Le monument commémoratif des guerriers algonquins a été dédié à tous les guerriers algonquins qui ont servi le Canada en temps de guerre et de paix.
Monument commémoratif des guerriers algonquins
Mon dossier ACC
Mon dossier ACC
Le monument commémoratif des guerriers algonquins a été dédié à tous les guerriers algonquins qui ont servi le Canada en temps de guerre et de paix.
WORLD WAR I 1914 - 1918
WORLD WAR II 1939 - 1945
KOREAN WAR 1950 - 1953
MERCHANT NAVY
PEACE KEEPING FORCES
LEST WE FORGET
IN GRATEFUL
REMEMBRANCE
OF THOSE WHO
SERVED
AND THOSE WHO
DIED
IN ALL OUR PAST
MILITARY CONFLICTS
The Denbigh Cenotaph was dedicated by the Royal Canadian Legion Branch 328 of Northbrook to honour the local citizens who served and died in the name of our country.
(Cairn)
In remembrance of the prarachutists
of 2 Sigs Sqn and 1 RCR who died by
drowning during an air exercise
on 8 May 1968
May God grant their gallntry
will live on in the hearts of their
countrymen
...
(Boulder)
1 RCR 2 SIG SQN AB TP
MWO Reginald Riddell Cpl. Dennis Clements
WO Michael McDonnell Cpl. Hugh Fields
Cpl. Bruce Chiswell Cpl. Bob Knight
Cpl. Jim Misener
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.
Donated by
Family, survivors, fellow jumpers, and friends
For the 50th memorial service of the tragedy
That took the lives of paratroopers
On May 8, 1968
Reflect Reconnect Never Forget
The Wegner Point Fallen Paratroopers Memorial commemorates seven soldiers (4 Signal Corps and 3 Royal Canadian Regiment) who drowned in the Ottawa River on 8 May 1968. Every year on 8 May a memorial service is held at Wegner Point by the members of 2 CMBG Headquarters and Signal Squadron, the 1st and 3rd Battalions of the Royal Canadian Regiment and the Airborne Regiment Association of Canada.
On 8 May 1968 at around 8:30 pm, the worst peacetime Canadian military training accident occurred at Camp Petawawa, 100 miles north-west of Canada’s capital city, Ottawa, Ontario. It was a cold and windy day that 26 paratroopers from the 1st Battalion, The Royal Canadian Regiment from Wollseley Barracks in London, Ontario, and 2 Signals Squadron, were participating in a training jump over Camp Petawawa.
Taking off in three Buffalo transport aircraft from the Bonnechere Airfield, an Air Defence Command auxiliary field, the paratroopers were expected to land in the designated landing zone on the Mattawa Plains within Camp Petawawa. The weather was good and a test dummy dropped earlier indicated no issues for the jumpers. In a tragic fluke, an unexpected wind shear at around 600 feet carried 22 of the paratroopers into the nearby Ottawa River, 1000 feet off shore near Wegner Point.
Weighted down by their heavy equipment and tangled in their parachutes, the soldiers struggled to make it out of the water. Rescue efforts saved all but seven of the soldiers. Some of the bodies weren’t recovered until days later, still entangled in their parachute harnesses.
A memorial cairn was erected at Wegner Point the following July, with the name of paratroopers lost etched on the monument. A wreath-laying ceremony is held each May at the memorial cairn, led by the Canadian Airborne Regiment Association. Serving members of the 1st and 3rd Battalions, Royal Canadian Regiment, and 2 Canadian Mechanized Brigade Group (2CMBG) Headquarters and Signals Squadron, gather alongside retired members and survivors of that horrible day to remember their comrades who never came home.
The seven paratroopers who died on 8 May 1968:
During the 50th Fallen Paratrooper Memorial Service on May 13, 2018 a large boulder inscribed with the names of the fallen, installed next to the cairn, was unveiled. It features the crests of the Royal Canadian Regiment, Signals Squadron and Paratroopers.
