Background
Léo Richer Louisiana Flèche was born in Concordia, Kansas, on April 16, 1888. The same year, with his parents, Zotique and Ida, Léo moved to Sorel, Quebec, because of his father"s work in Ottawa with the government as a civil servant.
Léo Richer Louisiana Flèche was born in Concordia, Kansas, on April 16, 1888. The same year, with his parents, Zotique and Ida, Léo moved to Sorel, Quebec, because of his father"s work in Ottawa with the government as a civil servant.
Leo managed the Molson Bank in Ville Street-Pierre until the outbreak of the First World War. He served with the Royal 22nd Battalion, CEF, during World War I, as an infantry officer, where he was wounded several times. In one instance, on June 17, 1916, a soldier in Léo"s battalion noticed Léo lying in a field, left for dead.
The soldier and four of his comrades transported the dying Léo on a stretcher as they crossed a battlefield under German artillery fire.
He later became a lieutenant-colonel commanding the District Depot Number. 4, Montreal which consisted of roughly 70,000 mentor
He co-founded the Canadian Legion in 1925 and became dominion president of the Canadian Legion in 1929. From 1932 to 1939, he was Deputy Minister of National Defence, Vice-Chairman Defence Council and briefly served as military attaché to Paris before the German invasion.
From 1940 to 1942, he was the associate deputy minister of War Services and was chairman of the National Film Board from 1941 to 1943.
In 1941, he received an honorary Doctor of Laws from the University of Ottawa. He was elected as the Liberal candidate to the Canadian House of Commons for the Quebec electoral district of Outremont in a by-election on November 30, 1942, called after the current Member of Parliament, Thomas Vien, resigned. He defeated future mayor of Montreal Jean Drapeau who was running for the Bloc Populaire.
Later that year, Prime minister Mackenzie King named him Minister of National War Services, a post he kept until he became the first Canadian ambassador to Greece on April 17, 1945.
He was the Canadian ambassador to Greece from 1945 to 1949. On October 20, 1949, he presented his credentials to the governor general of Australia as the new high commissioner of Canada.
On August 19, 1952, he also held this position in Buenos Aires, Argentina, as he officially took his post as the Canadian ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary in charge of the diplomatic relations with neighbouring Uruguay. He returned to Canada in 1955.
He died the next year at the age of 67.
His grave is in the Notre Dame des Neiges Cemetery of Montreal.