of the
British Army. Adam devised the CANLOAN scheme together with Major-General
Harry Letson of the
Canadian Army. In 1943, the
Canadian Army had a surplus of
junior officers and did not have enough active regiments to employ them in; given that the army was only active in the
Italian Front, and that the Home Defence divisions in Canada were disbanded. Conversely, the
British Army faced a shortage of junior officers, with its forces deployed in a number of fronts; and a need to supplement its regiments in preparation for the
Normandy landings. In an effort to rectify these issues, a scheme was devised to redeploy Canadian junior officers not in combat into active service, by "loaning" Canadian Army officers to various British Army units. The plan was first devised during a meeting between
Major-General Harry Letson of the Canadian Army, and General
Ronald Forbes Adam of the British Army in London on 9 October 1943. Canadian Military Headquarters and the British
War Office later approved of the program on 4 February 1944. Preparations were made for the program in early 1944, although the plan was not formally enacted by the
government of Canada until 29 April 1944 by
Order in Council; several weeks after the first cohort of CANLOAN officers had already arrived in the United Kingdom. The Canada Loan program operated under the code word
CANLOAN.
Service After recruitment for the CANLOAN program took place the selected volunteers were sent to
Sussex Military Camp in early 1944, to complete necessary preparations for overseas deployment. While stationed at Sussex Military Camp, officers of CANLOAN were placed under the command of
Brigadier-General Milton Fowler Gregg of the Canadian Army. Originally, the CANLOAN plan called for 1,500 Canadian officers to volunteer with regiments in the British Army. A manpower crisis within the Canadian Army in 1944 forced them to cap the program at 625 members shortly after the first CANLOAN cohort landed in the United Kingdom. The first batch of CANLOAN officers arrived in
Liverpool on 6 April 1944, ferried from Canada by . Another 200 officers arrived in the United Kingdom on 7 April 1944, with the remainder arriving shortly afterwards. The officers were immediately posted to various British battalions that were under-strength. While the program was active, British divisions took in 40 CANLOAN officers on average. Canadian officers loaned to British Army regiments were treated as a part of the regiment for all purposes except for pay, which remained the responsibility of the Canadian Army. Additionally while on loan to the British Army, CANLOAN officers wore a specialized shoulder badge and flashes with the words
Canada on it, and
CDN appeared before their serial number. CANLOAN officers also had separate administrative arrangements from the rest of the units they were loaned to. Barring administrative and payment differences, CANLOAN officers had largely integrated into their units without issue. The ease of integrating CANLOAN officers into their respective British units was largely credited to the uniform fashion of training of military colleges and Officer Cadet Training Units in Canada and the United Kingdom. The majority of the officers in the program were loaned to British regiments that fought in the
North-West Europe campaign of 1944–45; with 100 officers serving with British
airborne forces during the Normandy landings. Nearly half the officers assigned to the
Royal Army Ordnance Corps were assigned to posts in the
Mediterranean and Middle East theatre; with several other officers stationed with units in Italy. CANLOAN officers were also active in the
Southeast Asian theatre, with 22 Canadian officers sent to the
South East Asia Command in the summer of 1944; with the intended purpose to gain knowledge of tropical operations for the Canadian Army in anticipation for their participation in the Asian theatre once the
war in Europe ended. Officers sent to Southeast Asia were posted with
XV Corps of the
British Indian Army. There were 155 CANLOAN officers were promoted while serving with a British unit; with nearly half of the ordnance CANLOAN officers receiving promotions while serving with the British Army. Several CANLOAN officers were promoted as company commanders, and in one instance, was promoted as the commanding officer of their battalion. ==Members==