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Memorial 35092-003 Aurora, ON

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  • Building and plaque
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  • Plaque

Municipality/Province: Aurora, ON

Memorial number: 35092-003

Type: Building and provincial plaque

Address: 89 Mosley Street

Location: In front of the Aurora Armoury

GPS coordinates: Lat: 43.999111   Long: -79.4617542

Submitted by: Alfred Zangao

Photo credit: and Lauren Roberts (www.ontarioplaques.com)

This memorial commemorates the history of the Aurora Armoury site. The plaque was erected by the Ontario Heritage Trust, an agency of the Government of Ontario. Please read the plaque inscription for more details.


Inscription found on memorial

[Plaque/Plaque]

AURORA ARMOURY

Built in 1874 as a drill shed for the 12th Battalion or Infantry or York
Rangers, the Aurora Armoury was part of a network of defence
training facilities for citizen soldiers. It evokes the larger stories and
traditions of the province's militia regiments, recruited regionally, and
possessing close affiliations with their communities of origin. The
armoury was also the site of Edward Blake's famous "Aurora speech"
of 1874, in which the prominent politician and former Ontario
premier called upon the federal government of Liberal Prime Minister
Alexander Mackenzie to implement nationalistic and electoral
reforms. The speech exemplifies how drill halls and armouries fulfil
civic roles in the lives of their communities. The oldest purpose-built
armoury still used by the military in Ontario, the Aurora drill shed is
home to elements of The Queen's York Rangers (1st American
Regiment)(RCAC).

Ontario Heritage Trust, an agency of the Government of Ontario

Street view

Note

This information is provided by contributors and Veterans Affairs Canada makes it available as a service to the public. Veterans Affairs Canada is not responsible for the accuracy, currency or reliability of the information.

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