Culliton Crescent is named for Edward Milton Culliton, C.C. In 1941 he served with the Royal Canadian Artillery.
Culliton Crescent
Culliton Crescent
My VAC Account
My VAC AccountCulliton Crescent
Culliton Crescent is named for Edward Milton Culliton, C.C. In 1941 he served with the Royal Canadian Artillery.
Crowe Bay
Crowe Bay is named in honour of Robert Meikle Crowe, a veteran of both World Wars. He was awarded the Military Cross in 1918. Between 1944-1947, he served with the Regina Rifles, for two years as commanding officer of the Second Battalion.
Cross Place
Cross Place is named for Colonel James Albert Cross, D.S.O. Colonel Cross was awarded the Distinguished Service Order for his activities at Vimy Ridge. He also commanded Military District #12 in Regina.
Bishop Court
Bishop Court is named for Cecil Thomas Bishop who served in both the First and Second World Wars.
Bagshaw Place
Bagshaw Place: Frederick Bertram Bagshaw served overseas in the First World War and was wounded twice.
Arnheim Street
Arnheim Street (the more common spelling of the name is Arnhem) honours Allied soldiers who died in the Battle of Arnhem, the greatest airborne operation of the Second World War. In 1944 airborne forces of the American and British armies were dropped behind German lines to capture the crucial bridge over the Rhine River at Arnhem. The operation ended in bitter defeat for the Allies with more troops lost there than on D-Day.
Abbott Street
Abbott Street is named in honour of Captain Edward Lyman (Hickory) Abbott of the 68th Battalion, 1915.
[plaque/plaque]
DULCE ET DECORUM EST PRO PATRIA MORI
DEDICATED BY THE SASKATCHEWAN CIVIL SERVICE ASSOCIATION TO THOSE MEMBERS OF THE SERVICE WHO SACRIFICED THEIR LIVES IN THE GREAT WAR
1914 - 1918
LYMAN E. ABBOTT
ROBERT MURE ANDERSON
SARGIS AVIS
THOMAS HERBERT BLAIR
GEORGE BLOXAM
RICHARD BOYCE
STEWART CARLYLE
FREDERICK FRANCIS COATES
WILLIAM ERNEST COLEMAN
WALTER COLLINGWOOD
JAMES MELVILLE COTTAM
P.W. CLOVERLEY
JAMES MAXWELL CURRIE
HARRY H. FULLER
REGIS F. DE LA GORGENDIERE
BENJAMIN BELL GRAY
THOMAS TUFFLEY HARDING
ERNEST HAWTHORNE
W.S. HOLLIDAY
STEWART CLINK HOOD
WILFRED JEFFERSON
ARTHUR JOHNSTONE
EDWARD THOMAS JONES
JOHN LIDDELL
WILLIAM LITTLE
HAROLD LONGWORTHY
FREDERICK LUTTMAN
ALFRED FRANK MANTLE
LEON JOSEPH MCDERMOTT
NORMAN HOWARD PAWLEY
H.A. PHELPS
BERNARD RAYMOND PHILBRICK
JOHN HENRY PLATT
LEWIS PRESTON
SIDNEY E. SINNONS
JOHN COCHRANE SMITH
HARRY NELSON THOMPSON
THOMAS NEWELL VICKERS
JOHN GORDON WALKER
J.B. WATSON
GEORGE WATERHOUSE
ERNEST WILSON
Erected by the Saskatchewan Civil Service Association, this memorial is dedicated to the members of the Saskatchewan civil service killed during the First World War.
[plaque/plaque]
DEDICATED TO THE
GLORIOUS MEMORY OF THE MEMBERS OF THE SASKATCHEWAN CIVIL SERVICE WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR
1939 - 1945
ERECTED BY THE
SASKATCHEWAN CIVIL SERVICE ASSOCIATION
Erected by the Saskatchewan Civil Service Association, this memorial is dedicated to the members of the Saskatchewan civil service killed during the Second World War.
