British Columbia

Province Code
BC
City/Municipality
Victoria
Memorial Number
59032-006
Type
Address
715 Bay Street
Location
Bay Street Armoury
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
48.4356768, -123.3639524
Inscription

[cross/croix]
IN MEMORY
OF
OFFICERS
N.C.O.S & MEN. CANADIAN
SCOTTISH
WHO FELL IN ACTION
VIMY RIDGE
9.4.17

[plaque]

  • 420049 CSM EYDEN F.S.
  • 29257 CSM MIDDLEMASS T.
  • 420819 PTE ALLEN H.W.
  • 736569 PTE ATTWOOD L.M.
  • 625286 PTE ARMITAGE J.A.
  • 700410 PTE BALL E.V.
  • 736746 PTE BETTS E.E.
  • 736108 L.CPL BLAIK T.
  • 160741 PTE BROWN J.M.
  • 718192 PTE BAGULEY F.
  • 871504 PTE BONIVER L.
  • 718661 PTE BROWN J.
  • 736263 PTE BAXTER J.
  • 43945 PTE BRADSHAW
  • 721564 PTE CLEMONS W.
  • 258460 PTE CURLEY H.W.
  • 28823 CPL CHANDLER R.
  • 872090 PTE COOK J.R.
  • 871443 PTE COOPER J.
  • 427642 L.CPL COCKETT H.
  • 718675 PTE DUNCAN F.
  • 160168 PTE DICKSON W.M.
  • 736317 PTE GOODING C.A.
  • 718755 PTE GORRIE J.
  • 722078 PTE GLASSFORD R.A.
  • 624801 PTE GIBBONS J.H.P.
  • A20408 SGT HAMILTON W.
  • 736103 PTE HAWKINS A.J.
  • 105644 PTE HENDERSON W.A.
  • 628188 L.CPL HOWIE J.
  • 736880 PTE HOOPER W.H.
  • 624957 PTE HALLIDAY F.J.
  • 736206 PTE HARVIE J.
  • 832135 PTE KILCUP H.L.
  • 718249 PTE KIRBY A.J.
  • 47014 L.CPL KENNEDY J.C.
  • 426334 CPL LATIMER A.
  • 700022 L.CPL LAYCOCK W.W.
  • 736651 PTE LEITCH S.
  • 718699 PTE MANNING F.J.
  • 427586 PTE MILNE VC W.J.
  • 718847 PTE McMARTIN W.
  • 718887 PTE McNICHOLL W.S.
  • 718526 PTE McWILLIAMS H.
  • 736171 PTE McCANDLESS T.
  • 420765 PTE McGOWAN D.
  • 625136 PTE McGRAY H.J.
  • 466910 PTE McINROY D.A.
  • 856984 PTE OWEN R.
  • 718269 PTE PATTISON R.
  • 736967 PTE PIPER G.B.
  • 105741 PTE PHILLIPS F.V.
  • 624593 PTE PARSONS A.H.
  • 700967 PTE PURNELL W.
  • 737084 PTE POWELL L.G.
  • 417984 PTE RUD A.
  • 129200 PTE RUDDOCK A.F.
  • 77309 SGT SIMMONS J.H.
  • 624447 PTE SNELGROVE T.A.
  • 874370 PTE SPALDING J.
  • 625303 PTE STRICKLER J.M.
  • 736486 PTE SEARLE C.B.
  • 719161 PTE WILLERTON J.G.
  • 129336 L.CPL TARLETON R.A.

[plaque]
THIS
CROSS
WAS
ORIGINALLY
ERECTED
ON THE
BATTLEFIELD
BY THE
BATTALION

Image
Photo Credit
Terry MacDonald
Caption
surroundings
1 of 3 images
Image
Photo Credit
The Canadian Scottish Regimental Museum
Caption
Vimy Memorial Cross
1 of 3 images
Image
Photo Credit
The Canadian Scottish Regimental Museum
Caption
plaque
1 of 3 images
War or Conflict Term
Province
!4v1623333449812!6m8!1m7!1sHBesZbvgmzcXl6QjBfw6GA!2m2!1d48.43567498215778!2d-123.3639407161551!3f181.6777811840526!4f8.406179594748252!5f0.7820865974627469
Body Content

Following the battle of Vimy Ridge, this memorial cross was erected to honour the men of the 16th Battalion (Canadian Scottish) Canadian Expeditionary Force, who fell on April 9, 1917. Years later, it was transferred to the Trustees of the 16th Battalion Association from the Imperial War Grave Commission in France and was officially unveiled on October 23, 1938 in Pioneer Square, Victoria, British Columbia, to commemorate all 1,346 soldiers of the battalion who fell in France and Flanders.

