he had been longer on duty there than any other Colonel. At his own request there was no special demonstration and when the 7.40 train pulled in from Toronto he and his wife were warmly greeted by Colonel and Mrs. Howard and a few other intimate friends. He is looking exceedingly well after his arduous and notable experience.
To a Courier representative this morning Lieutenant Colonel Genet gave an interview characteristic of the optimism of the colonel himself. He is the same genial personality whom Brantfordites knew in years past, and was busy today renewing acquaintances after his absence of almost three years from the city.
Can get it at a Price
“The situation on the Western front today,” declares Lieutenant Colonel Genet, “is practically the same as a real estate deal in Brant County. The Germans can attain their objectives if they are willing to pay the price, but that price will be one prohibitive of successful effort on their part. It does not look at present, as if they are willing to pay it, but in any event there is no cause for alarm. England is calm and confident of the outcome. Her people are taking the war much more seriously than Canadians, but there is no fear in their heart, no real discontent in their occasional grumblings.”
58th in Fighting
The 58th Battalion, commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Harry Genet, is one of the only two battalions recruited in 1915, which went to the front as a unit. The other was the 75th Battalion, which also contained a large number of Brantford men. The 58th went overseas in the autumn of 1915 and crossed to France early the following year. The unit was stationed first in the Ypres salient, and there went through the fighting at Sanctuary Wood and Observatory Ridge. It was in the latter “show” that Major Panayoty Percy Ballachey lost his life and Lieutenant Colonel Genet this morning had a word of high praise and deep regret for his fallen comrade, with whom he had been associated in the 38th Dufferin Rifles for twenty-five years. It was at Observatory Ridge also that Lieutenant Colonel Harry Augustus Genet won his Distinguished Service Order.
The 58th Battalion was moved to the Somme salient in time to share in the fighting there in the early autumn of 1916, and later went to Vimy bearing a part in the capture of that ridge in April 1917. Later, the battalion was transferred to Lens and when all was in readiness for an attack which promised to place the great coal centre in Canadian hands a sudden change in the plans of the higher command resulted in the moving of the 58th and other troops to Passchendaele to aid in the British drive there. It was shortly after this that Lieutenant Colonel Genet left the front, but he believes that the 58th Battalion is back a Lens once more at present.
“To the best of his knowledge, only two of the Brantford men who went overseas with the battalion are still at the front,” stated the colonel. Of the Officers Major Panayoty Percy Ballachey has made the supreme sacrifice, while Lieutenant Colonel Genet, Major Frank Elsworth Hicks, Captain John Richard Cornelius, Captain Charles Edward Jeakins, Lieutenant Joseph Algernon Pearce and Lieutenant William John Wallace all have been invalided home.
Shortly before his departure from France on January 13th last, Lieutenant Colonel Genet saw a detachment of American troops.
“There is an impression abroad” he declared “that the Americans come over with a cocksure air boasting that they intend to finish the war for us, but this is far from the case. They admit that they have a lot to learn, and they are learning it rapidly. Their spirit is one of determination “we won’t come back till it’s over, over there.”
Lieutenant Colonel Harry Augustus Genet’s family has a patriotic record which can scarcely be surpassed. The colonel himself holds the D.S.O., while both his sons Lieutenant John Ernest Genet and Harry Genet have won the Military Cross. Mrs. Genet accompanied her husband to England, and has been engaged in war work there. On two occasions she was under fire during air raids on London, a bomb dropping within two hundred yards of her home in one instance.
BX March 19, 1946
Death Calls Col. H.A. Genet
Lieutenant Colonel Harry Augustus Genet, D.S.O., V.D., for many years a resident of this City and widely known throughout Canada, died Sunday at his residence, Merstham, Surrey, England, in his 83rd year.
Colonel Genet, who had a distinguished career in the First Great War, raised and commanded the 58th Battalion, which went to France as a unit and fought throughout the Somme. He was decorated with the D.S.O. by King George V. November 1, 1917. He was mentioned in dispatches by Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig. After a leave spent here, he returned to the reserve army in England and later was recalled to Canada to assume the duties of A.A.G. Military District 3, Kingston, Ont. He took up residence in England some years ago.
Surviving are two sons, Brigadier General John E. (Jack) Genet, Kingston, former resident of this City, who had a distinguished career in the war just ended as commander of Signals in the Canadian Active Army, and Harry T. Genet, Beeston, England.