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Liberation Tours Liberation Tours is your Canadian tour operator for guided Tours to the Battlefields of Europe.

LT takes travelers to Europe from across the country, accompanied by a Canadian historian. Destinations include France, Belgium, Holland, Italy, England, Scotland, Germany and more. In addition, we offer private guided tours for small groups, based on your own personalized itinerary. LT also organizes custom tours for cadet corps/sqn, living history groups, and more. We are honoured to have travel

ed with many veterans, from WWII to Peacekeeping to Afghanistan, and also to have been the tour company of choice for hundreds of travelers who seek to follow in the footsteps of their family members who served in the two world wars. Many long-term friendships have been formed between our travelers, a source of great pride for our company. If you are considering a trip to the battlefields of Europe, contact us for the journey of a lifetime.
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Liberation Tours is a proud member of the CF Appreciation Program and the Guild of Battlefield Guides, and we a thrilled to support:

Wounded Warriors Canada ● The Juno Beach Centre ● The Last Post Association ● SVNF ● Faces to Graves ● The Western Front Association ● The Somme Association ● Wartime Friends ● Westlake Brothers Souvenir ● Friends of Lochnagar

On May 2 Liberation Tours will be present by invitation for the official opening of the exhibition The Faces of Groesbee...
21/03/2025

On May 2 Liberation Tours will be present by invitation for the official opening of the exhibition The Faces of Groesbeek, in which the photo of hundreds of soldiers will be displayed at their grave in Groesbeek Canadian War Cemetery. We are a proud principal sponsor of this wonderful event, and look forward to visiting with our good friends, the amazing volunteers of Faces to Graves - Groesbeek Canadian War Cemetery.

Our fall edition of our highly popular Northwest Europe Battlefield & Remembrance Tour is filling up quick, just 6 rooms...
21/03/2025

Our fall edition of our highly popular Northwest Europe Battlefield & Remembrance Tour is filling up quick, just 6 rooms left. We will walk Juno Beach, stand at the foot of the Vimy Memorial, and stroll the Dutch countryside. Everyone who travels to the battlefields of Europe will tell you - it is one of the best things you will ever do. https://www.liberationtours.ca/nwf25.html 🍁 Come with us, and Step into History.

10/03/2025

The grave of Private Arthur Vanance, a Canadian soldier who went missing in the Netherlands during the Second World War, has been identified at Holten Canadian War Cemetery after decades of uncertainty.

What are you doing this fall? We're going to Italy - care to join us? Two weeks, from the southern tip of Sicily all the...
05/03/2025

What are you doing this fall? We're going to Italy - care to join us? Two weeks, from the southern tip of Sicily all the way to Venice. History, culture and great food all in one trip - and some amazing experiences along the way. It all begins in Syracuse on October 6. Join us, and Step Into History. https://www.liberationtours.ca/itf25.html

A great opportunity to work for the Juno Beach Centre this summer!
27/02/2025

A great opportunity to work for the Juno Beach Centre this summer!

To members of the Fort Garry Horse ... we still have space on our 8-day tour for the 80th Anniversary of the Liberation ...
21/02/2025

To members of the Fort Garry Horse ... we still have space on our 8-day tour for the 80th Anniversary of the Liberation of Holland ... we have five (5) rooms left. Deadline to book is Monday Feb.24. We would be delighted if you could join us! Facta non verba. 🍁 https://www.liberationtours.ca/holland80-8.html

Happy Birthday to our flag. Why not join us on a tour, and see it flying proudly in France, Belgium and Holland. We have...
15/02/2025

Happy Birthday to our flag. Why not join us on a tour, and see it flying proudly in France, Belgium and Holland. We have ONE ROOM left for our 17-day Holland Anniversary Tour, beginning April 21 in Paris. DEADLINE TO BOOK: this Sunday evening Feb.16 @ 6pm. www.liberationtours.ca/holland80. Call or WhatsApp us at (833) 252-0001.

Mat Johnson of Marathon of History will be leading our 8-Day Holland Liberation 80th Anniversary Tour. One week left to ...
11/02/2025

Mat Johnson of Marathon of History will be leading our 8-Day Holland Liberation 80th Anniversary Tour. One week left to join. Come with us! https://www.liberationtours.ca/holland80-8.html

How do you find your Liberation Tours guide on a crowded Netherlands street? Look for the bright yellow hat and a jacket that says, unsurprisingly, Liberation Tours ✈️🚌🚊

What's this? Another great addition to our team? Why yes ... it's 𝗠𝗮𝘁 𝗝𝗼𝗵𝗻𝘀𝗼𝗻!Mat works professionally in the heritage s...
26/01/2025

What's this? Another great addition to our team? Why yes ... it's 𝗠𝗮𝘁 𝗝𝗼𝗵𝗻𝘀𝗼𝗻!

