Toronto man searching for fallen Manitoba soldier's family
Jillian Taylor | CBC News | Posted: November 21, 2017 11:00 AM | Last Updated: November 21, 2017
Phill Di Cecco is trying to return a WW II helmet belonging to soldier J. E. Gagnon
Phill Di Cecco keeps a Manitoba soldier's helmet on display in his Toronto bedroom.
The 22-year-old inherited the artifact from his grandparents, who found it in the home they bought in the 1960s.
"Someone has written Templeton on the inside of it," he said. "On the actual chinstrap, someone had written the initials J. E. Gagnon."
Di Cecco said he started researching a few years ago and found a Joseph Edward Gagnon in military records.
On Remembrance Day he posted a picture of the helmet and the records on social media hoping to learn more about the solider.
"I really just want to be able to give it back to someone in the family," he said. "As much as a cool artifact as it is, and as much as I appreciate it, it's just something I feel could have a pretty significant emotional weight to a family."
He said a friend posted a link to Gagnon's obituary, a notice that the 23-year-old had been killed in action in Italy.
"It has a picture of him, which was mind-blowing to see. Just knowing this guy actually wore the [helmet]," he said. "But it also mentioned he was from East Kildonan in Manitoba."
That lead Di Cecco to post in the Facebook group: Elmwood / East Kildonan - Preserving our Past, Planning our Future.
"Suddenly I get people messaging me saying they're checking ancestry.com, they've been checking all kinds of archives, historical sources," he said. "I've had people really piecing together not only this guys life but the lives of his actual family."
Di Cecco found Gagnon's service file, which contained his birth date, April 25, 1920, and his address, 535 Melbourne Avenue. It also said he was born in Lac Du Bonnet, Man.. He's now connecting with people from there, who are sending him leads to Pine Falls, Man.
"I think that's kind of amazing just how something as simple as writing your name on the inside of a [helmet] allows people to be able to learn so much about your life history," he said "Especially when you've died for you country 70 years ago."
He said he feels a connection to Gagnon because he was only a year old than Di Cecco is now when he died.
"Seeing that obituary picture was really incredible," he said. "[It] felt like he was asking me to return it when I saw his face."
Di Cecco is hoping that anyone with a lead on finding Gagnon's living relatives will contact him on Facebook.
He said if he can't locate anyone he has a back-up plan on how to honour the fallen soldier.
"I have spoken with someone who said they would be able to place it on his grave in Italy, which is also amazing."