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Triquet's Cross

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In Triquet's Cross John MacFarlane tells the story of Paul Triquet, a French-Canadian soldier who was awarded the Victoria Cross for bravery in the battle for Casa Berardi during the Second World War.
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  • 16 September 2025
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In Triquet's Cross John MacFarlane tells the story of Paul Triquet, a French-Canadian soldier who was awarded the Victoria Cross for bravery in the battle for Casa Berardi during the Second World War.

One of only thirteen members of the Canadian Armed Forces to be awarded the highest military honour during the war, Triquet was later pressured to resign from the force due to the overwhelming public and political expectations that the award entailed. The role of hero did not suit Triquet and weighed heavily on him and his family. MacFarlane shows how Triquet's story was changed by those who wished to make his hero status the cornerstone in a political debate between francophones and anglophones, particularly with regard to his representing the Commonwealth despite his French-Canadian heritage.

Military heroism has changed in the postwar period, and heroes are no longer expected to be perfect models. But in 1944 Paul Triquet - perhaps the most popular Canadian hero of the war - was asked to conform to political, social, and military agendas. His story reveals much about Canadian and Québécois society at the time and the history of French-Canadians in the Second World War.

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Price: $32.95
Pages: 264
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Imprint: McGill-Queen's University Press
Publication Date: 16 September 2025
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780228026396
Format: Paperback
BISACs: HISTORY / Military / Veterans
REVIEWS Icon
"While this well-researched and highly readable book covers Triquet's life story in detail, it concentrates on the subsequent publicity surrounding his act of heroism and its effect on him. It was a limelight that Triquet did not want and for which he was ill-suited. The resulting downfall of a true hero provides an object lesson that the spin doctors – and all of us – should take to heart" The Chronicle Herald

"An informative case study of the creation and function of public heroism." Carman Miller, McGill University
John MacFarlane is a historian with the Department of National Defence and author of Ernest Lapointe and Quebec's Influence on Canadian Foreign Policy.