Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 38. Chapters: Charles Davidson Dunbar, Roman Jarymowycz, Andrew Godefroy, Cyrus Wesley Peck, James Thorburn, Cyril Biddulph, Gordon Flowerdew, Kenneth Angus Munn, Charles Smith Rutherford, Gerald Birks, Frederick Albert Tilston, Albert Desbrisay Carter, Jeff Nicklin, William Mahlon Davis, Arthur Godfrey Peuchen, Adam Butler, Samuel Lewis Honey, Jean Brillant, Sydney Valpy Radley-Walters, Francis Alexander Caron Scrimger, Charles Wesley Weldon McLean, John Norman Stuart Buchan, 2nd Baron Tweedsmuir, James Gayfer, Yves Duhaime, Henry Eric Dolan, John MacMillan Stevenson Patton, Albiny Paquette, David Vivian Currie, Coulson Norman Mitchell, Edward James Gibson Holland, Hampden Zane Churchill Cockburn, Bellenden Seymour Hutcheson, Graham Thomson Lyall, Benjamin Handley Geary, George Tuxford, Frederick William Campbell, Hugh McKenzie, Harcus Strachan, Robert Hill Hanna, Robert Grierson Combe, James Edward Tait, John K. Lawson, John MacGregor, Horace Percy Lale, George Burdon McKean, Okill Massey Learmonth, George Arthur Welsh, George Fraser Kerr, W. J. Aitchison, Michael Mitchell, Prince Antonio Gastao of Orleans-Braganza, Paul Triquet, James Lyons Biggar, Christopher O'Kelly, William Hew Clark-Kennedy, John Arbuthnott, 14th Viscount of Arbuthnott, John Keefer Mahony, Richard Clive Cooper, William Osborne Smith, Roderick Ogle Bell-Irving. Excerpt: Charles Davidson Dunbar, DCM, (17 July 1870 - 25 January 1939) was an orphan who grew up to become the first pipe major in Britain and the Empire to be commissioned as a pipe officer. He emigrated from Scotland to Canada, where he came to be called "Canada's greatest military piper." According to the official record of his birth, he was born 17 July 1870, to an unmarried needlewoman: Alexandrina Leith Miller, who lived at 107 Bridge Street in the Caithness village of Halkirk, in northern Sco...