At St. Clement's Anglican Church on Jones Avenue, a stained glass window in the south wall of the building was dedicated in memory of brothers Private Stuart Frederick Kerrigan and Lance-Corporal Charles Kerrigan The brothers died in the First World War and the window was dedicated by their father, James Kerrigan.
Charles was born on July 2, 1893, and Stuart was born on March 5, 1894. They grew up in Toronto, Ontario. Charles was a firefighter when he enlisted with the Canadian Expeditionary Force on September 22, 1914. He was a lance-corporal in the 15th Battalion (48th Highlanders). On April 24, 1915, while engaged in St. Julien at the Second Battle of Ypres he lost his life in a gas attack. Stuart was working as a salesman when he enlisted on October 10, 1916. He arrived in Europe after his brother's death, was a private in the 123rd Pioneer Battalion and died after suffering compound fractures to his arms and legs while at Passchendaele on October 21, 1917.
Having outgrown its space for the second time, St. Clement's started a building fund in 1910. A new site on Jones Avenue was purchased in 1911, with the cornerstone for the new building being laid in 1913. The church was disestablished in 2006 and remained abandoned for several years. In 2015, the church was converted into residential space.