THIS TABLET COMMEMORATES THOSE IN THE SERVICE
OF THE CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY WHO
AT THE CALL OF KING AND COUNTRY LEFT ALL THAT
WAS DEAR TO THEM, ENDURED HARDSHIP, FACED DANGER
AND FINALLY PASSED OUT OF SIGHT OF MEN BY THE
PATH OF DUTY AND SELF SACRIFICE. GIVING UP THEIR
OWN LIVES THAT OTHERS MIGHT LIVE IN FREEDOM
LET THOSE WHO COME AFTER SEE TO IT
THAT THEIR NAMES BE NOT FORGOTTEN.
1914 YPRES FESTUBERT THE SOMME VIMY HILL 70 1918
PASSCHENDAELE AMIENS CAMBRAI DROCOURT QUEANT MONS
The Canadian Pacific Railway Great War Tablet in the Regina Station was dedicated on April 28, 1922.
To honour those who served and gave their lives during the Great War, the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) erected a series of bronze memorial tablets in over twenty select locations along their railway system and offices in Canada, United States, England and China. The tablet depicts Britannia, the national personification of Britain, as a helmeted female warrior with a lion to her right and a shield at her feet, HMS Lion (Admiral Beatty's flagship during the Battle of Jutland) with airplanes above and a tank in front, Canadian Pacific Steamship RMS Empress of Russia (used during the war as an armed merchant cruiser and transport ship), Canadian troops, and a CPR locomotive in a nod to all those who travelled by train across Canada before heading overseas. The plaque was designed by Archibald Pearce, Chief Engineer's Department, Montreal, with its model and casting by the Bromsgrove Guild at Worcester, England.
| Original location | Current location |
| CPR Office, Saint John, New Brunswick | McAdam Railway Museum, McAdam, New Brunswick |
| Du Palais CPR Station, Quebec City, Quebec | Du Palais CPR Station, Quebec City, Quebec |
| Viger Station, Montreal, Quebec | Exporail, Montreal, Quebec |
| Windsor Station, Montreal, Quebec | Windsor Station, Montreal, Quebec |
| Angus Shops, Montreal, Quebec | CPKC Archives, Calgary, Alberta (in storage) |
| North Toronto Station, Toronto, Ontario | Union Station, Toronto, Ontario |
| West Toronto Station, Toronto, Ontario | unknown |
| North Bay Station, North Bay, Ontario | North Bay Memorial Park, North Bay, Ontario |
| Fort William Union Station, Fort William, Ontario | Thunder Bay Station, Thunder Bay, Ontario |
| Weston Shops, Winnipeg, Manitoba | Weston Shops, Winnipeg, Manitoba |
| Saskatoon Station, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan | Thomas Cook Restaurant, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan |
| Moose Jaw Station, Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan | Old Moose Jaw Station, Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan |
| Regina Station, Regina, Saskatchewan | Casino Regina, Regina, Saskatchewan |
| Calgary Station, Calgary, Alberta | CPKC Headquarters, Calgary, Alberta |
| Calgary Natural Resources Building, Calgary, Alberta | The Military Museums, Calgary, Alberta |
| Edmonton Station, Edmonton Alberta | CPKC Archives, Calgary, Alberta (in storage) |
| Nelson Station, Nelson, British Columbia | Nelson Museum, Archives & Gallery, Nelson, British Columbia |
| Vancouver Station, Vancouver, British Columbia | unknown |
| Steamship Office, Victoria, British Columbia | Royal British Columbia Museum, Victoria, British Columbia |
| CPR Office, New York, New York, United States | Exporail, Montreal, Quebec |
| CPR Office, Liverpool, England | Royal Liver Building, Liverpool, England |
| CPR Building, Charing Cross, London, England | unknown |
| CPR Office, Hong Kong, China | Believed destroyed during the Japanese occupation in the Second World War. |
All tablets were unveiled simultaneously on the same date along with three identical Winged Victory memorials in Montreal, Winnipeg and Vancouver.