Malcolm Mercer
Major-General Malcolm Smith Mercer (17 September 1859 – 3 June 1916) was a Canadian general, barrister and art patron who practiced law in
Toronto and led the Canadian Contingent, then later the
3rd Canadian Division, during the first two years of the
First World War before he was killed in action at
Mount Sorrel in
Belgium. Mercer was an experienced
Canadian Militia commander and had demonstrated a great flair with training and organising the raw Canadian recruits during the opening months of the war. He also demonstrated courage under fire, visiting the front lines on numerous occasions at the height of battle and personally directing his forces in the face of
poison gas attacks and heavy shellfire.
Mercer remains the most senior Canadian officer ever to die in combat and was unfortunate to be killed at the opening engagement of the largest battle of his career, when he was trapped by shellfire during a front line reconnaissance and overrun during the subsequent German attack. The division Mercer created and trained remained one of the best units of the
Canadian Expeditionary Force under his successor
Louis Lipsett and Mercer was remembered by the men under his command, many of whom attended his funeral in the aftermath of the
Battle of Mount Sorrel.
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