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Veteran on quest to deliver WW I medal to rightful owner's loved ones

Ambrose Lucas is a veteran who has had a First World War medal in his possession for about a decade. After doing some research, he realized it belonged to Walter Hodder of Ireland's Eye, and now he wants to give the medal to Hodder's relatives.

Ambrose Lucas of Stephenville Crossing has had medal for about a decade

A man in a baseball cap and jeans holding a small british war medal in his hands.
Veteran Ambrose Lucas holds up a First World War medal he's had for about a decade. He believes it belonged to Walter Hodder and he wants to return it to Hodder's family. (Colleen Connors/CBC)

Ambrose Lucas's hands shake as he removes the red cover on the Royal Canadian Legion box.

He carefully lifts a ribbon from the case and delicately places it in his fingers. 

"This is the medal right here," he said.

He has kept the British War Medal in his bedside table for a decade, pondering the story of its rightful owner — a solider born in 1895 who served 14 months with the Royal Navy Reserve.

"My intention was to get information about the medal, get information about the owner of the medal and hopefully someday find some members of the family and return the medal back to where it belongs," Lucas said.

Lucas was a combat medic in Croatia during the Battle of the Medek Pocket. He retired from the military almost 20 years ago and is a well decorated veteran living in Stephenville Crossing, on Newfoundland's west coast.

Everyone calls him Joebag, a nickname that has stuck since the 1970s.

Getting the medal

A Remembrance Day parade, about a decade ago, a friend of Lucas from Stephenville Crossing — Charlie House — presented him with the First World War medal. House thought it would be best to give it to Lucas, given his military background.

The story goes that House's father got the medal in the 1930s on a trade in a Cape Breton logging camp. A solider named Walter Hodder needed 10 dollars.

WATCH |  The mystery of a war medal that's lasted a decade — and counting: 

This N.L. veteran has a new mission — returning a lost First World War medal

22 days ago
Duration 3:36
Ambrose Lucas has been retired from the military for almost 20 years, and he has his own medals from his service. But there is one in his possession that doesn’t belong to him, and so far Lucas has spent 10 years searching for the rightful owner. The CBC’s Colleen Connors has the full story.

"He gave it to Charlie House's dad for the $10 that he lent him and he told him when he came back he would give him back his $10 and the agreement was he would give him back his medal," explained Lucas.

"But Mr. House went back to the logging camp, [and] this gentleman from Ireland's Eye never did return. Mr. House held it on, and when he passed away Charlie decided to bring me the medal and see what information I could find. " 

Lucas has done some digging over the years. He started by taking the medal to the Legion branch in Stephenville to have it mounted, complete with a blue ribbon. Then, he called The Rooms, where staff provided him with documents that told the story of its owner, Walter Hodder.

The documents state he was born in 1895 and joined the Royal Navy Reserve on his 23rd birthday. He was born in a place called Ireland's Eye — an island in Trinity Bay — and resided in Deer Harbour. 

He served as a seaman on four vessels for 14 months and on April 7, 1919, he was granted special grace from the military to come ashore.

Lucas thinks about Hodder all the time, and wonders what life was like for him after he served. He learned that he was a single man at the time, and his mother had passed. 

A medal with King George IV's face on it. The medal has a ribbon attached and it sits in a small box.
This British War Medal has been at Lucas's house in Stephenville Crossing for ten years. He hopes to return it to the family of its owner. (Colleen Connors/CBC)

"I think I am the last part of this journey, where the medal should end up," he said.

Lucas hopes the journey will end with the rightful owners, who he believes is a member of the Hodder family.

"I think the family probably doesn't even know he had the medal," said Lucas. "People from the military when they came back home, especially from the ship, the army and the Air Force, a lot of them, if they went through battle or a war zone or something, a lot of them did not really want to talk about what they done."

He believes Hodder kept the medal private and never told anybody about it.

Lucas says he would travel anywhere in the province and present the medal to someone in the Hodder family. 

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Colleen Connors reports on western Newfoundland from the CBC's bureau in Corner Brook.

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