The Paddockwood Cenotaph was erected by the Paddockwood Royal Canadian Legion Branch 31. There are 375 names on the Cenotaph in Dorothy School in the Forest Gate area.
Paddockwood Cenotaph
My VAC Account
My VAC Account
The Paddockwood Cenotaph was erected by the Paddockwood Royal Canadian Legion Branch 31. There are 375 names on the Cenotaph in Dorothy School in the Forest Gate area.
|
Rank |
Given Names |
Surname |
|
Pte |
William Harold |
Elkins |
|
Gnr |
Kenneth Arthur |
Ferguson |
|
Cpl |
Perry William |
Head |
|
Tpr |
Stephen |
Holdstock |
|
Pte |
Clarence |
Lloyd |
|
Bdr |
Philip Arthur |
McGunigal |
|
Pte |
John Philip |
Miller |
|
Tpr |
Terence Timothy |
O'Riordan |
|
OS |
Roy Norman |
Peddie |
|
Pte |
Lorne Gibson |
Shewfelt |
|
Pte |
William |
Thomson |
|
Pte |
Ovila |
Toutant |
Arborfield cenotaph consists of a shaft on a platform. It was built to honor the soldiers who gave their lives in battle. The Dutch Canadian Friendship tulip garden is planted nearby.
The Dutch-Canadian Friendship Tulip Garden was erected in 2015 in partnership with Arborfield Legion Branch 203 and Communities in Bloom (CIB). Volunteers planted an interlaced pattern of red and white tulip bulbs in the garden beds surrounding the Memorial. The blooms will offer a visual reminder next spring of the link between the two countries.
Arborfield was one of the 140 communities selected from the more than 400 applications received by the Canadian Garden Council. Each of the 140 new 70th Anniversary Dutch-Canadian Friendship Tulip Gardens across the country will consist of 700 red and white tulip bulbs (350 of each colour) donated by Vesey’s Bulbs in Prince Edward Island.
Prince Albert was one of the 140 communities selected from the more than 400 applications received by the Canadian Garden Council. The garden was erected by Bancroft Horticultural Society. Each of the 140 new 70th Anniversary Dutch-Canadian Friendship Tulip Gardens across the country will consist of 700 red and white tulip bulbs (350 of each colour) donated by Vesey’s Bulbs in Prince Edward Island.
The Garden was planted in fall 2015. Tulip bulbs generally bloom between the end of April and the beginning of June depending on the type of tulip and where it’s planted.
The memorial is dedicated as a living monument in recognition of the 70th Anniversary of the original Dutch-Canadian Friendship Tulip Garden planted in Ottawa at the end of World War II in 1945. The memorial is in appreciation of the safe haven that members of Holland’s exiled royal family received during World War II, and in recognition of the role Canadian troops played in the liberation of the Netherlands.
[top plaque/plaque du haut]
WE DEDICATE THIS MEMORIAL TO
THOSE WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES IN
WORLD WAR II
ALFRED SAMPSON
ARTHUR BRUNELLE
WALTER GILLROY
JAMES SPENCER
LORNE SMYTHE JR.
OLIVER FRIGON
MIKE ROMANCHUK
LORENZO PELLERIN
JOSEPH JONES
GILBERT SCRIVEN
CHARLIE BIRD
GEORGE VON ESCHEN
OVID LEBLANC
[bottom plaque/plaque du bas]
ERECTED JULY 1985
BY THE ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION
BRANCH 225
WITH ASSISTANCE FROM
SASKATCHEWAN HERITAGE
Needs further research
THEY SHALL GROW NOT OLD
AS WE THAT ARE LEFT GROW OLD
AGE SHALL NOT WEARY THEM
NOR THE YEARS CONDEMN
AT THE GOING DOWN OF THE SUN
AND IN THE MORNING
WE WILL REMEMBER THEM
DEDICATED BY THE PEOPLE OF NIPAWIN IN SOLEMN PRIDE
TO OUR COMPATRIOTS WHO LAID SO COSTLY
A SACRIFICE UPON THE ALTAR OF FREEDOM
Needs further research
Harold Armitage
William Armstrong
Louis G.H. Brown
Frederick Clarke Lester E. Curry
Robert E. Davidson
Horace E. Day
Leonard F. Gouldsmith
Allen J. Hunter
Harry Huartson
George Mitchell
William F. Paisley
Thomas N. Robinson
Lloyd Schaefer
Edward Wilmot
Norman Wilmot
Stanley Gwynn
George Venables
The War Memorial was erected in 1930, in memory of the local boys who made the supreme sacrifice in the First World War. This monument was originally constructed west of Codette, the location at that time was known as Mac's Corners. Then in 1964 the monument was moved into Codette, Saskatchewan and placed close to the Legion Branch #275.
