This plaque represents the coat of arms of the Royal Engineers who founded and surveyed the city from 1859 - 1863.
Coat of Arms of the Royal Engineers
(needs further research/recherche incomplète)
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This plaque represents the coat of arms of the Royal Engineers who founded and surveyed the city from 1859 - 1863.
(needs further research/recherche incomplète)
Opened in 1896, the Armoury has served military and community needs, in war and in peace, throughout its life. The home of the Royal Westminster Regiment, the Armoury has been the site of such varied events as early city basketball games, vegetable exhibitions, a dinner for Winston Churchill, gala celebrations, and an emergency supply centre after the City's Great Fire of 1898. Its military obligations encompass conflicts from the Boer War to the present including peacekeeping throughout the world.
This sixty-four pounder muzzle-loader was once mounted in the Gun Room of the Armoury to be used in the defence of the City. It is a Sea-Service weapon from the lower gundeck of a line-of-battleship. For Land-Service, apart from static use in a fort, it would need a very heavy wheeled carriage for mobility.
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This remarkably resilient wooden building is referred to as "The Armouries" by members of the Royal Westminster Regiment. The Armoury proudly served as the headquarters for the Regiment through the first and second World Wars and continues to do so today. In addition, the building houses the Regimental Museum. In 1895 contractor David Bain, using plans drawn up by Dominion Government Engineer F.C. Gamble, began work on this building. The building was completed in 1896 but the finishing touch was the construction of the Gun Room in 1898. The building's Richardsonian Romanesque architectural style is thought to be based on the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition Building of 1876. The founding of the Regiment dates back to 1863. During the Second World War the men of the Westminster Regiment saw more combat than any other Canadian fighting unit. In recognition of outstanding service Queen Elizabeth bestowed the title "Royal" upon the Regiment in 1966.
THE WORLD'S LARGEST TIN SOLDIER
The Royal Engineers, Columbia Detachment, founded, surveyed, and laid out the City of New Westminster. This Tin Soldier looks out over the Fraser River where the first soldiers set ashore. The detachment of Royal Engineers were instrumental in laying the foundations for law and order, communication routes, communities, government services, and more, during their time here: 1859 to 1863.
The Soldier stands as a replica of a Sergeant Major with his distinctive scarlet tunic, blue trousers with wide red stripes and most noteworthy his red gold-trimmed pill-box hat.
The Soldier was completed as a highlight of the Royal Christmas Festival in New Westminster in support of the Simon Fraser Society for Community Living and their programs for children with special needs and adults with disabilities. Unveiled on November 29, 2000 adjacent to the Armoury of The Royal Westminster Regiment at 6th Street and Queens Avenue, it was moved here and rededicated on February 14, 2002. A time capsule was placed within the Soldier to be opened in 2025.
Built as a labour of love by the joint efforts of the Sheet Metal Workers International Association Local Union 280 and the BC Sheet Metal Association (SMACNA-BC) for the benefit of The Simon Fraser Society for Community Living. The Soldier is 32 feet tall, weighs 5 tons and was fabricated using materials to last 100 years or more.
A 32-foot high “Tin Man” statue weighing 5 tons stands guard at Westminster Quay in New Westminster, BC in tribute to the Royal Engineers. Unveiled at a public ceremony in November 2000, this stylized Royal Engineer figure recognizes the work of the Royal Engineers in founding the first city built in western Canada as well as their laying the foundations for law and order, communication routes, communities and government services in the new colony of British Columbia.
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There are several Canadian geographical names that honour the ‘sapper’. Sapperton is a neighbourhood of New Westminister, BC that owes its name to the original Royal Engineers’ camp when they were occupied with the early mapping and development of this part of Canada in the 1860s.
[front/devant]
DEDICATED TO THE MEMORY OF
THE MEN AND WOMEN
OF THE ARMED FORCES
WHO SERVED THEIR COUNTRY
THIS COMMUNITY MEMORIAL
WAS DEDICATED BY
THE ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION
BRANCH 263
DISTRICT OF COQUITLAM
OCT. 21, 1972
"TO YOU FROM FAILING HANDS
WE THROW THE TORCH
BE YOURS TO HOLD IT HIGH
IF YE BREAK FAITH WITH US
WHO DIE WE SHALL NOT SLEEP"
LEST WE FORGET
The Blue Mountain Cenotaph, located in Blue Mountain Park, was unveiled on October 21, 1972, in memory of the men and women of the Armed Forces who served their Country.
