La petite province de l'Î.-P.-É. a elle aussi participé au débarquement en Normandie

Captain (Ret.) Greg Gallant, curator of the Prince Edward Island Museum in the Queen Charlotte Armouries, and Joyce Phillips, volunteer researcher with the museum, discuss its exhibit of the North Nova Scotia Highlanders, in Charlottetown, Saturday, June 1, 2024. Gallant and Phillips were instrumental in getting posters honouring P.E.I. soldiers killed on D-Day put into Charlottetown bus shelters. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Brian McInnis

CHARLOTTETOWN - A Prince Edward Island man is in France this week to trace the steps of a company of Island soldiers who took part in the D-Day invasion 80 years ago.

Greg Gallant, curator of the P.E.I. Regiment Museum in Charlottetown, said it’s little known that about 250 Islanders served in a company of the North Nova Scotia Highlanders. The regiment, known as the North Novies, was at the head of the Canadian advance from Juno Beach on the first day of the Allied invasion of Normandy.

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