'He was always remembered': Family attends WWI soldier's military burial in France

Nieces and cousins say service will help bring closure after a century

Image | Burial

Caption: Pte. John (Jack) Henry Thomas was among four soldiers killed in the Battle of Hill 70 who were laid to rest with military honours at the Commonwealth War Graves Commission’s Loos British Cemetery outside Loos-en-Gohelle, France. (Department of National Defence)

The family of Pte. John (Jack) Henry Thomas of New Brunswick helped lay him to rest Thursday, 101 years after the First World War soldier was killed in France.
Nieces and cousins of the 28-year-old Victoria County man killed on Aug. 19, 1917, during the Battle of Hill 70 said they attended the service to bring closure for the family a century later.
Niece Joyce Lappage said her father was only seven years old in Birch Ridge, when his brother was killed on the outskirts of Lens in northern France.
No one in the family ever forgot about Thomas, she said.

Image | Pte. John (Jack) Henry Thomas

Caption: Thomas was from Birch Ridge in Victoria County. (Bonnie Murphy)

"I'm thankful that I was able to come and make closure for our grandparents."
Thomas was a member of the 26th Canadian Infantry Battalion, Canadian Expeditionary Force, when he was killed a day shy of his one-year anniversary of enlisting in Saint John.
His remains were buried and lost until they were unearthed by a construction crew in 2016 in Lens.
Thomas was identified by the casualty identification program's Casualty Identification Review Board last October through historical, genealogical, anthropological, archeological and DNA analysis.

'Always knew about him'

Image | collar badge found with Pte. John Thomas

Caption: A collar badge from the 26th Canadian Infantry Battalion (New Brunswick), found with the Thomas's remains. (Directorate of History and Heritage)

Lappage said a picture of the Vimy Ridge monument and Thomas hung in the dining room of her family's home.
"We always knew about him," she said, adding she hung a picture of him in her own home when she moved to Ontario.
While doing research for a family tree, Lappage said, she was elated to receive Thomas's war records.
"He was always remembered by all family members. They all had pictures of him."
Lappage said she and other relatives at the service, some she met for the first time on the trip to France, felt blessed to be there.

Image | 26th Canadian Infantry Battalion (New Brunswick), Saint John, June 13, 1915

Caption: The 26th Canadian Infantry Battalion (New Brunswick) embarked for England from Saint John on the Caledonia on June 13, 1915. (Library and Archives Canada (MIKAN n. 3259630))

"it does bring tears to your eyes and we haven't even started the ceremony yet, so I'm sure it's going to be heartwarming."
Veterans Affairs Canada assisted in having family present for Thomas's burial by his regiment at Commonwealth War Graves Commission's Loos British cemetery near Vimy, France.
Thomas was buried with three other soldiers whose remains were found at the same construction site and identified as Pte. William Del Donegan, 20, Pte. Henry Edmonds Priddle, 33, and Sgt. Archibald Wilson, 25. All three soldiers enlisted in Winnipeg.
Thomas's name is engraved on the Vimy Memorial, which commemorates the more than 11,000 Canadian soldiers killed in France during the First World War whose bodies were never recovered.