THESE ENTRANCE GATES
WERE ERECTED IN 1988 THROUGH THE GENEROSITY OF THE
ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION BRANCH NO. 2
Needs further research
[front/devant]
TO ALL THOSE WHO DIED FOR FREEDOM ESPECIALLY THE MEN OF SHELLBROOK AND THE SURROUNDING DISTRICT
1914 - 1918
KOREA
1950 - 1953
[west side/côté ouest]
J. B. AUGUSTA
B.B. ANDERSON
T.H. BRYDEN
J. BROWN
P. BECK
D. BLACK
C.L. CAMPBELL
J. CAMERON
W.H. DENFOR
J. FURBANK
W.J. GREEN
E.L. GREEN
W. GOODWIN
P.J. GOUDAL
F. GRIFFIN
H. HAYDOCK
J.R. HEAP
H. HANGER
A. HASLEP
L. HOOPHER
H. HENSLEIGH
J. DRUGEL
W. KEATING
A. SMITH
[east side/côté est]
T. LOFTHOUSE
J. LOFTHOUSE
N. MORTON
E. NELSON
P.H. PAINTER
J. PIERCE
R. SOTHERLAN
D.L. GREEN
P.H. MOORE
J. MILNE
T. MARTIN
C.H. STERLING
A.J. SPARKS
P. SKOOTE
J.A. STUART
R. SCOTT
O. SOBERG
T. TAYLOR
C. WILLIAMS
W. HATCH
E. WABE
E. TAYLOR
T. SWIFT
A. MIDDLEMISS
[south side/côté sud]
1939-1945
R.G.S. ANDERSON
H.E. ANDERSON
S. ANDERSON
H. ALLEN
S. BRYDEN
K. BLACK
E. CHEESMAN
L. GRAHAM
G. HEWITT
E. LANES
T.D. MATHEWS
N. MASSEY
J. SMITH
W. WILKSON
R.G.H. FISHER
F.T. MORRISON
L. MILLER
[honour roll names not on cenotaph/noms figurant au tableau d’honneur, mais non sur le cénotaphe]
G.R. CANFIELD
G. CORNWELL
S. CLARKE
G. HALLIDAY
M. LAYCOCK
D. OLSVICK
L. ROBERTS
J. VAN DE VEEN
Erected in October 1923 by the Town of Shellbrook, and the Royal Canadian Legion, this memorial was originally dedicated to all Canadian war dead, in particular those from Shellbrook and area. The property for the Memorial was on the east corner of Main Street and 2nd Ave. East in Shellbrook and was owned by the Canadian National Railway. The property had a slough hole to a depth of six feet, this required filling. Shellbrook Municipality donated one hundred and fifty dollars to purchase the lot. The Town of Shellbrook owned the adjacent lot and donated and three hundred dollars to the Legion. Subscriptions were received from the public as well. The memorial was erected in October 1923 on a six foot concrete base that rested on the original ground, then dirt fill was hauled in to level the property. Construction took place soon after in an impressive ceremony with all the Local Church Clergy, the militia, school children and the public. The memorial was later expanded to commemorate the losses of the Second World War and the Korean War. The Legion Memorial Cenotaph was turned over to the Town of Shellbrook as a permanent Memorial to those who lost their lives in the First and Second World Wars.
[front/devant]
IN MEMORY OF THOSE WHO FELL AND IN HONOUR OF THOSE WHO SERVED
1914-1918
1939-1945
ERECTED BY CITIZENS OF THIS COMMUNITY UNDER AUSPICES OF CANADIAN LEGION B.E.S.L. AND ROTARY CLUB OF CARROT RIVER
[side/côté]
WE WILL REMEMBER THEM
[back/arrière]
1955 SASKATCHEWAN GOLDEN JUBILEE
[side/côté]
LEST WE FORGET
Erected by the town of Carrot River in 1955, through the initiative of the Rotary Club and Royal Canadian Legion, this memorial is dedicated to the local war dead and veterans of the First and Second World Wars.
[plaque/plaque]
THEY SHALL GROW NOT OLD AS WE THAT ARE LEFT GROW OLD
1914-1918
BACON R.
BACON W.
CODLING W.
COOLIDGE S.
CROMARTIE D.
DRAKE P.
EWART R.
FISHER G.
GRANT G.
HOUNSELL P.
MOTHERWELL A.
REID H.
STEVENS P.
SUMMERFIELD J.
1939-1945
BIRD B.
BRAGER L.
CHRISTOPHERSON C.
CUNNINGHAM M.
FAGRIE H.
FISHER K.
KINGSLEY W.
MACFIE J.
MANSON P.
MCDONALD W.
MCLENNAN J.
MCNABB G.
MELBY P.
MOTHERWELL D.
ORTON N.
SHANNON I.
TAYLOR J.
VOCHELL E.
WILDEY N.
WOOD W.
YOUNG M.
WE WILL REMEMBER THEM
Erected by Royal Canadian Legion Branch No. 122, this memorial is dedicated to the local war dead of the First and Second World Wars.