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281 First St Unit 4 Collingwood, ON L9Y 1B2, Canada

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Comfort Keepers provides award-winning in-home care for seniors and other adults in need of assistance with daily activities. Our highly trained and dedicated caregivers can help your loved one stay in their home for as long as safely possible—a dream come true for many elders.

Comfort Keepers Georgian Triangle Buys a Spitfire!

Activities for Seniors  |  September 19, 2022

Comfort Keepers Georgian Triangle buys a Vintage Supermarine Spitfire Warplane to support the 50 Years Gala celebrating the work to preserve our aviation history at the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum.

On October 15, 2022 it’s time to celebrate the 50 year anniversary of the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum

Fifty Years Gala – Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum

Supermarine Spitfire Warplane History

Reginald Mitchell designed the Spitfire in 1935 and the prototype made its first flight from Southampton, UK in March 1936. The British Air Ministry placed an initial order for 300 Spitfires three months later, however due to production problems the first Spitfires did not enter RAF service until October 1938.

Nine RAF Spitfire squadrons were operational in September 1939 and they were reserved for the defence of Great Britain. The first large clash with German fighters occurred over Dunkirk in late May 1940, where the Spitfire acquitted itself well. During the Battle of Britain in 1940, the Spitfire targeted the high flying fighters, while the Hurricane dealt with the slower bombers and by the end of September 1940, the Luftwaffe was handed its first defeat. Fourteen Canadian pilots flew RAF Spitfires in this battle.

In the spring of 1942, the defence of Malta became critical, so RAF No. 249 Squadron, equipped with Spitfires was dispatched there. Several Canadians flew with the squadron, the most famous being “Buzz” Beurling, who shot down 24 enemy aircraft over Malta, between June and October 1942.

Spitfires served on many of the Second World War battle fronts, including North Africa, Italy, Normandy, North West Europe, South East Asia, and Australia. Of special note were the eleven RCAF Spitfire squadrons that provided air cover for the D-Day landings in June 1944 and supported the Allied advance across North West Europe and into Germany in 1945.

In 1941, a version of the Spitfire was developed for the Royal Navy called the Seafire. Eventually, over 2,000 Seafires equipped Fleet Air Arm squadrons aboard British aircraft carriers during the war. Following the war, Seafire XVs were operated by Royal Canadian Navy between 1946 and 1954.

From July 1938 to March 1949, 20,351 Spitfires were manufactured, together with another 2,406 Seafires for a total of 22,757 aircraft. Besides the RAF, the RCAF and other Commonwealth Air Forces, the Spitfire served with the air forces of eleven other nations. The Spitfire Mk. XVIe at the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum was built by Vickers at Castle Bromwich, UK, in 1945. It flew post war with RAF No. 203 Advanced Flying School, until it was damaged in an accident. The British Air Ministry gave it to the RCAF in 1960, who transferred it to the Canada Aviation and Space Museum, Ottawa, in 1966. The Spitfire displays the markings of No. 416, “City of Oshawa” Squadron, one of eleven RCAF squadrons that fought over North West Europe in 1944-5.

Blaine Bell owner of Comfort Keepers Georgian Triangle is a proud
sponsor of the 50th Anniversary for the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum in
Hamilton.
Blaine Bell (owner of Comfort Keepers Georgian Triangle) with his wife Elizabeth and Lieutenant General (Ret.) Richard Rohmer standing in front of the Supermarine Spitfire fighter at the 50th Anniversary of the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum in Hamilton, Ontario.
Blaine Bell and his wife Elizabeth, with Lieutenant General (Ret’)
Richard Rohmer who in Europe in 1943–44 flew as a reconnaissance pilot
flying North American Mustang fighters. He completed a 135-mission tour of operations at the end of November 1944 in Holland.  Rohmer took part in D-Day and the Battles of Normandy, Belgium, and Holland. He is now the senior surviving Canadian veteran of all of those Battles. Seen here in front of the Comfort Keeper’s sponsored Supermarine Spitfire fighter at the 50th Anniversary of the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum in Hamilton.

Comfort Keepers® Georgian Triangle | Leaders in Family Focused Personal Health Care and Interactive Caregiving™

If you are concerned about the health and well-being of your aging loved ones we can help. Comfort Keepers®’s trained caregivers help provide senior clients with the highest quality of life possible to keep them happy and healthy at home. Our Interactive Caregiving™ provides a system of care that addresses safety, nutrition, mind, body, and activities of daily living (ADLs).

What’s more, our trained caregivers are selected with one specific quality in mind: empathy. Care that is empathetic is care that starts in the heart, and it allows us to meet our client’s exact needs. Learn more about our unique service offering Dementia Care and Palliative Care by contacting the Comfort Keepers Georgian Triangle office.

Comfort Keepers Georgian Triangle, is pleased to announce that we are a recipient of Accreditation Canada’s, Accreditation Primer Award. Accreditation is an intensive process in which an organization’s processes, policies, and procedures are examined by industry experts against a set of quality standards. To achieve accredited status, Comfort Keepers offices met or exceeded the rigorous standards for Home Care companies, as defined by Accreditation Canada. 

If you live in the Collingwood, Midland, Owen Sound area, contact Comfort Keepers at (705) 293-5553, or email us at georgiantriangle@comfortkeepers.ca. Comfort Keepers Georgian Triangle is here to help you and your loved ones get the best care possible.

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