In 1920, the local chapter of the Imperial Order of the Daughters of the Empire began fundraising for a cenotaph. With thousands in attendance, it was unveiled on November 11, 1924, by Effie Bolster, a Cobourg nurse who had served overseas. The design is a Roman cross with a brass sword superimposed on either side. Emblazoned on the cenotaph is a quotation from a speech that Rudyard Kipling wrote for King George V to give when visiting war memorials.
This cenotaph was rebuilt in 1990, and dedicated to the local war dead of the First and Second World Wars, the Korean War and merchant seamen.