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Centre Sportif et aquatique Dundonald Hall Fitness sports and aquatic centre |
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Reopened by: |
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Réouverture: |
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Mr. Hector Cloutier M.P. Renfrew, Nippissing, & Pembroke |
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On behalf of the Minister of National Defence 30 June 2000 |
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Au nom du Ministère de la Défense nationale 30 juin 2000 |
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Design build team: |
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Équipe de construction conception: |
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Westeinde Construction Limited Griffiths, Rankin, Cooke Architects BBS Construction |
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Base Commander: |
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Commandant de la base: |
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Colonel K.C. McLeod, CD |
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Dundonald Hall is named in honour of Lieutenant-General Douglas Mackinnon Baillie Hamilton Cochrane, 12th Earl of Dundonald, KCB, KCVO, the last British officer to command the Canadian militia. The building was originally built in the 1950s but extensively renovated in 2000.
Lieutenant-General Cochrane was born in 1852 and commissioned in the Life Guards in 1870. He served in the Nile Expedition, the Desert March and the Relief of Khartoum in 1885. In 1895, he was appointed Commanding Officer of 2nd Battalion, Life Guards. He served in the Second Boer War where in 1899 he was appointed Commander of the Mounted Brigade, part of the South Natal Field Force. He took part in the Relief of Ladysmith in February 1900. He was appointed General Officer Commanding the Militia of Canada in 1902. He served in the First World War in the British Admiralty Office. Lieutenant-General Cochrane, 12th Earl of Dundonald, died in 1935 at the age of 82.
[dedication palque]
This monument is dedicated to the Gunners of Canada
WW I, WW II, Korea and Afghanistan, Ubique
Various costs associated with the monument were donated in memory of
those fallen Gunners who gave their all for Canada
Lt. W. Turner; Bdr. M. Mansell; Capt. N. Goddard
Capt. J. Francis; Gnr. J. Dion; Bdr. J. Ouellet
Sgt. K. Taylor and Bdr. K. Manning
They shall not grow 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
[explanatory plaque]
M109 Howitzer
The M109 Howitzer was first introduced to Canada in 1967. Developed by the Ground System Division of United Defense LP, the Canadian M109 had a total crew of 10 that consisted of a detachment commander, driver, gunner, assistant gunner, and two ammunition handlers. Additionally, the M109 was accompanied by an ammunition vehicle, the M548, which included the detachment second in command, two more ammunition handlers as well as the driver.
The M109 and its subsequent variations is the most common western indirect-fire support weapon of maneuver brigades of armored and mechanized infantry divisions. In Canada, the M109 was in service by the Canadian Armed Forces until 2005 with the last rounds being fired at CFB Petawawa in April 2005. The M109A4 and other M109 variations were replaced in Canada by the 155mm howitzer M777 which is still in use today.
Internationally, the M109 saw its combat debut in Vietnam.
Ce monument est dédié aux artilleurs du Canada.
Petawawa
Veterans Bridge- Dedicated
to the McConnell
brothers
who served in
World War II
with various units.
All seven returned home.
Lorne – RCE
James – CPC
Alexander – CFC
Sydney – RCE
Clifford – RCASC
Edward – RCAF
Reginald – RCASC
Le pont des vétérans a été ouvert à Petawawa en 2006; il est dédié aux frères McConnell qui vivaient ici et qui ont combattu au cours de la Seconde Guerre mondiale.
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Canadian Military Engineers Génie militaire canadien |
Professional Engineers Ontario |
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Presented to the / Présenté au
Canadian Military Engineers of CFB Petawawa, Ontario To commemorate the 100th Anniversary of dedicated Military Engineering for Canada
Génie militaire canadien de la BFC de Petawawa, Ontario Pour commémorer un siècle de Génie militaire dévoué au Canada |
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2004 February 20 / 20 février 2004 Chalk River, Ontario, Canada |
Algonquin Chapter Professional Engineers Ontario |
Cette plaque a été dévoilée pour marquer le 100e anniversaire du Génie militaire canadien (GMC) et commémorer un siècle de services rendus au Canada.
