Needs further research
Forest Grove Cenotaph
[front plaque/plaque frontale]
IN MEMORY OF THOSE
WHO HAVE GIVEN THEIR
LIVES IN THE SERVICE
OF THEIR COUNTRY
WE WILL REMEMBER THEM
My VAC Account
My VAC Account[front plaque/plaque frontale]
IN MEMORY OF THOSE
WHO HAVE GIVEN THEIR
LIVES IN THE SERVICE
OF THEIR COUNTRY
WE WILL REMEMBER THEM
Needs further research
[plaque]
IN REMEMBRANCE
1914 - 1918
1939 - 1945
KOREA
"LEST WE FORGET"
Needs further research
[upper plaque/plaque du haut]
LEST WE FORGET
1914-1918
1939-1945
KOREA
ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION
BRANCH 260
[lower plaque/plaque du bas]
DEDICATED
11-11-93
VILLAGE OF 100 MILE HOUSE MAYOR RAY CARLSON
100 MILE HOUSE COMMUNITY CLUB PRES. DOT VERBOOM
LEGION BRANCH 260 PRES C. ALLAIR, PADRE D. JONES, G. BALOC - W. KIELER
This memorial was dedicated on 11 November 1993 in memory of the First and Second World Wars and the Korean War. It was erected by Royal Canadian Legion Branch No. 260.
Lest we forget
The Royal Canadian legion Branch 83 Burnaby commissioned a mural in 2019. The mural reminds the community of sacrifices made by members of the armed forces. The mural features a soldier from the Great War, World War II, Korean War and Afghanistan. The mural is set in the clouds above a graveyard covered in poppies. The mural was painted by Ela Mafteir and Mihar Dorvesa.
[street sign/plaque de rue]
SAPPERTON AVE
This street was named in honour of the "Sapper".
LEST WE
FORGET
THEY DIED THAT
1914-18
1939-45
WE MIGHT LIVE
KOREA
1950-53
Built in 1953 by stonemason and First World War Veteran Walter Holmes Morrice, the cenotaph was erected by the North Burnaby Legion Post No. 148. It remains as one of four memorials to Burnaby's war dead.
The granite cairn and brass plaques were designed by Legion member F.J. Brisdon. Legion members volunteered to clear the park of stumps and brush, then filled and landscaped the memorial site. An impressive dedication on Remembrance Day 1953 has been faithfully followed with an annual ceremony. The cenotaph now forms an important landmark near the sports oval and was designated as a heritage site by Council in 1992.
IN MEMORY OF
OUR FALLEN COMRADES
WORLD WAR I 1914 1918
WORLD WAR II 1939 1945
KOREA 1950 1953
THEY SHALL NOT GROW OLD
AS WE WHO ARE LEFT GROW OLD.
AGE SHALL NOT WEARY THEM
NOR TIME CONDEMN.
AT THE GOING DOWN OF THE SUN
AND IN THE MORNING
WE WILL REMEMBER THEM.
THIS CENOTAPH IS DEDICATED TO
THE VETERANS OF CANADA BY
THE ARMY, NAVY, AND AIR FORCE VETERANS IN CANADA.
POMPIER UNIT 314. BURNABY, B.C.
Constructed in 1988 in memory of Canadian Veterans and war dead of the First and Second World Wars, and Korea.
Memorial consists of a Cedar log standing vertically with large fieldstone memorial and plaque. Memorial erected in 2004 to memorialize those pararescuemen/ Rescue specialists/ Search and Rescue Technicians who had lost their lives in Service, That Others May Live. The course number for each member lost is presented. Since first erected, 4 course numbers have been added. Access to the Camp is restricted.
Honouring ALL peace officers
who have died in the line of duty.
May their brave spirits soar.
We give thanks for them,
and for all who still protect and serve.
Unvieled July 4, 2008
Maythorpe Fallen Four Memorial Society
The Fallen Four Memorial recognizes the risks that peace officers take every day and in particular, honours the ultimate sacrifice of four young Royal Canadian Mounted Police officers who were killed in the line of duty on March 3, 2005, Constables Peter Schiemann, Leo Johnston, Brock Myrol and Anthony Gordon. It was unveiled on July 4, 2008, by the Maythorpe Fallen Four Memorial Society.