Mat works professionally in the heritage sector through his company Marathon of History, which began as a museum model-building business in 2010. Since that time, Marathon of History has evolved to include: historical exhibit design and fabrication; spatial consultation for museums, contractors and architects; museum public outreach programming; heritage preservation services for individuals and businesses; and a unique line of historical toys and models available in museum gift shops across Ontario including the Canadian Tank Museum in Oshawa, and also the Juno Beach Centre in Normandy, France. Mat is also an exhibit planner and promoter for Titanic Concepts Inc. which has items on loan to museums around the world and is North America’s largest private collection of infamous shipwreck and Titanic-related artifacts.

Though his work requires him to dig deep into many genres of history, Mat’s favourite topics include Canada in the First and Second World War, the American Civil War, and the Napoleonic era - including the War of 1812.

Mat is the founder and editor of the 2024 Ontario Museum Association award-winning publication Marathon of History Magazine. This full-colour magazine encourages submissions from people of all knowledge levels on almost any historical topic in the Southwestern Ontario area. The magazine focuses on encouraging people to celebrate and explore the incredible history that can be found in their own back yards.

Mat enjoys running, hiking, the Toronto Maple Leafs, cold beer and making pizza - not necessarily in that order. He lives in Durham, Ontario with his wife Lauren who owns a gardening services business. To learn more about Mat and see all that Marathon of History offers, visit www.coolhistory.ca .

Mat leads our Holland Liberation 80th Anniversary 8-Day program, and for just a few more weeks you can book your trip and join Mat for an amazing experience in Holland. Get the details at https://www.liberationtours.ca/holland80-8.html . 🍁

On this day in January 1943 a "Canadian" Princess was born. ____________________________________________________  by Jam...
19/01/2025

On this day in January 1943 a "Canadian" Princess was born.
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by James Powell, the author of the blog Today in Ottawa's History.

If there ever was a time for an emotional pick-me-up, you couldn’t have found a better moment than mid-January 1943. It was brutally cold, and Canada was in its fourth year of war with the Axis Powers with no end in sight. Hundreds of thousands of Canada’s young men and women had left their homes, families and jobs to serve in the armed forces, or in the merchant marine bringing much needed food and other supplies to embattled Britain. Coupon rationing for gasoline and tires had been introduced the previous spring and had been extended through 1942 to cover many food staples, including sugar, tea, coffee and butter. And it was only to get worse. On 19 January 1943, Ottawa’s Evening Citizen reported that meat rationing was about to be introduced. “Bacon, ham and even pork sausage [was] unable to be had for love or money in many places.” The butter ration was also about to be reduced by a third to 5 1/3 ounces per week per person. But there was one piece of news that bleak mid-winter that raised spirits and boosted the morale of a war-weary population. At 7pm on that snowy January day, a princess was born at Ottawa’s Civic Hospital, the third daughter of Princess Juliana of the Netherlands.

Three years earlier in May 1940, the Dutch Royal Family had fled to Britain from the Netherlands, one step ahead of the invading German army. While Queen Wilhelmina and the Dutch Government established a government-in-exile in London, her daughter, Crown Princess Juliana, and her two young daughters, Princess Beatrix, aged 2 ½ years and Princess Irene, 9 months, were evacuated to Canada. Her German-born husband, Prince Bernhard, now a Dutch subject, was stationed in London becoming an active RAF spitfire pilot.

Princess Juliana and her two daughters arrived in Halifax on 11 June 1940 on a Dutch cruiser. She had been offered asylum by Canada’s new governor general, the Earl of Athlone. His wife, Princess Alice, was an aunt of Princess Juliana. After staying temporarily at Rideau Hall, the Governor General’s residence, the young family settled in Ottawa at 120 Landsdowne Road in Rockcliffe Park. They dubbed their home “Nooit Gedacht,” meaning “Never Imagined.” Princess Juliana later leased Stornaway at 541 Acacia Drive, now the official residence of the Leader of the Opposition.

In September 1942, Prince Bernard announced over Radio Orange that Princess Juliana was pregnant with their baby due sometime in late January the following year. In anticipation of the royal birth, the Canadian Government declared in December the hospital room in the Civic Hospital where the birth was to occur “extraterritorial” to ensure that the child would not be born a Canadian citizen and British subject; an important consideration should the child be a boy and hence heir to the Dutch throne.

Four rooms were set aside for Princess Juliana on the third floor of the Civic Hospital—one room for Princess Juliana, one room for the baby, another for her nurse, and a fourth for a security guard. Fittingly, the rooms overlooked Holland Avenue. The corridor outside of the rooms was also decorated with the Dutch flag.