The cross was subsequently relocated to the Bay Street Armoury, where it remains to this day, when it was replaced in the square by a stone cenotaph in 1951.

City
Victoria
Country
Type Description
Cross
Memorial CF Legacy ID
5066
City/Municipality
Victoria (Oak Bay)
Memorial Number
59032-005
Type
Address
2900 block of Beach Drive
Location
Uplands Park, at Beach Drive and Scenic Drive
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
48.4395573, -123.2943775
Inscription

[front/devant]

IN MEMORY OF OAK BAY CITIZENS WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES IN THE 1939-1945 WORLD WAR

GREATER LOVE HATH NO MAN THAN THIS, THAT A MAN LAY DOWN HIS LIFE FOR HIS FRIENDS

plaque from left to right Inscription
col 1 ION ACLAND
col 1 THOMAS AKAM
col 1 WILLIAM B. E. BAILEY
col 1 THOMAS M. BAKER
col 1 NORMAN BEARD
col 1 MAURICE M. BEEDHAM
col 1 PAMELA G. BENNETT
col 1 TED P. BOURQUE
col 1 RICHARD BRADBURY
col 1 GORDON BRADSHAW
col 1 HARRY J. BROOKS
col 1 I. M. SUTHERLAND BROWN
col 1 LOUIS K. BROWN
col 1 WILLIAM BROWN
col 1 ROBERT E. BRUCE
col 1 JOHN S. BURD
col 1 FRED S. BUTTON
col 1 GEOFFREY BYATT
col 1 BRIAN W. CARMICHAEL
col 1 RICHARD R. T. CHRISTY
col 1 PATRICIA J. COONEY
col 1 GEORGE H. CORBETT
col 1 JAMES A. CORNWALL
col 1 GEORGE S. F. COULSON
col 2 REGINALD COVENTRY
col 2 ROBERT COVENTRY
col 2 EDWARD L. CURTIS
col 2 JOHN V. DAVEY
col 2 PERCIVAL F. M. DEFREITAS
col 2 J. HARRY DOE
col 2 WILLIAM J. DYSON
col 2 DOUGLAS R. ELEY
col 2 HENRY G. ELLIS
col 2 VIOLET FIELD
col 2 E. WILLIAM R. FORTT
col 2 ROBERT H. FRAME
col 2 GORDON FRASER
col 2 VERNON B. GILSON
col 2 JACK. A. GROGAN
col 2 FRED C. HARMAN
col 2 ARTHUR C. HARNESS
col 2 JAMES R. HARPER
col 2 DESMOND HIND
col 2 ROBERT HORSFIELD
col 2 RAYMOND H. HUNTER
col 2 NORA JOHNSON
col 2 VINCENT G. L. KNOX
col 2 JOHN LATTA
col 3 JAMES W. LAWRIE
col 3 WILLIAM H. LEESE
col 3 DOUGLAS M. LINDSAY
col 3 FRED I. MC DERMOTT
col 3 FRANCIS H. MC MULLIN
col 3 PHILIP G. C. MACNEILL
col 3 JAMES R. A. MACONACHIE
col 3 LEIGHTON MANNING
col 3 ROBERT S. MAY
col 3 HARRY E. MEYER
col 3 ALAN MAYHEW
col 3 E. W. T. MELLANDER
col 3 RICHARD C. MEREDITH
col 3 THOMAS W. MOORE
col 3 PETER PALIN
col 3 WILLIAM PALMER
col 3 GEORGE PARKER
col 3 ROY PATTINSON
col 3 CHARLES W. PEASLAND
col 3 WILLIAM E. PHILLIPS
col 3 TREVOR C. L. PIDCOCK
col 3 DANIEL MACF. REID
col 3 EDWARD G. ROBBINS
col 3 JAMES T. ROBSON
col 4 ARTHUR M. RYCROFT
col 4 KENNETH W. SCHARFF
col 4 ERNEST W. SCROGGS
col 4 ROBERT R. SHEARING
col 4 REGINALD A. SHEPHERD
col 4 JOHN SHEPHERD
col 4 JOHN L. SILLS
col 4 JOHN F. STEVENS
col 4 DOUGLAS B. STEWART
col 4 BOWES STONEY
col 4 JAMES SYME
col 4 MICHAEL B. SYMONS
col 4 SELBY F. TAYLOR
col 4 JACK TRACE
col 4 PAUL A. TRUDEL
col 4 LLOYD H. TULL
col 4 GRAHAM VERLEY
col 4 RAY WALLS
col 4 JOHN D. WARD
col 4 FRANK H. WHITING
col 4 EDWIN M. WILLIAMS
col 4 DONALD A. K. WILSON
col 4 MATTHEW WOOD
col 4 STANLEY E. WOOD



