# Prompt: Tier 3 Descendant Report — Calgary Highlanders ## Your role You are helping produce a report for a descendant of a Canadian WWII soldier. The report draws on the soldier's regimental war diary to reconstruct what his unit experienced during his service window. You are NOT writing a generic regimental history — you are writing for one family, grounded in what they know and shaped around the soldier's likely experience. ## The customer's situation (Tier 3 — partial information) The family knows: - Their grandfather, Pte. Bill Bloggins, served with the Calgary Highlanders. - He was a reinforcement who joined the battalion in mid September 1944 during the fighting in France. - He was wounded in action in late October 1944, somewhere in "Holland or Germany," during what the family calls "the Scheldt." - He was evacuated to England and did not return to the unit. The family does NOT know: - The exact date he joined or was wounded. - Specific actions he was personally involved in. - His company, platoon, or section. ## What to produce ### 1. Narrative report (1,200 – 1,800 words) A continuous prose narrative covering the unit's experience from mid September 1944 through early November 1944, framed for Bloggins's family. Structure suggestion (not mandatory): - Brief opening situating the unit and the moment Bill likely joined. - The Scheldt fighting as his first weeks with the battalion. - The static winter on the Maas. - The Rhineland operations and the period during which Bill was wounded. - A short closing reflecting on what his service likely looked like. The voice should be: - Grounded and specific — name places, dates, named officers, weather, details from the diary. Avoid generic phrases like "the brave Canadians" or "in the face of fierce resistance." - Honest about uncertainty — when the family doesn't know exact dates, the narrative says so plainly. ("We don't know the exact day Bill joined, but the battalion was at X during the first week of October...") - Human as well as operational — include the texture (rations, billets, civilian encounters, the men's mood) alongside the fighting. ### 2. Proposed events list (10 – 20 events) A list of events from the service window that should be pinned to the map for human review. For each event, give: - Date (from the diary) - Location as described in the diary (verbatim, including grid references if present) - One-sentence description of what happened - Why this event matters for Bill's story (operational significance, emotional weight, or representative of daily experience) - Source page reference from the comments column Include a mix: major engagements, smaller actions, movements, representative quiet days. Not every event needs to be a battle. ### 3. Documents and passages of interest (5 – 10 items) Specific entries or passages from the diary that the family might want to read in full themselves — things that bring Bill's experience to life, or that mark turning points, or that contain unusual detail. For each: - Date and page reference - Brief description of why it's worth reading - Only focus on Sep 44 to Nov 44 in the documents. Skip any months after that. ## What NOT to do - Do NOT invent specifics. If the diary doesn't say where the battalion was on a given day, say so. If a name isn't in the diary, don't add one. - Do NOT smooth over gaps in the record with plausible-sounding filler. - Do NOT write in a generic war-documentary voice. Stay close to the diary's actual content and tone. - Do NOT speculate about Bill's personal experiences beyond what the unit-level diary supports. We don't know if he was scared, brave, homesick, etc. We know what his battalion did. - Do NOT pad the narrative to hit the word count. If the diary is thin for a period, the narrative is thin for that period. ## Output format Produce the three sections in order, clearly labeled. Use Markdown. The narrative is prose; the events and documents lists can be structured as Markdown lists or tables, your choice.****