FESTUBERT BLVD
Ce boulevard est nommé en l’honneur des soldats qui ont combattu à la bataille de Festubert, a constitué le deuxième engagement majeur au combat des troupes canadiennes lors de la Première Guerre mondiale.
[front/devant]
DEDICATED TO THE MEMORY
OF THE MEN AND WOMEN
OF THIS TOWNSHIP
WHO HELPED PRESERVE
A FREE NATION
WORLD WAR I 1914 - 1918
WORLD WAR II 1939 - 1945
KOREAN WAR 1950 - 1953
LEST WE FORGET
[back/arrière]
IN MEMORY OF THOSE
WHO MADE THE SUPREME SACRIFICE
WORLD WAR I
HUGH ED BROWNLEE
DONALD COFFEE
ARNOLD DAVIDSON
LYLE G. DOUGHERTY
LOUIS ETHIER
LEMOINE GERVAIS
GEORGE L. GRAHAM
VERNON GRAHAM
WILLIS HOWARD
JOHN McGONEGAL
WILLIAM R. MUCKLE
JAMES PATTERSON
HAROLD G. SMITH
WALTER THOMPSON
WORLD WAR II
CLINTON B. BERRY
WILLIAM BLACKMORE
GERALD BROMLEY
WELDON CARNEGIE
WILSON COSTELLO
WESLEY G. DAVIDSON
STEWART ECKFORD
CARSON FOY
WARRINGTON FOY
EDWARD GERVAIS
HARRY GERVAIS
RENAUD GERVAIS
FRANCIS HARNEY
ELMER S. KENNY
J. IRWIN LABOW
KENNETH LADEROUTE
NEIL LAFRENIER
LYLE LAMKIE
HAILEN LAPORTE
JOHN MELLISH
ELMER MUTTON
SYDNEY PRESCOTT
MERVIN ROBINSON
GORDON ROLLINS
ROBERT H. WILSON
Le samedi 9 août 1997, les citoyens du village de Westmeath se sont rassemblés pour se souvenir des 39 militaires du village tombés au combat au cours des trois dernières guerres.
Les deux frères sont inscrits sur ce cénotaphe, Carson and Warrington Foy, les fils de John et Mabel Foy. Ils périrent tous deux lors de la Seconde Guerre mondiale, à seulement quelques semaines d’intervalle, à la suite d’incidents de tirs amis. Deux Croix du Souvenir furent envoyées à la famille (une pour chaque fils), mais elles furent égarées au fil du temps. À l’automne 2010, elles ont été retrouvées sur le site de ventes eBay, puis préparées pour une exposition définitive au Westmeath Hall.
List of names of men who left our employment and enlisted for active service:
| Matthew Costello | |
| George Ironmonger | |
| John Ironmonger | |
| Fred Lapointe | |
| Michael Narlock | (killed in action) |
| Thomas Narlock | |
| Robert Ritchie | |
| Robert Shore | |
| John Villemaire | |
| Joseph Zyvitski |
La publication Canada’s Aid to the Allies and Peace Memorial comprend un tableau d’honneur de la Première Guerre mondiale de Renfrew Knitting Co. Ltd.
Canada’s Aid to the Allies and Peace Memorial (Éd. Frederic Yorston, Montreal Standard Publishing Company) est une revue de 152 pages qui se consacre aux différentes provinces, personnes et entreprises qui ont aidé la cause des Alliés au cours de la Première Guerre mondiale. Elle fut publiée peu après la fin de la Première Guerre mondiale, et la majorité des annonces qu’elle renfermait étaient pour des entreprises dans la région de Montréal et quelques industries importantes du Canada.
Bibliothèque et Archives Canada et la Société de l’histoire des familles du Québec (SHFQ) en possèdent des copies.