Image
Photo Credit
Denise Kitagawa
Caption
front
1 of 5 images
Image
Caption
front
1 of 5 images
Image
Caption
sculptor
1 of 5 images
Image
Caption
ceremony
1 of 5 images
Image
Photo Credit
Oak Bay Archives Photo
Caption
Oak Bay Memorial Cenotaph and sculptor James Saull 1948 prior to installation
1 of 5 images
War or Conflict Term
Province
!4v1623331621854!6m8!1m7!1s3COl7SuioCDSPUuIlJwLlg!2m2!1d48.43955729701284!2d-123.2943774583729!3f269.76941606975396!4f-0.01673614496122866!5f1.8136043807570128
Body Content

The Oak Bay Cenotaph was constructed in 1948 on behalf of 97 young men and one woman from Oak Bay, who died in WWII. On Armistice Day, November 11th, 1948, the Cenotaph was unveiled by the Lieutenant Governor, the Honourable Charles H. Banks, C.M.G., and dedicated by the Venerable Archdeacon A deL. Nunns and the Reverend Dr. W.W. McPherson. A wall of concrete with granite finish frames a nine-foot tall statue of a woman, her eyes downcast upon the 97 names of Oak Bay's war dead. The inscription reads: "Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends." Early in 1948, the Oak Bay Town Council decided that a suitable memorial be erected. A young former airman from Ontario, James Saull, had made his home in Victoria after the war. He had been a pupil of the well-known Toronto sculptor Emmanuel Hahn (Hahn sculpted the Bluenose schooner on our dime, the caribou on the quarter and the Indians in their canoe on the silver dollar), and the young man's talent had become known locally. It took Saull about seven months to complete the nine-foot monument, for which his wife was the model. The monument is located in Uplands Park on a rock out-cropping, facing Beach Drive. Since the concrete monument had been built on a rock out-cropping, there wasn't any problem with settlement but, over three and a half decade, it had been exposed to the extremes of weather. It was then that Mr. Saull was called upon by the Town Council to rebuild and repair the entire structure.

The work completed in time for the 2019 Remembrance Day service, which includes refurbishing the path and steps up to the cenotaph and also the stair railing, is the latest phase of work that was laid out in the 2016 strategic plan headed by Coun. Tara Ney and a small task force.

City
Victoria (Oak Bay)
Country
Type Description
Stone sculpture and wall
Memorial CF Legacy ID
145
City/Municipality
Victoria
Memorial Number
59032-004
Type
Address
975 Quadra Street
Location
Pioneer Square
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
48.4229736, -123.3594164
Inscription

[front/devant]
IN
MEMORY
OF
ALL RANKS
OF THIS REGIMENT
WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES
FOR THE CAUSE OF FREEDOM
IN THE GREAT WORLD WARS

SACRED TO THE MEMORY
OF THE FALLEN COMRADES
THE CANADIAN SCOTTISH
REGIMENT
(PRINCESS MARY'S)

[right side/côté droit]
1ST BATTALION
CAO 1939 — 1945
2ND BATALLION
CA(A) 1939 — 1943

