![]() ![]() (b) we use ACCEPTCOOKIES to show you have accepted the use of cookiesĥ.1Google Analytics provides its own cookies which we have no control over. This reduces the likelihood of fraud and improves the security of the website. ![]() (a) we use PHPSESSID to manage your session when you are logged into the website. The identifier is then sent back to the server each time the browser requests a page from the server.ģ.2Ĝookies may be either "persistent" cookies or "session" cookies: a persistent cookie will be stored by a web browser and will remain valid until its set expiry date, unless deleted by the user before the expiry date a session cookie, on the other hand, will expire at the end of the user session, when the web browser is closed.ģ.3Ĝookies do not typically contain any information that personally identifies a user, but personal information that we store about you may be linked to the information stored in and obtained from cookies.ģ.4Ĝookies can be used by web servers to identify and track users as they navigate different pages on a website and identify users returning to a website.Ĥ.1 We use 1 session cookie and 1 persistent cookie on our website.Ĥ.2 The names of the cookies that we use on our website, and the purposes for which they are used, are set out below: 1.2ěy using our website and agreeing to this policy, you consent to our use of cookies in accordance with the terms of this policy.Ģ.1 This document was created using a template from SEQ Legal ().ģ.1Ě cookie is a file containing an identifier (a string of letters and numbers) that is sent by a web server to a web browser and is stored by the browser. Introductionġ.1 Our website uses cookies. See photos for Peter's Medal Index Card, his Newspaper clipping, his Army Register of Soldiers Effects, his Service Record x 6, his Silver War Badge Record, his Service Medal and Award Rolls, Old Monkland Cemetery, Peter's Pension Records x 2, his former Regiments the Royal Scots Fusiliers and the Kings Own Scottish Borderers Cap Badges and the Gordon Highlanders Cap Badge.Ĭookie Policy for website. Peter is also remembered on the St Patrick's (book) and St Mary's Church Rolls of Honour (see photos). See Directory for Peter's half-brother Private John Downie's page. Peter was discharged on the but died at the home of his mother a few weeks later. The ship was torpedoed on the but some 500 of the 600 wounded on board survived. Peter was serving in the East and was admitted to hospital in July 1918 with Malaria and shipped home from Le Havre to Southampton on the hospital ship Warilda. It was sent to India and served with the 2nd (Rawalpindi) Division from March 1917, and was subsequently on operations during the Third Anglo-Afghan War. The 1st Garrison Battalion was formed in 1916 of soldiers unfit for front line duties. They moved to Blairgowrie before going in January 1917 to India. They were formed in 1916 and were known as the 12th Battalion for a short time. However on the he enlisted in the Kings Own Scottish Borderers (26660) later transferring to the 1st Garrison Battalion Gordon Highlanders. He was awarded the Kyoto Prize Journalism Fellowship in the fall of 2008.Additional Information Peter joined the Royal Scots Fusiliers (13439) at the outbreak of war and although initially passed as fit he was discharged 90 days later on account of Tuberculosis. He was awarded the 2007 Michael Monty Award for Excellence in Broadcast Teaching by the Canadian Radio Television News Directors Foundation. In the late 1990s, Downie joined Concordia University's Department of Journalism as a professor and was appointed director of the department's graduate diploma program in 2004. In 1994, he conceived of and became the first host of Tapestry, a weekly CBC radio program featuring documentaries and interviews on spirituality. On CBC Radio he hosted Cross Country Checkup in the early 1980s and the CBC Ontario weekend morning programme Fresh Air for a season in the 1990s and has been a guest host on As It Happens and Morningside. On CBC Television, he was best known as the co-anchor of Midday from 1985 to 1989 and the host of Man Alive from 1989 to 1993. Peter Downie is a Canadian journalist, broadcaster and academic.įor 25 years, Downie worked for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. ![]()
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