Hello everyone,
I’m starting a year-long research project focused on George Robert “Bob” Armstrong, a Canadian WWII veteran from Bentley, Alberta, and I wanted to introduce the project here as I work through some remaining gaps — particularly his time as a POW.
Bob served with the 14th Canadian Army Tank Regiment (Calgary Tanks) and landed at Dieppe on 19 August 1942. He was a crewman in a Churchill Mk III, was captured during the raid, and spent the remainder of the war as a prisoner of war. Post-war newspaper articles and family history indicate that he was held in Stalag VII-B and later at Colditz Castle, though I am still trying to accurately reconstruct the timeline of his captivity and movements between camps.
Over the next year, I’m working toward a Remembrance Day 2026 museum exhibit at my local museum, which will include:
A biographical display on Bob Armstrong
Original newspaper coverage and oral history material
A 3D-printed diorama of the Dieppe landing, specifically depicting the Churchill Mk III Cougar and the beach conditions faced by Calgary Tanks
The diorama is well underway in the planning stage, but the area where I’m still very much in research mode is Bob’s POW experience:
Confirmation of camps and dates
Transport routes after Dieppe
Any documentation tying Calgary Tanks POWs to Colditz
Escape attempts or resistance activity (newspaper articles suggest this, but I want to verify it properly)
I have requested Bob’s full service file through Library and Archives Canada, but as many of you know, that process takes time. In the meantime, I’m hoping members here might be able to point me toward:
Relevant war diaries or POW nominal rolls
Calgary Tanks POW research already done
Colditz/Stalag VII-B transfer records
Or simply advice on how best to plot a POW’s movement when records are fragmented
I’ll be sharing progress updates as the project develops, and I’m very happy to credit any assistance in the final exhibit. This is both a research project and a labour of remembrance, and I want to do Bob’s story justice.
Thanks very much for reading — and for any guidance you’re able to offer.
Kristen
Canada
Thread also shared on ww2talk