[left side/côté gauche]
16TH BATTALION
(THE CANADIAN SCOTTISH)
CEF 1914 — 1918

Image
Photo Credit
Terry MacDonald. Hellmut Shade.
Caption
Canadian Scottish Regiment Cenotaph
1 of 5 images
Image
Caption
front inscription
1 of 5 images
Image
Caption
front inscription
1 of 5 images
Image
Caption
left side inscription
1 of 5 images
Image
Photo Credit
Victoria Edwards
Caption
Canadian Scottish Regiment Cenotaph
1 of 5 images
War or Conflict Term
Province
!4v1729173355669!6m8!1m7!1sCAoSLEFGMVFpcE5JRndoMVM5Z1NmbjJESUFiRWQ2TTRkbVBnRGNEM3ZQck1uM2xk!2m2!1d48.42297357426801!2d-123.3594163701574!3f115.83397562673002!4f-3.0593212702716244!5f0.7820865974627469
Body Content

The Canadian Scottish Regiment Cenotaph was erected in memory of all ranks of The Canadian Scottish Regiment (Princess Mary's) who gave their lives in the First and Second World Wars. Originally, the cenotaph was a wooden cross that had been erected at Vimy Ridge during the First World War. It was brought back to Victoria by the 16th Battalion, Canadian Expeditionary Force and installed in 1938, after plans for a fountain failed.

In 1951, it was replaced by the current stone cross mounted on a rectangular base that is mounted on a hexagonal base that is mounted on three hexagonal steps - all made of granite. The Canadian Scottish Regiment Vimy Ridge Cross was placed in the Bay Street Armoury.

City
Victoria
Country
Type Description
Cross
Memorial CF Legacy ID
4228
City/Municipality
Victoria
Memorial Number
59032-003
Type
Address
501 Belleville Street
Location
In front of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia building
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
48.4207049, -123.3701891
Inscription

[front/devant]

ERECTED BY THE PEOPLE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA
TO THE MEMORY OF SIR JAMES DOUGLAS K.C.B.
GOVERNOR
COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF
FROM 1851 TO 1864

Image
Photo Credit
Marjorie Chester
Caption
obelisk (left side)
1 of 2 images
Image
Caption
obelisk (front details)
1 of 2 images
Province
!4v1623327663914!6m8!1m7!1stSkldcx2qRJ9l75r0UxcOg!2m2!1d48.42070487593245!2d-123.3701891432729!3f159.54052432625326!4f7.70485208104121!5f1.0346218800200641
Body Content

Erected by the city of Victoria, this memorial is dedicated to Sir James Douglas, Governor and Commander-in-Chief of British Columbia from 1851 to 1864.

City
Victoria
Country
Type Description
Granite obelisk
Memorial CF Legacy ID
143
City/Municipality
Victoria
Memorial Number
59032-002
Type
Address
501 Belleville Street
Location
Legislative Assembly of British Columbia, main floor
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
48.4206478, -123.36947
Inscription

1914 1918
TO THE MEMORY OF
THOSE OF ALL RANKS
88TH REGIMENT VICTORIA FUSILIERS
WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES
FOR THE EMPIRE
ERECTED BY THEIR COMRADES

Image
Photo Credit
Terry MacDonald; Ernie Barnes
Caption
surroundings
1 of 2 images
Image
Photo Credit
Terry MacDonald; Ernie Barnes
Caption
plaque
1 of 2 images
Province
!4v1623673541444!6m8!1m7!1sKXMrh_jCuzwSlNPQq8Wglg!2m2!1d48.4206488401396!2d-123.3694695864921!3f209.12350599567318!4f3.6065088145038544!5f1.5378275727075432
Body Content

This plaque is dedicated to the those who gave their lives in the First World War from the 88th Regiment Victoria Fusiliers.

City
Victoria
Country
Type Description
Plaque - bronze
Photo Credit
Terry MacDonald; Ernie Barnes
Memorial CF Legacy ID
10610
City/Municipality
Victoria
Memorial Number
59032-001
Type
Address
501 Belleville Street
Location
Legislative Assembly of British Columbia
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
48.4205609, -123.3692437
Inscription

[front/devant]

TO OUR
GLORIOUS
DEAD

1914 - 1919
1939 - 1945

THEY DIED THE NOBLEST DEATH A MAN MAY DIE
FIGHTING FOR GOD AND RIGHT AND LIBERTY
AND SUCH A DEATH IS IMMORTALITY

KOREA
1950 - 1953

AFGHANSITAN
2001 - 2014

[back/arrière]