Suffering from mumps and with the birth due anytime, Princess Juliana was admitted to hospital by her physician, Dr. Puddicombe, on Monday, 18 January 1943. Princess Margriet Francisca, the first and only North American-born princess, was born the following day. She was named after the marguerite, a daisy-like flower and symbol of Dutch resistance. Prince Bernhard who flew to Ottawa for the birth reported the glad tidings by telephone via Montreal and New York to Queen Wilhelmina in London. The news was then sent to reporters waiting at the Château Laurier Hotel, and broadcasted around the world.

At 7.45pm, the Civic Hospital released its first press statement saying that both mother and daughter were doing well, with the new princess weighing in at seven pounds, five ounces. The next day, the Peace Tower carillon on Parliament Hill played the Dutch National Anthem and other Dutch songs, while the Dutch tricolour flew overhead; the first time a foreign flag had flown from the Tower. In keeping with Dutch tradition, the baby’s birth was celebrated by eating beschuit met muisjes—a rusk topped with sugar and anise seed sprinkles. Typically coloured white and pink, the sprinkles were coloured orange in honour of the Dutch Royal House of Orange-Nassau. The rusks were wrapped in orange paper and tied with a red, white and blue ribbon. A journalist described one as “hard as a chunk of the city’s ice encrusted pavement” but “with rationing what it is” it tasted “pretty good.”

News of the princess’s birth, was a major morale boost for oppressed Dutch citizens living in occupied Netherlands. The underground Dutch newspaper De Oranjerkrant wrote: “Little Margriet, you will be our princess of peace. We long to have you in our midst…Come soon Margriet. We are awaiting you with open arms.”

Princess Margriet was christened in St Andrew’s Presbyterian Church on Wellington St on 29 June 1943 at 1:00pm. It was a bright, sunny afternoon. Among the dignitaries in attendance for the occasion were her father, Prince Bernhard, her grandmother, Queen Wilhelmina who was making her second trip to Ottawa, the Governor General and his wife, and Prime Minister Mackenzie King. The packed service was conducted in Dutch by Rev. Dr Winfield Burggraaff, a Dutch naval chaplain and a minister of the Reformed Church on Staten Island, NY. Also presiding were Rev. A. Ian Burnett, minister of St. Andrew’s and Rev. Robert Good, former moderator of St. Andrew’s. Godparents for the little princess included U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt, Queen Mary, the widow of King George V, the Governor General, and the entire Dutch merchant marine who were represented at the church by seven of its members. Marine Roell, who had accompanied Princess Juliana into exile in Canada, was also made a godmother, though she was identified only as a widow of a Dutch martyr who gave his life for his country in order to protect her family still in Holland from reprisals. The christening service was broadcasted by short-wave radio live to London via New York and was rebroadcasted to the occupied Netherlands. Prince Bernhard advised his countrymen not to celebrate too openly for fear of German retaliation. Following the ceremony, hundreds of Ottawa citizens welcomed the little princess with loud applause as the Royal Family emerged from the church.

The Dutch Royal Family stayed in Ottawa for the remainder of the war, returning to the Netherlands in early May 1945 after its liberation for the most part by Canadian troops. Before leaving, Princess Juliana gave an oak lectern to St Andrew’s Church carved with the royal coat of arms, marguerites, and the four evangelists. The birth of Princess Margriet helped cement a lasting bond between the peoples of Canada and the Netherlands. Princess Juliana is reported to have said “My baby will always be a link with Canada not only for my own family but for the Netherlands.” As way of thanks for her family’s treatment in Canada, Princess Juliana sent 100,000 tulips to Ottawa in the fall of 1945. It was the start of a beautiful friendship that has lasted to the present day. 🍁

Here is an amazing employment opportunity at the Netherlands embassy in Ottawa! 🌷https://www.facebook.com/share/19iJLNqH...
10/01/2025

Here is an amazing employment opportunity at the Netherlands embassy in Ottawa! 🌷
https://www.facebook.com/share/19iJLNqHX9/

🚨 VACANCY ALERT 🚨

We are looking for a positive, self-motivated jack-of-all-trades individual to join our team as an Executive Assistant to the Ambassador and Deputy Head of Mission. This dynamic role is perfect for a diligent person who a team player attitude who likes to keep many balls in the air and solve problems, creatively, independently and diplomatically.

Sounds like you? Check out the details at the link below to apply by January 25: https://www.netherlandsandyou.nl/web/canada/executive-assistant-in-ottawa.

We wish you Christmas peace. 🍁
25/12/2024

We wish you Christmas peace. 🍁

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