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In memory of:

Private William Lockhard Campbell

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Menin Gate

Military service

Service number: 8423
Age: 18
Rank: Private
Force: Army
Unit/Regiment: Canadian Infantry (Eastern Ontario Regiment)
Division: 2nd Bn.
Birth: May 10, 1896 Owen Sound, Ontario
Enlistment: September 23, 1914 Ontario
Death: April 22, 1915 St. Julien, Belgium

Burial/memorial information

Grave reference: Panel 10 - 26 - 28
Additional information
Son of William James Campbell of Carleton Place, Ontario. Private Campbells' was the first notice of death of a Carleton Place soldier in the First World War to appear in the Carleton Place Herald, printed in the issue of May 11, 1915. He was one of the youngest boys in that group that had marched so confidently off to war on a warm August 1914 afternoon. He died just two weeks short of his nineteenth birthday. The Town of Carleton Place remembered Private Campbell by naming a street in his honour.

In the Books of Remembrance

Commemorated on:

Page 8 of the First World War Book of Remembrance.
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MENIN GATE (YPRES) MEMORIAL Belgium


The Menin Gate Memorial is situated at the eastern side of the town of Ypres (now Ieper) in the Province of West Flanders, on the road to Menin and Courtrai. It bears the names of 55,000 men who were lost without trace during the defence of the Ypres Salient in the First World War. Designed by Sir Reginald Blomfield and erected by the Imperial (now Commonwealth) War Graves Commission, it consists of a Hall of Memory", 36.6 metres long by 20.1 metres wide. In the centre are broad staircases leading to the ramparts which overlook the moat, and to pillared loggias which run the whole length of the structure. On the inner walls of the Hall, on the side of the staircases and on the walls of the loggias, panels of Portland stone bear the names of the dead, inscribed by regiment and corps. Carved in stone above the central arch are the words:


TO THE ARMIES OF THE BRITISH EMPIRE WHO STOOD HERE FROM 1914 TO 1918 AND TO THOSE OF THEIR DEAD WHO HAVE NO KNOWN GRAVE.

Over the two staircases leading from the main Hall is the inscription:

HERE ARE RECORDED NAMES OF OFFICERS AND MEN WHO FELL IN YPRES SALIENT BUT TO WHOM THE FORTUNE OF WAR DENIED THE KNOWN AND HONOURED BURIAL GIVEN TO THEIR COMRADES IN DEATH.

The dead are remembered to this day in a simple ceremony that takes place every evening at 8:00 p.m. All traffic through the gateway in either direction is halted, and two buglers (on special occasions four) move to the centre of the Hall and sound the Last Post. Two silver trumpets for use in the ceremony are a gift to the Ypres Last Post Committee by an officer of the Royal Canadian Artillery, who served with the 10th Battery, of St. Catharines, Ontario, in Ypres in April 1915."

For more information, visit Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

 

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