[plaque/plaque]
OUR HONOURED DEAD
1914 - 1918
[First column/première colonne]
ASHWORTH HENRY
AITKEN WILLIAM
ALLISON W. RODERICK
ANNADALE T.S. JR
ANDERSON G. F.
ANDERSON ROBERT G.
ANDERSON WILLIAM
ANDERSON ROBERT A.
AITCHESON JOSEPH
ADAMSKI S.
ANGELO A.
ABBOTT V.H.C.
BRODERICK J.B.
BOWDEN CHRIS.
BARBER GEO. R.
BRUCE JOHN
BUNDY L.
BARNES A.
BLACKMORE CHAS.
BEATTLE REG.
BURNETT HARRY
BRISTOW SAMUEL
BOWDEN FRED
BATEMAN M.G.
BURR W.R.
BUTCHER ALFRED J
BOYD JOHN
BRISTOWE FRANK L.
BRUCE A.M.
BIRT G.W.
BUCHAN G.W.
BUCKLY S.C.
BOWER W.A.
BOWER W.A.
BATE DOUGLAS S.
BERNAYS L.A.
BLAIR J.F.
CARPENTER F.H.G.
CALLAHAN J.
COOK J.E.
CAMPBELL K.M.
CURTIS T.D.
CRAIGHEAD W.J.P.
[Second column/deuxième colonne]
CLITHEROE PERCY
CREIGHTON A.R.
CHESSELL FRED
CANNING GEORGE
CLAPP CHAS. E.
COLLINS GERALD
CHURCH NORMAN
CAMERON JAS. S.
CARRUTHERS W.B.
CLARKE R.M.
CLEGHORN W.S.
CALMAN WM.
CORBETT E.C.
CURTIS LESLIE W.
CUNNINGHAM F.B.
CONNOLY T.A.
CAPLE L.N.
CRANDELL JAS. G.
CULLINGTON ART. H.
CAMPBELL HUGH
CALLANAN J.
COUTU THOMAS
COMBE R.W.
DAY W.M.L.
DUNFORD E.T.
DALLEY G.
DENNISTON JAS.
BEACON C.H.
DAY WM.
DAILEY ALFRED T.
DOUGLASS WALLACE
EASTMAN EDWIN F.
EDGAR ROBERT
FERGUSON T.
FOSTER JOHN A.
FELL R.J.
FOURISTER ROBERT
FLUMERFELT E.
FORREST LEONARD
GORDON OLIVER
GORDON G.C.
GORDON W.
[Third column/troisième colonne]
GAUDIN H.E.
GYOTOKU TOMOKI
GREVENY WM. K.
GOUGH E.B.
GUNN B.B.
GRAY ALFRED
GRAY L.
GRAY JOHN A.
GRAY T.
GLAUSTONE ROBERT
HARPER J.A.
HEPWORTH A.H.
HAPPER A.D.
HAWKES H.
HUME ARTHUR E.
HARRIS FRED
HARRIS H.
HUNTER JOHN W.
HAMILTON WILLIAM
HUGGARD KEN H.
HENDERSON JOHN
HARVIE H.
HURDORD C.H.
ISHIHARA IUDO
IRVIN CHAS. A.
IRVINE E.
JAMES ALBERT
JONES HUGH L.
JAGGER HERB.
JAGGER LOUIS
JOHNSON HENRY C.
JAMES JOSEPH
KELLY WILLIAM
KELLY FRANK W.
KETCHER BERT
KNOX MATTHEW
KENNY N.
KEARY WM. O'B.
KEAN STANLEY W.
LEVY ALFRED J.
LESLIE W.
LINN J. McK.
"THEIR NAME LIVETH FOR EVERMORE"
[plaque/plaque]
OUR HONOURED DEAD
1939 - 1945
[A list of names follows, but is not clear in the photo./Une liste de noms suit, mais le texte n’est pas clair sur la photo.]
[plaque/plaque]
24 POUNDER FIELD HOWITZERS
THESE TWO GUNS ARRIVED IN NEW WESTMINSTER IN 1866
ON BOARD THE HMS SPARROWHAWK.
THEY WERE USED FOR TRAINING LOCAL DEFENSE
UNTIL 1873 BY THE SEYMOUR ARTILLERY COMPANY,
A PREDECESSOR OF
THE ROYAL WESTMINSTER REGIMENT.
