Editorial: On remembering

Canada has a long history of respect and remembrance for citizens who served and fell in war. In fact it was a poem by Canadian physician John McCrae that first made the poppy an enduring symbol of remembrance, with the moving opening line: “In Flanders Fields the poppies grow, between the crosses row on row.”

Local residents (l to r) Ross McMillan, Bill Morrow, Chris Monk and Derek Jackson — who also serve on the local cemetery board — are committed to maintaining the community’s war memorial.

Remembering the men of Margaret

Residents of this small southwestern Manitoba village 
continue to attend to the care of their war memorial

Pale November sunlight glints off the cold red granite where their names are inscribed. They were farm boys, seven sons of Margaret families, who never returned home to their small southwestern Manitoba village a century ago. Sgt. William David McKellar’s name is on this monument. He died in a sea of blood-soaked mud October 26,


After 1918 about 100 communities chose to honour their fallen with a sculpture in Carrara marble. Manitoba has one of the highest concentrations of these soldier statues in Canada. A new book documents 18 of the 33 its author counted in this province.

Our stone soldiers

A new book Remembered in Bronze and Stone profiles 130 of Canada’s bronze and stone Great War memorials, including many of these century-old heritage sites found across rural Manitoba

It has been nearly a century since Foxwarren’s stone soldier began his vigil in this tiny western Manitoba village. The war memorial where he stands bears the names of 15 local young men who died in the Great War of 1914 to 1918. These stone soldier statues are a familiar sight in Manitoba, and notably

Canadian soldier

Operation Ag Careers to launch in 2016

An on-line resource encourages Canadian Armed Forces retirees to eye a second career in agriculture

A pilot project being launched early this year aims to put some muscle behind the notion of farming with ‘military precision.’ Operation Ag Careers is targeting the thousands of men and women retiring from the armed forces every year as potential recruits for the thousands of jobs available in agriculture. The joint project of the