New Brunswick born Herman Good and his brother Ernest, from South Bathurst, enlisted in the Canadian Army in the autumn of 1915. They saw extensive service with the 13th (Black Watch) Battalion. Ernest Good was killed on 4 September 1916 near Pozieres Wood and has no known grave; his name appears on the Vimy Ridge Memorial. Corporal Herman Good during the Battle of Amiens at Hangard Wood on August 8th 1918, won the Victoria Cross for courageously disposing of three German machine-guns and their crews, and then, with the assistance of three comrades, assaulting and capturing a German battery of 5.9 inch guns and their entire crews. Corporal Good received a hero’s welcome home when he returned to Bathurst on 22 April 1919. Good, a modest man, resumed his life as a woodsman and farmer. Later he became a Game Warden. His grave in St Albans Cemetery, in addition to a family stone, has a veteran’s marker with the Victoria Cross emblazoned on it; the only one in New Brunswick and only one of five in Canada. At the cemetery entrance along the Salmon Beach Road is a cairn with a plaque outlining how Corporal Good won his Victoria Cross.