The four statues, each a life-size likeness of one of the fallen officers, were created by renowned bronze sculptor Don Begg of Studio West Bronze Foundry Ltd. in July 2008. Each statue is a highly detailed, realistic portrait in uniform and stature. They are in the four positions of readiness, standing back-to-back, around a 24 feet obelisk. The doves, flying skyward from atop the obelisk, are a tribute to all serving peace officers.
needs further research/recherche incomplète
The Colonel James Macleod Statue was conceived by retired Royal Canada Mounted Police officers Gus Buziak and Walter Sedler. They were on their way to an Royal Canadian Mounted Police veterans' meeting when they had the idea of the statue as a centennial gift from former Mounties to Calgary. The Macleod statue was unveiled on September 1, 2005. At the ceremony, Royal Canadian Mounted Police Commissioner Giuliano Zaccardelli announced that a second casting of the statue would be erected in Ottawa. The statue was created by renowned bronze sculptors Don and Shirley Begg of Studio West Bronze Foundry Ltd. Colonel Macleod is depicted in a commissioner uniform of the North-West Mounted Police and sitting on his horse.
Three panels, each telling a story of the land and its people, sit atop the rocks surrounding the statue of Colonel Macleod. Titled Innai'tsiyiyaawa, which is Blackfoot for "They Made Treaty," the exhibit puts Chief Crowfoot and the Blackfoot people at the center of narratives about the lands at Fort Calgary and the signing of Treaty 7. The land was a natural gathering place to hunt, trade and hold ceremonies. With its natural topography and social significance, it was where the North-West Mounted Police built Fort Calgary in 1875. The panels were created by artist Sikapinakii Low Horn.
Colonel James Macleod was born in Scotland, but moved to Canada with his family when he was around nine years old. The Macleods’ friendship with a family of local Ojibwa gave James a lifelong respect and admiration for the Indigenous peoples of Canada. His fairness and compassion shaped the North-West Mounted Police, which eventually became the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, and set the pattern for justice in Western Canada. Historians give him much of the credit for the comparatively peaceful and orderly settlement of the region. He treated Indigenous people as equals, and when he could, blended their traditional justice with the British justice. In those days, a lot of military officers and Mounted Police officers were British. They would buy their commissions and ruled by fear. They didn’t command by respect. Macleod was a man ahead of his time and governed by respect. He had to get past the rigid British traditions to accomplish what he did.
In the summer of 1856, he joined the Volunteer Militia Field Battery of Kingston as a lieutenant. In 1860, James passed his bar examinations at Osgoode Hall. He transferred to the Bowmanville Volunteer Militia Rifle Company in 1862 and was promoted to captain in 1863 and major in 1866. James saw active service during the Trent affair in 1861 and the Fenian raids of 1866. In 1870, Macleod obtained a commission as brigade major with the expedition under Colonel Garnet Joseph Wolseley sent to quell the uprising in the Red River settlement, Manitoba. His leadership during the expedition earned him praise from his commanding officer as well as a CMG. He remained with the Canadian militia force at Lower Fort Garry until the spring of 1871. Macleod was promoted to lieutenant-colonel in the 45th Battalion of Infantry in December 1871. In the spring of 1873, he became the superintendent and inspector in the newly established North-West Mounted Police.
In the summer of 1875, Inspector Éphrem-A. Brisebois travelled to the Bow River to build a second major outpost, Fort Brisebois, subsequently renamed Fort Calgary (Calgary) by Macleod. There’s a Calgary, a hamlet, that exists on the Isle of Mull, Scotland. That Calgary had a nice beach and it drew Macleod there one summer when he was visiting and provided the inspiration for the name in Canada. Fort Macleod in southern Alberta and Macleod Trail, a major road in Calgary were named after Colonel Macleod.
Macleod was assistant commissioner, and later commissioner, of the newly formed North-West Mounted Police. He had a distinguished career as a magistrate and judge, serving first in Fort Macleod. He was appointed a justice of the Supreme Court of the Northwest Territories in 1893, but died a few months after moving to Calgary. He is buried in the city’s Union Cemetery.