Traditions[edit]

Cap badge[edit]

A stag's head caboched above a scroll bearing the Gaelic motto CUIDICH'N RIGH, below a coronet of a son of the Sovereign and cypher of Prince Leopold, Duke of Albany. Senior non-commissioned officers wear the badge without the coronet and cypher while junior ranks wear a two-dimensional cap badge without the ducal coronet and cypher.

Battle cry[edit]

Tuloch Ard (The High Hill) From the rallying cry of the Seaforth Highlanders (Ross-shire Buffs, The Duke of Albany's Own), a British Army unit long since amalgamated into The Highlanders. The cry is derived from the name of the gathering place of the Clan Mackenzie, a mountain near Kintail in Ross Shire, Scotland.[10]

(1907–1999), soldier, businessman and conservationist.

Bertram Meryl Hoffmeister

(1913–2002), soldier, businessman and Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia.

Henry Pybus Bell-Irving

(1908–2000), soldier, lawyer and politician.

Charles Cecil Ingersol Merritt, VC

(1879–1960), soldier, businessman and Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia.

Eric Werge Hamber

(1886–1976), soldier, lawyer and politician.

John Arthur Clark

(1920–2002), soldier, lawyer and politician.

Harry Rankin

(1959–2012) biochemist, author, rights activist.

William Sampson

(1965–), soldier and author.

Charles Trevor Greene

(1956–), Canadian author and professor.

Ven Begamudré

Garnett Weston (1890–1980), Canadian author and screenwriter.

A Narrative of War: From the Beaches of Sicily to the Hitler Line with the Seaforth Highlanders of Canada, 1943 by Robert L. McDougall (Sep 1 1996)

The Seaforth Highlanders of Canada 1919–1965 by Roy Reginald H. (1969)

History of the 72nd Canadian Infantry Battalion. Seaforth Highlanders of Canada by McEvoy, Bernard & Finlay, H. (1920)

Canadian-Scottish regiment

231st Battalion (Seaforth Highlanders of Canada), CEF

Trevor Greene

Barnes, RM, The Uniforms and History of the Scottish Regiments, London, Sphere Books Limited, 1972.

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Official website

The Seaforth Highlanders of Canada Regimental Association website

The Seaforth Highlanders of Canada official centenary website

Bernard McEvoy and Capt. A. H. Finlay, , Vancouver: Cowan & Brookhouse, 1920.

History of the 72nd Battalion Seaforth Highlanders of Canada

Canadian Military History, Vol. 2 (1993): Issue 1, pages 93–114.

Chris Madsen, "Victims of Circumstance: The Execution of German Deserters by Surrendered German Troops Under Canadian Control in Amsterdam, May 1945,"