The Eighth Army held the corps in reserve until after the Gustav defences in the Liri valley had been broken and then brought it forward to assault successfully the next defensive line, the Hitler Line, shortly before the Allied capture of Rome in early June.Having taken part in the Allies' northward advance to Florence, the corps then took part in Operation Olive, the assault on the Gothic Line, in September 1944 before being transported during January–February 1945 in Operation Goldflake to rejoin the rest of the First Canadian Army in Belgium and the Netherlands.On May 6, 1945, at Wageningen, Lieutenant-General Foulkes received the final surrender by Colonel General Johannes Blaskowitz of all remaining German forces still active in the Netherlands.During the final campaign to liberate the Netherlands, the corps included for a time the British 49th Infantry Division.In 2015, personnel of the Canadian Army Doctrine and Training Centre, headquartered at CFB Kingston, began wearing the formation patch of I Canadian Corps on their ceremonial and service dress uniforms.
I Canadian Corps forces advancing from the
Gustav Line
to the
Hitler Line
during the Liri Valley Offensive, May 24, 1944.
Dutch civilians celebrating the arrival of I Canadian Corps troops in
Utrecht
after the German surrender, May 7, 1945.