Captain Edward T. Brown Memorial

Peterborough, Ontario
Type
Other

On May 14, 1886, a memorial drinking fountain was unveiled at Confederation Park in the memory of Captain Edward T. Brown. Captain Brown died during the Northwest Resistance at Batoche on May 12, 1885. He is the only local militia member to die during that conflict.

Peterborough architect and engineer John E. Belcher designed a structure approximately six and a half feet high which sat upon a base. The monument was made of Ohio sandstone and the base of Warsaw limestone. The fountain rested upon one finial atop a center gable and water flowed from a bronzed lion's head attached to the stone in a deeply recessed and richly moulded Gothic panel.

The fountain was originally placed in the east-central part of the park, but was moved in 1929 after the erection of the war memorial. At this time, the limestone base was replaced with the present one of granite. Today, the inscription is barely legible and the drinking fountain has long ceased to flow.

Inscription

[front/devant]
PRO PATRIA
CAPTAIN
EDWARD T. BROWN

BATOCHE 1885 FISH CREEK

A tribute
to the
Canadian volunteers
and to the
memory of
CAPT. EDWARD T. BROWN
of Boulton's Scouts,
a native of
this county
who fell
at Batoche
May 12th, 1885

[back/arrière]
Restored
for the
centennial
of the
battles,
1985

Location
Captain Edward T. Brown Memorial

McDonnel and George Streets
Peterborough
Ontario
GPS Coordinates
Lat. 44.3094399
Long. -78.3203271

back inscription

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front inscription

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Captain Edward T. Brown Memorial

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