Audet Lake was named to commemorate F/L RJ. Audet, of Lethbridge, who was killed in the World War II. It was officially named in 1950.
Audet Lake
(needs further research/recherche incomplète)
My VAC Account
My VAC Account(needs further research/recherche incomplète)
Audet Lake was named to commemorate F/L RJ. Audet, of Lethbridge, who was killed in the World War II. It was officially named in 1950.
[upper plaque/plaque du haut]
FIRST WORLD WAR
1914 - 1918
(needs further research/recherche incomplète)
SECOND WORLD WAR
1939 - 1945
(needs further research/recherche incomplète)
[lower plaque/plaque du bas] KOREA
1950 - 1953
Erected by Royal Canadian Legion Branch No. 97, this memorial is dedicated to the local war dead of the First and Second World Wars and the Korean War.
[plaque/plaque]
MCMURRAY BRANCH 165
IN HONORED MEMORY OF THOSE WHO MADE THE SUPREME SACRIFICE
1914-1918 1939-1945
ERNEST FRANK CLARKE
DAVID WALTER HILL
FREDERICK LESSOWAY
HOWARD MEIN
PATRICK FRANCIS O'COFFEY
GEORGE WANIANDY
GORDON WHITE
Approximately ten feet tall and five feet wide, this memorial is dedicated to local war dead of the First and Second World Wars and was erected by Royal Canadian Legion Branch No. 165. On top of the monument is a natural gas flare which is usually lit during Remembrance Day ceremonies.
[plaque/plaque]
IN MEMORY OF
THOSE OF THE
LESSER SLAVE LAKE AREA
WHO LAID DOWN THEIR LIVES
FOR PEACE
WORLD WAR I 1914-1918
WORLD WAR II 1939-1945
KOREAN CONFLICT
LEST WE FORGET
Erected on behalf of Royal Canadian Legion Branch No. 110, this memorial is dedicated to the local war dead of the First and Second World Wars and the Korean War. The cenotaph was originally placed by a group of veterans who were members of the Royal Canadian Legion. The cement pad was built using a borrowed cement mixer, a lot of hard work and a combination of purchased cement and donated gravel/sand. There is only one member still alive and he believes the cost was between $3500 and $8500 for the cenotaph itself. Consecration of the memorial was carried out by a local parish priest in 1976. We have estimated that the cenotaph weighs approximately 20,000 lbs.
[front/devant]
An illustration of the Battle of Vimy Ridge, the Vimy Ridge Monument, and the Field of Remembrance, this mural is dedicated to the men and women of the Army, Navy, and Airforce who fought in all wars, and to the Peacekeepers who guard the freedoms we as Canadians enjoy today.
Lest We Forget
November 1999
Painted by a local artist and unveiled in November 1999, this memorial is dedicated to the men and women of the military who fought in all of Canada's wars as well as the peacekeepers of today.
[upper plaque/plaque du haut]
HIGH PRAIRIE
ALTA BRANCH NO. 37
IN MEMORY OF THOSE WHO LOST THEIR LIVES IN THE TWO GREAT WARS
1914 - 1918 1939 - 1945
LEST WE FORGET
[lower plaque/plaque du bas]
1914 - 1918
C. TRAVERSE
W.J. MARTINS
1939 - 1945
W. ARLIDGE
J. ANDERSON
L. BASARAB
A. BONE
A. CUTHBERT
E.N. GRAUMANN
J. HANLIN
J. HEATH
F. HELMER
F. IRELAND
C. IRELAND
C. KEAY
P. MEARON
S. MEARON
F. MECLEOD
C. RAEGEN
E. SAHLIN
F. SMITH
E. WABASCA
C. WALKER
Erected on behalf of the Royal Canadian Legion, Branch No. 37, this memorial is dedicated to the local war dead of the First and Second World Wars.
The veterans wall of honour was erected at the Churchbridge community center in 2009. The wall was unveiled May 23 2009.
The wall includes service records, medals, photos on plaques. The wall honours and thanks veterans for sacrifices they made.
Veteran's Way - 2nd Avenue
Kamsack Veteran's Way
Kamsack 'improving' Veterans Way is a segment of 2nd Street between 3rd Avenue and West Avenue. Veteran's Way was unveiled Jan 31, 2011.
Tree of Remembrance
The Tree of Remembrance was erected by the Kamsack Legion at the Kamsack Comprehensive Institute. The memorial tree is covered in poppies in the annual Remembrance Day events.
[no inscription/aucun inscription]
Needs further research