Leslie Thomas History

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This photo of Leslie Thomas resides in the lobby of the Junior High School that proudly bears his name.
(Abby Corbin, photo)


Who Was Leslie Thomas?

In 1975, thirty-two years after the death of Sergeant Leslie E. Thomas, RCAF, of Sackville, N.S., Sackville decided to honour him by naming a school after him, Leslie Thomas Junior High.

Leslie E. Thomas, son of Edwin N. Thomas and Violet Grace Fader, was born on July 2, 1921. He was a student at Lower Sackville School, which was located at the foot of the Sackville Cross Road. When Leslie was 16, he spent the better part of the year in a body cast to straighten a curvature in his spine. Despite this setback, Thomas was a well-liked student who enjoyed life and loved to ski.

Leslie joined the Air Force in June 1941. He was stationed in Yarmouth in July of 1942 and was assigned to #113 Bomber Recon after completing courses in St. Thomas, Ontario and Jarvis, Ontario. Six months later, while on a training mission, the plane that Thomas and four others were on developed engine trouble. The pilot struggled to bring the aircraft, a Hudson #BW 447, back to base, but crashed on landing. All five men died in the fire following the crash. Thomas was 21 and a half years old.

The following is an excerpt from a Halifax Paper that was published in 1943. The document was provided to Leslie Thomas Junior High by the staff of the Fultz House Museum in Sackville.

St. John’s the Evangelist church in Lr. Sackville, where Leslie Thomas and his family are buried.

(Rob MacIlreith, Photo)

The Thomas Family grave site. Leslie Thomas’s stone is on the right. The stone reads:
R104036 Sergeant
Leslie E. Thomas
RCAF
8th Jan 1943


Age 21 years 6 mos.
Killed in a Plane Crash
Until we meet