Larry Robillard

I should have been searching for more information about Larry Robillard.

I got this comment on him.

I knew Larry Robillard in Montreal in the 60s. Very sorry to hear he died in 2008. Had tried to find him for some time. He still had a book I lent him! Larry had a son who was probably in his 20’s at that time. Do you know where to contact him? Do you know if Larry lived in Montreal until his death? I know he loved Montreal and especially the Windsor Hotel, owned I think by his friend Lorne Webster?

Nice that you keep the memories alive.

So I went to look for more information.

Source

http://www.westsideaction.com/noble-residents/

The modest house shown above on Elm Street is typical for the neighborhood. West Side homes have seen many stories played out. But this story is far from typical.

This is the home Joseph Guillaume Laurent “Larry” Robillard and his brothers grew up in.

On November 8, 1941, 70 years ago, Sgt. Robillard of the Royal Canadian Air Force was awarded the Distinguished Flying Medal. He downed two enemy aircraft while protecting a descending parachutist. Then just 20 years old, the resident of 15 Elm Street had already shot down a Messerschmitt 109 on 22 June.

During a patrol over Lille, France, on 2 July 1941, then a novice pilot with less than a month’s flying under his belt, he saw a descending parachutist and moved down to protect him. Nine Nazi fighters moved in to kill them both. In the following firefight, Larry Robillard shot down two German fighters and drove off the others (the parachutist lived).

Unfortunately, he was shot down in the process. Would he become the 404th RCAF casualty of the war?

Within a few minutes of his crashing in occupied France, peasants came rushing up with civilian clothes. They removed his uniform and hid it. Dressed as a peasant, he was employed by the Germans to head up the search for himself.

With the assistance of the Resistance, aided by his fluent French, he walked across France, snuck through the Spanish border, and travelled at nights across Fascist Spain, and snuck across the border into British Gibraltar on 12 August 1941. He had travelled through 1724 km of enemy territory. By October, he was back in the UK where he got his DFM medal. He wasn’t promoted, however, until March 1942.

The New York Times reported on June 6, 1942 that a civic reception was held on Parliament Hill in honour of Larry Robillard and Paul Émile Morin. Over 10,000 people showed up on the lawn of Parliament Hill. By November of  1942, Robillard had eight enemy planes to his credit.

In November 1943, Larry’s little brother RJ, aged 19, who had been serving in the Wildcat Squadron patrolling over Alaska, flew cross country and then over the Atlantic to join the RCAF in Europe.

On June 29th, 1944 (just three weeks after the D Day Normandy invasion) Larry Robillard was part of a group of RCAF fighters than engaged 34 enemy aircraft in Normandy and shot down 26 of them in one day. Robillard was credited with one kill.

He retired as a Lieutenant Commander in 1955.

He was born in Ottawa on 17 November 1920, residing with his parents and brothers at 15 Elm Street. He learned to fly at the Ottawa Flying Club. Robillard died at his home in Montreal, Canada on 8th March 2006.

I would have liked to add a comment on that post, but the comment section is closed.

To be continued?

 

5 thoughts on “Larry Robillard

    • I am preserving the past with stories shared by strangers, stories that are not in history books or History Channel…

      Lest We Forget

      • The person who knew him was asking about my uncle Pierre, Larry’s son, who lives in Montreal. He lived with my grandfather until his death.

      • This is what I sent this woman.

        Hi,

        I got these two comments.

        Wow, Larry was my paternal grandfather. I love this story and glad you do too!

        The person who knew him was asking about my uncle Pierre, Larry’s son, who lives in Montreal. He lived with my grandfather until his death.

        I told this person he or she could contact you.

        Pierre

  1. Pingback: Bonne-Fete a Toi, Casse-Cou. – Subterraneans

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