02/21/2026
In WWII, Ghosts Walked Behind Enemy Lines, One of Them Was Canadian Tommy Prince A Warrior Forged in Battle, But Forgotten at Home.
Born in 1915 in Petersfield, Manitoba, Thomas George Prince was a boy of the Brokenhead Ojibway Nation, a great-grandson of Chief Peguis. From an early age, his father taught him to track, hunt and survive in the wilds of Manitoba, skills that would later make him one of Canada’s most lethal soldiers.
Rejected multiple times due to systemic discrimination, Prince finally joined the Royal Canadian Engineers in 1940. Soon, he volunteered for the elite 1st Special Service Force, feared by Germans as the Devil's Brigade.
On February 8, 1944, near Littoria, Italy, Sergeant Tommy Prince performed an act of immense bravery that earned him the Military Medal. He ran 1,500 yards of telephone wire into enemy territory to an abandoned farmhouse to spy on German artillery. When shells severed the line, he disguised himself as a local farmer, walked in plain sight of the enemy and repaired the connection. This daring act enabled Allied forces to destroy four German positions.
Prince’s courage didn’t end there. He moved silently through shadows in moccasins, infiltrating enemy camps, stealing supplies, and leaving chilling messages: “The worst is yet to come.” German soldiers whispered that he was no human, but a ghost, a devil.
After WWII, Prince received honors at Buckingham Palace, but his service continued in Korea with Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry, where his bravery at the Battle of Kapyong earned a U.S. Presidential Citation.
Yet the battles at home were cruel. Injuries, PTSD and poverty haunted him. He was Canada’s most decorated Indigenous soldier and he was forced to sell his medals to survive. Tommy Prince died alone in Winnipeg in 1977.
Tommy Prince was more than a soldier, he was a ghost of the battlefield, a hero Canada almost forgot. His story is a reminder that courage doesn’t always guarantee recognition at home. Canada’s Greatest Indigenous Soldier No One Talks About!