Go directly to the menu Site plan
  • Normal
  • Medium
  • Large

Les Archives de Radio-Canada

Home · Programs · CBC Radio News

CBC Radio News

'We were all kings for the day'

Broadcast Date: Aug. 25, 1944

Paris is liberated from Germany and the streets are wild with celebration. Tanks bearing the flag of France roll down the avenues, soldiers scream "Vive la France" until hoarse, and girls surround the parading jeeps to kiss the troops. "Can you blame me if I call this fantastic?" Halton asks in his radio report on the liberation.

Halton is only the second Canadian to enter the city, behind Captain Colin McDougall. As they drive through the city streets, Halton's friends introduce him to cheering strangers along the procession route, saying "Il est Canadien." He salutes the crowd jubilantly with both hands. "We were all kings for the day," Halton says again and again in his report.

'We were all kings for the day'

• "We strain our eyes through our field glasses, staring into the August haze for the first sight of Paris. We stare at villages and towns, we stare across one of the loveliest countrysides on earth. We stare for Paris. Paris is a symbol. Paris is victory. Paris is freedom. Paris is democracy. All the things we've fought for are in the word 'Paris.'" – Matthew Halton broadcast on his way into Paris.

• The Nazi forces had occupied Paris for more than four years. The French 2nd Armored Division and the American 4th Infantry Division led the liberation on Aug. 24, 1944.
• As the celebrations were taking place, military combat was still breaking out throughout the city. The Allies lost over 600 men and the Germans lost approximately 3,000 in the fighting. More than 10,000 Germans were taken prisoner.

'We were all kings for the day'

Medium: Radio

Program: CBC Radio News

Broadcast Date: Aug. 25, 1944

Guest(s):


Reporter: Matthew Halton

Duration: 8:55

Photo: National Archives of Canada PA-130252, Frank L. Dubervill

Last updated:
Aug. 14, 2003


End of list




All clips from this program

Show
123 results available   «   <  . 6  . 7  . 8  . 9   >    »

MediaTitle and dateDescription
Radio
4:39
June 18, 1946
1946 Windsor tornado
Death, looting and a frightened "little war bride" in the wake of a terrible twister.
Radio
2:24
April 12, 1946
Welcome to the Canadian Wives' Bureau
A London office organizes the war brides' journeys to Canada and educates them on life in their adopted country.
Radio
19:56
Sept. 20, 1945
Canada and the atom
Montreal, 1945: Canadian scientists demonstrate the power of the atom to CBC Radio listeners.
Radio
7:03
May 15, 1945
The first Canadians into Berlin
Two Canadian soldiers describe their entry to Berlin on VE night.
Radio
4:40
May 5, 1945
'The time has come to be glad'
Matthew Halton reports on the end of the German war.
Radio
2:57
March 22, 1945
'Baby Bonus' unveiled
Minister of National Health and Welfare Brooke Claxton introduces Canadians to the Family Allowance program.
Radio
5:00
March 8, 1945
Seeking atonement: A soldier's story
He was too old and too brave – Matthew Halton tells the story of the Canadian soldier "Snowy."
Radio
4:30
March 5, 1945
A soldier at the breaking point
"Johnny's guts were gone at last," reports CBC's Matthew Halton in this report on battle exhaustion.
Radio
2:53
March 1, 1945
Fred Tilston wins Victoria Cross for attack in Germany
During the Second World War a Canadian hero captures a German position despite wounds to his head and both legs.
Radio
4:15
Jan. 19, 1945
On leave in Rome
On a rare respite, our soldiers "play the same way they fight — hard."
Radio
4:09
Dec. 13, 1944
The forgotten army
One soldier's plea for Canadians to remember their men in Italy.
Radio
3:28
Dec. 4, 1944
Tea time on the battlefront
The nightly ritual of making tea in the trenches.
Radio
3:33
Dec. 4, 1944
Christmas dinner at the war front
An army cook discusses plans for Christmas dinner at the front in Holland.
Radio
4:47
Dec. 4, 1944
Shell shock: losing your nerve
The horrors of a mental breakdown on the Italian front.
Radio
4:28
Nov. 21, 1944
The slit trench
A wounded Canadian captain discusses the grim hours soldiers spend in shallow, muddy trenches.
123 results available   «   <  . 6  . 7  . 8  . 9   >    »