RESTORATION OF THE GUNS COMPLETED IN 2004 BY
THE ROYAL WESTMINSTER REGIMENT HISTORICAL SOCIETY
THANKS TO MAJOR SPONSORS
THEY CITY OF NEW WESTMINSTER
AND
THE MILLENNIUM COMMITTEE
[plaque/plaque]
ERECTED BY
THE PEOPLE OF
NEW WESTMINSTER
IN
GRATEFUL MEMORY
OF THOSE
WHO SERVED
KING AND COUNTRY
IN THE GREAT WAR OF
1914 - 1918
1939 - 1945
[Plaque/plaque]
KOREAN CONFLICT
1950 - 1953
[Plaque/plaque]
CANADIAN MERCHANT NAVY
MARINE MARCHANDE CANADIENNE
1914 - 18 1939 - 45 1950 - 53
THE
LIFE LINE
OF THE
WORLD
POUR LA
SURVIE
DU MONDE
LIBRE
[Plaque/plaque]
IN RECOGNITION OF THE
50TH ANNIVERSARY OF V. E. DAY
DEDICATED ON MAY 7TH 1995
TO THE
ROYAL WESTMINSTER REGIMENT
MEMBERS WHO VOLUNTEER
AS PEACE KEEPERS
IN
THE TROUBLED WORLD
This memorial, located in Memorial Plaza, commemorates members of the Armed Services and Merchant Navy who gave their lives in the service of Canada. The cenotaph was unveiled in 1922 near the corner of McBride Boulevard and Columbia St. Later it was moved close to the entrance to the Pattullo Bridge, and then to its current location when this City Hall was built. Included are names from the First World War, the Second World War, Korea, Merchant Navy, and Peacekeeping Members. Recently the area has been completely renovated and two cannons from 1866 were added. www.royal-westies-assn.ca
IN MEMORY OF 1701 MEN OF THE CANADIAN
BANK OF COMMERCE WHO SERVED IN
THE GREAT WAR 1914-1918
IN MEMORY OF 1701 MEN OF THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE
WHO SERVED IN THE GREAT WAR 1914-1918
GNR R.J. BEATTY
LT W. BRUCE
GNR F.R. DUNCANSON
2ND LT G.B. PINLAY
3 PTE A.G.H. GODWIN
GNR W.K. GOODING
*PL CADET R.W.R. LITCHFIELD
CAPT A.B.F. LLOYD
C S.M.W. MURRAY
LT J.A. MCGREGOR MC MM
DVR E.G. SHADWELL
GNR R. TAYLOR
LT J.C.E. WALKER
NEW WESTMINSTER
BRANCH
In addition to the monument at its head office in Toronto, the Canadian Bank of Commerce honoured employees from each branch who served in the First World War. This plaque was commissioned shortly after the war and dedicated to the bank's 1701 employees who served in the war, 321 laid down their lives. The names of 13 employees of the New Westminster Canadian Bank of Commerce who served in the war are listed on the plaque.
The plaque features the caduceus logo of the bank - two snakes winding around a winged staff at the upper left, and two poppies intertwined with a symbolic olive branch at the lower right. The Canadian Bank of Commerce went to great lengths to commemorate its staff that served in the war including a two-volume book of staff profiles and accounts of their war experiences.
[left stele]
SHALOM BRANCH 178
ROYAL CANADIAN
LEGION
VANCOUVER BC
[center stele]
ERECTED BY
GRATEFUL COMRADES
FOR THE MEMORY
OF ALL THOSE
WHO SERVED
IN CANADIAN
ARMED FORCES
AND NOW
LIE IN PEACE
WWI 1914-1918
WWII 1939-1945
KOREA 1950-1953
[right stele]
JEWISH
WAR VETERANS
OF CANADA
VANCOUVER BC
LEST WE FORGET WE WILL REMEMBER THEM
The Schara Tzedeck Cemetery War Memorial was dedicated on November 4, 1990. It was erected in memory of all those who served in the Canada's Armed Forces.
Shawnigan Lake School was founded in 1916 by Christopher Windley Lonsdale in a then-secluded west coast rainforest on Vancouver Island. The first register of Shawnigan Lake School is dated April 27, 1916. As the years passed, Shawnigan withstood two world wars, economic crises and changing approaches to education to forge a place as one of the country's leading boarding schools.
In 1953, the Shawnigan Lake School War Memorial Society and the Old Boys Committee constructed two tennis courts at the school known as the War Memorial Tennis Courts. In March 1953, the Honourable Clarence Wallace C.B.E., Lieutenant-Governor of British Columbia presented a roll of honour to the school with the names of 42 Old Boys of Shawnigan killed on active service in the war of 1939-45. The Roll of Honour is in permanent display in the Chapel.