Second Lieutenant Douglas Paton Mcrae Brown Plaque

Toronto, Ontario
Type
Other

The Bank of Ottawa was established in 1874 and amalgamated with the Bank of Nova Scotia on April 30, 1919. By the time The Great War had ended, 188 staff members of the Bank of Ottawa had enlisted for military service – 21 made the supreme sacrifice; 17 were wounded; 5 were made prisoners; and 2 were reported missing. 

As a memorial to staff who gave their lives in the Great War, the Bank of Nova Scotia commissioned about 60 bronze tablets, between July 1920 and February 1921, to be placed on the wall of the branch where each known staff member was employed when they joined the military forces. These plaques listed the names of staff killed on the field, as well as those who died from their wounds after they returned home from the war.

Second Lieutenant Douglas Paton Mcrae Brown worked at the Bank of Ottawa Main Branch, Regina, Saskatchewan.

Inscription

BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA 1832

IN MEMORY OF
D.P.M. BROWN
AN OFFICER OF THIS BRANCH
WHO GAVE HIS LIFE IN
THE GREAT WAR
1914 ∼ 1919

Location
Second Lieutenant Douglas Paton Mcrae Brown Plaque

44 King Street West
Toronto
Ontario
GPS Coordinates
Lat. 43.6490718
Long. -79.3822255

Second Lieutenant Douglas Paton Mcrae Brown Plaque

Scotiabank Archives
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