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Those Who Died That Others Might Be Free
Don
Norton
Date and Place of Birth: St Stephen, New Brunswick, Canada
Died: June 8, 1944 Ronchois, France
Baseball Experience:
Amateur
Position: Pitcher/Outfield
Rank: Flying Officer
Military Unit: 420 Squadron, Royal Canadian Air Force
Area Served: European Theater of Operations
Norton emerged as an outstanding natural athlete while at Milltown High School
and was recognized
as one of the province's premier track and field athletes. At a
1938 interscholastic track meet he tied the provincial high school record for
the 220-yard dash and set new records in the standing broad jump and the
100-yard dash. During his senior year in high school, he set a triple jump
record at the 1939 Maritime Interscholastic Championship.
Norton played baseball with
the local St Croixs team in 1938 and 1939. Used as a relief pitcher, pinch
runner, right fielder, and a third-base man, his amazing speed made him a
constant threat when on the bases.
St Croixs won nine
consecutive New Brunswick titles from 1931 to 1939, they also won seven Maritime
championships and the team was inducted into the New Brunswick Sports Hall of
Fame in 1971.
Norton attended
Mount Allison College (now University) at Sackville, New Brunswick in 1939. In
his freshman year he earned first-place finishes at the Halifax Intercollegiate
Meet in the 100-yard, 220-yard dash, broad and triple jump events. At the 1940
Intercollegiate Meet, Norton duplicated firsts in the same events as he had
during 1939 and added a second-place finish in javelin. At the Highland Games
the same year, he ran the 100-yard dash in record time. Then in 1941 he beat
Canadian sprint champion, Peter Taylor, in the 100-yard dash. In 1942, Norton
equaled his best time in the 100-yard dash and broke his own record in the broad
jump.
But Norton’s
most heroic act Mount Allison College did not take place on the athletic field.
On December 16, 1941, a fire broke out at the college’s men's residence. With
little regard for his own safety, Don Norton ran from floor to floor, waking up
the sleeping students and helping them to make improvised ropes from bed sheets.
Eventually, Norton jumped from a third-storey window into the safety of a
fireman's net. Four students lost their lives in the fire. Norton’s efforts
saved many more.
Norton enlisted
in the Royal Canadian Air Force after graduating from Mount Allison and trained
as a navigator. He continued to run track for the RCAF and was recognized as the
fastest runner in a Canadian military uniform.
Flying Officer Norton served with 420 Squadron and was based at RAF Tholthorpe
in Yorkshire, England. On June 8, 1944, Don Norton, who had survived a plane
crash earlier in his military service, was killed when his Handley Page Halifax
III was shot down and exploded upon crashing in a field at Ronchois, France.
"Every person who was on the campus when Don was here,” declared
a Mount Allison College publication shortly after his death in 1944, “will long
remember him for his marvelous running as well as his general all round ability
in everything he tried. There were few his equal, and his death is indeed a blow
to all who knew him."
Don Norton is buried at
Poix-de-Picardie Cemetery in Somme, France. He was inducted into the New
Brunswick Sports Hall of Fame in 1970.
Thanks to
Kelly Ross, Curator/Exhibits Director of the
New Brunswick Sports Hall of Fame and author/creator of the virtual
exhibition,
Hometown Sports Heroes of St Stephen, New Brunswick for help with this
biography and photos.
Added April 10, 2007.
Copyright © 2007 Gary Bedingfield (Baseball
in Wartime). All Rights Reserved.

The St Croixs team
of St Stephen, New Brunswick in 1939.

A Handley-Page
Halifax III. The type of airplane Don Norton served in with 420
Squadron.
The Don Norton Memorial Award later established at Mount Allison. The university
presents the award - in memory of all students who gave their lives in WWII - to
the male student who makes the greatest overall contribution to university life
in his senior year.
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