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Communications and Electronics Branch

Communications and Electronics Branch
C and E branch crest.png
The cap badge of the Communications and Electronics Branch.
Active 1968–present
Country Canada Canada
Type Combat support
Role Military communications
Size Personnel branch
Part of Canadian Forces
Motto(s) Latin: Velox, versutus, vigilans ("Swift, Skilled, Alert")
Website www.forces.gc.ca/en/caf-community-branches-comm-elec/index.page
Commanders
Colonel-in-chief The Princess Royal

The Communications and Electronics Branch (Branche des communications et de l'électronique) is a personnel branch of the Canadian Forces (CF). The army component of the branch is designated the Royal Canadian Corps of Signals (Corps des transmissions royal du Canada).

Major Wallace Bruce Matthews Carruthers (13 February 1863 – 21 October 1910) was the founder of the Canadian Signalling Corps, forerunner of the Royal Canadian Corps of Signals and the Communications and Electronics Branch. In the 1968 unification of the Canadian Forces, functional similar components of the Royal Canadian Navy, Canadian Army and Royal Canadian Air Force were combined into the new Communications and Electronics Branch.

During the Boer War, Carruthers noted the importance of tactical signaling in a successful campaign. Observing the employment of heliographs, semaphore flags and lamps, he realized there was a need for a unit to provide proper training in the use of these systems. Upon his return to Canada in 1902, he wrote a paper on signaling for the Royal Military College Club and championed an establishment of a signaling corp. In 1903, the formation of the Canadian Signal Corps was authorized by General Order 167. It was the first Signal Corp in the British Commonwealth and is the forerunner of the Royal Canadian Corp of Signals.

On 3 February 1903, now Major Carruthers was appointed as one of two Inspectors of Signaling. Setting up his headquarters in Kingston, Ontario, he was responsible to the Militia Council for the supervision of instruction and practice of signaling and the inspection of signalers and their equipment. In 1904, the first Provisional School of Signaling was established, with schools held in Kingston, Ottawa, Winnipeg, Montreal, Halifax, London, Quebec and Toronto over the next 2 years.

Training began in earnest in 1905 in summer militia instructional camps or in provisional schools set up in those eight cities. 546 Officers and men from the Rural Corps were trained in semaphore at the summer camps and 68 of those had qualified as signalers over the next few years.

A reorganization of the Corp in 1906 Carruthers made the Canadian Corp of Signal’s Commanding Officer. He received the title of Assistant Adjutant General for Signaling

In April 2013, the army component of the branch was officially designated with its historic title, the Royal Canadian Corps of Signals, but it remains a part of the C&E Branch.


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Wikipedia

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