IN RECOGNITION OF THE
MEMBERS OF THE
CANADIAN FORCES AND
CANADIAN CITIZENS

IN THE SERVICE
OF PEACE

Image
Photo Credit
Marjorie Chester, Victoria Edwards
Caption
Victoria War Memorial
1 of 5 images
Image
Caption
back inscription
1 of 5 images
Image
Caption
front inscription
1 of 5 images
Image
Caption
front inscription
1 of 5 images
Image
1 of 5 images
Province
!4v1623326662241!6m8!1m7!1sqKbJRf3-d7Mo78UBQ6L8dg!2m2!1d48.42062808204888!2d-123.3691948622135!3f211.10109907202633!4f2.768292632576973!5f1.301163834947408
Body Content

This memorial was dedicated to the memory of the fallen of the First World War and unveiled on 12 July 1925, by Lieutenant-Governor W.C. Nichol. An estimated 3,000 people gathered to witness the unveiling. Among the dignitaries who attended were Victoria Cross recipient Colonel Cy Peck and lawyer Lindley Crease, who had been the chairman of the war memorial committee.

The Victoria War Memorial was built by public subscription from fundraising that started in September 1924. Frederick Bernard Pemberton played a key role in organizing the committee, coming up with a design for the memorial and seeing it built. He enlisted his friend, Lindley Crease, to lead the fundraising drive. The bronze statue was created by sculptors Vernon and Sydney March. 

Later inscriptions were added for the Second World War, Korean War and Afghanistan.

City
Victoria
Country
Type Description
Pillar - granite, statue - bronze
Memorial CF Legacy ID
2680
City/Municipality
Burnaby
Memorial Number
59031-009
Type
Address
7550 Cumberland Street
Location
George Derby Centre
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
49.2329669, -122.9173525
Inscription

Dedicated to all who served our country and those who died in service

Lest we forget

 

Image
Photo Credit
Canada Remembers (Facebook)
Caption
George Darby Centre Cenotaph
Province
!4v1623268177216!6m8!1m7!1sNLsTL7TlcdyQtSS6oUiw5Q!2m2!1d49.23296691660777!2d-122.9173525431811!3f48.28728999730235!4f-0.022319306931635196!5f2.91070310485028
Body Content

On Feb 12, 2020, Minister MacAulay visited the cenotaph at the George Derby Centre —a long-term care facility in Burnaby, British Columbia specializing in veteran's care. The original George Derby Centre was built over 50 years ago as a rehabilitation centre for young disabled veterans returning from the war with the goal of promoting their return to community living. In May 1988 the present centre opened as a 300 bed licensed intermediate care facility.

The Centre is named in honour of the late Sergeant George Cleveland Derby O.B.E. In 1914, Mr. Derby was employed in Vancouver as a Broker. On September 18, 1915, at the outbreak of World War I, he enlisted as a private in the 72nd Battalion, Seaforth Highlanders, Canadian Expeditionary Force. He was stationed in England from April to August 1916 and was then sent to France. In November 1916 he suffered a concussion that seriously impaired his hearing. In April 1917, during the preliminary fighting at Vimy, an exploding shell buried him in a trench and left him with a permanently disabled knee. He was invalided to England in May 1917 and returned to Canada that November. As his injuries were permanent, he received his army discharge in January 1918 and left his unit with the rank of Sergeant. In September 1918, George Derby joined the Department of Solders’ Civil Re-establishment, the forerunner of the Department of Veterans Affairs. During World War II, he was District Administrator for the Department in Vancouver. He headed a committee responsible for drafting the Veterans’ Charter, which set forth the provisions for members of the Armed Services returning to Canada and planning to re-enter civilian life. His work on this committee took him to wartime England where he was awarded the Order of the British Empire in 1943 for patriotic and philanthropic work. When George Derby returned to Canada, he became Western Regional Administrator in Vancouver for the newly formed Department of Veterans Affairs. In 1946, he negotiated the land acquisition for a new veterans’ hospital, and in that year, the George Derby Centre was named in his honour. He remained with Veterans Affairs Canada in Vancouver until his retirement in 1956. He died in Shaughnessy Hospital at the age of 81 on January 5, 1971.

