Hanna, Robert Hill, VC
Grave marker

Robert Hill Hanna, VC

Born: August 6, 1886, Kilkeel, County Down, Northern Ireland

Died: June 15, 1967, Mount Lehman, British Columbia

Buried at: Pacific Heritage Cemetery, Burnaby BC

Burial plot: Masonic Cemetery, plot 49, section c grave 2

Accolades: Victoria Cross

Also known as Company Sergeant-Major (CSM) Hanna, VC Lieut. Robert Hanna, VC

Robert Hill Hanna moved to Canada in 1905. During WWI he joined the Canadian Expeditionary Force. By the summer of 1917 was a Company Sergeant-Major (CSM) serving with the 29th Infantry Battalion.

On 21 August 1917 CSM Hanna’s company was attempting to overpower a German strongpoint on Hill 70, near Lens in France. In the course of three assaults on the enemy position, the company had suffered several casualties, including the loss of all of its officers. While his company continued to take casualties from the heavy machine gun fire coming from the strongpoint, Hanna calmly collected a party of men and led them in a fourth attack, rushing through the dense barbed wire protecting the position. When he arrived inside the strongpoint, CSM Hanna bayoneted three of the enemy and clubbed a fourth with his rifle, enabling the position and its machine gun to be captured.

For the bravery and leadership he demonstrated in this action, Hanna received the Victoria Cross. He died in Mount Lehman, British Columbia on 15 June 1967.

Victoria Cross Citation:

“For most conspicuous bravery in attack, when his company met with most severe enemy resistance and all the company officers became casualties. A strong point, heavily protected by wire and held by a machine gun, had beaten off three assaults of the company with heavy casualties. This Warrant Officer under heavy machine gun and rifle fire, coolly collected a party of men, and leading them against this strong point, rushed through the wire and personally bayonetted three of the enemy and brained the fourth, capturing the position and silencing the machine gun.
This most courageous action, displayed courage and personal bravery of the highest order at this most critical moment of the attack, was responsible for the capture of a most important tactical point, and but for his daring action and determined handling of a desperate situation the attack would not have succeeded.
C.S./M. Hanna’s outstanding gallantry, personal courage and determined leading of his company is deserving of the highest possible reward.”

London Gazette, no.30372, 8 November 1917

https://www.hill70.ca/In-Memoriam/Canada-s-Victoria-Cross-Winners/Hanna.aspx

Robert Hanna is interred at the Masonic Cemetery (aka Pacific Heritage Cemetery) plot 49, section c grave 2

Stephanie Allen

About the Author: Stephanie Allen

This is the new bio field

Latest Posts

Sainte-Marie Among the Hurons
Midland, Ontario
RMS Empress of Ireland
RMS Empress of Ireland
RMS Empress of Ireland was a British-built ocean liner that sank near the mouth of the Saint Lawrence River in…
John Graves Simcoe
Simcoe, John Graves
John Graves Simcoe is best known to Canadians as the first lieutenant-governor of the new British colony of Upper Canada,…
Cascadia Earthquake
At 9 PM on January 26, 1700 one of the world’s largest earthquakes occurred along the west coast of North…

© 2026 Dead Canadians