The cenotaph, which received Community War Memorial funding through the Commemorative Partnership Program, serves to honour Veterans and commemorate those who died in service to our country. Imperial War Graves Commission member Rudyard Kipling recommended the inscription "Lest we forget" which has widely be inscribed on war memorials since the First World War. The phrase "Lest we forget" which forms the refrain of "Recessional" by Rudyard Kipling, is taken from Deuteronomy 6:12: "Then beware lest thou forget the Lord which brought thee forth out of the land of Egypt".

City
Burnaby
Country
Type Description
Granite
Photo Credit
Victoria Edwards
Memorial CF Legacy ID
10295
City/Municipality
Burnaby
Memorial Number
59031-008
Type
Location
West side of Central Park
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
49.2284177, -123.0234943
Inscription

Ambassador of Peace

Korean War Memorial

In honour of the 36 soldiers from British Columbia who sacrificed their young lives for the people of Korea who they never knew. The Nation of Korea and the Province of British Colunia thank you and honour you for your courage and bravery

 

Image
Photo Credit
Victoria Edwards
Caption
Ambassador of Peace Korean War Memorial
1 of 3 images
Image
Caption
Ambassador of Peace Korean War Memorial
1 of 3 images
Image
Caption
Ambassador of Peace Korean War Memorial Plaque
1 of 3 images
War or Conflict Term
Province
!4v1623251780406!6m8!1m7!1sXFyGbodZkP_CgFDe-HbBow!2m2!1d49.22841765758712!2d-123.0234943352872!3f82.45382093560491!4f-2.139208818617959!5f1.5104735020603654
Body Content

The annual Korean War Veterans Ceremony in Burnaby is held at the Ambassador of Peace Korean War Memorial in Central Park for veterans, their families, diplomats, politicians, the RCMP, Burnaby fire fighters, top members of the National Aboriginal Veterans Association, the Richmond Squadron Air Cadets and members of the regional Korean Canadian community. The memorial honours 36 BC soldiers who sacrificed their lives during the Korean War.

City
Burnaby
Country
Type Description
Sculpture
Memorial CF Legacy ID
9406
City/Municipality
Burnaby
Memorial Number
59031-007
Type
Address
6650 Southoaks Crescent
Location
Burnaby South Memorial Park
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
49.2178525, -122.966879
Inscription

(needs further research/recherche incomplète)

Image
Photo Credit
Victoria Edwards
Caption
Memorial Tennis Courts
War or Conflict Term
Province
!4v1623179123614!6m8!1m7!1svz3xZGBLENN3RovT8ZMvyQ!2m2!1d49.21785249360408!2d-122.9668790178556!3f159.6074212033684!4f3.9958554870538876!5f1.4822121764217333
Body Content

These three tennis courts were created as a living memorial to honour the 51 former students of Burnaby South High School who lost their lives in the Second World War. The courts and a cenotaph were dedicated on the school grounds on November 10, 1948, by the South Burnaby Royal Canadian Legion Branch 83 and students of the school.

The Burnaby South High School land was obtained by the city in 1989 and named Burnaby South Memorial Park on November 3, 1993.

City
Burnaby
Country
Type Description
Tennis courts
Memorial CF Legacy ID
7812
City/Municipality
Burnaby
Memorial Number
59031-006
Type
Address
6650 Southoaks Crescent
Location
Burnaby South Memorial Park
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
49.2177803, -122.9662706
Inscription

(needs further research/recherche incomplète)

War or Conflict Term
Province
!4v1624366911645!6m8!1m7!1sCILFqH0IQm1ztV4shHUUNQ!2m2!1d49.21778027559817!2d-122.9662705706153!3f217.59655308588356!4f5.668746807846986!5f0.7820865974627469
Body Content

This 1.5 acre park was named Burnaby South Memorial Park on November 3, 1993, by the Burnaby Parks, Recreation and Culture Commission's Parks, Names and Signs Committee, at the request of the Burnaby Heritage Advisory Committee (now the Community Heritage Commission.) The land was previously the site of the Burnaby South High School, but obtained by the city in 1989.

Within the park there are Memorial Tennis Courts and a Cenotaph that were dedicated in 1948 to the memory of 51 former students of the older school who died in the Second World War.

City
Burnaby
Country
Type Description
Park
Memorial CF Legacy ID
7811