Other

City/Municipality
Spruce Grove
Memorial Number
48023-006
Type
Address
475 King Street
Location
Woodhaven Junior High School
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
53.5504602, -113.8983639
Inscription

[upper plaque/plaque du haut]

LEST WE FORGET

[lower plaques/plaques du bas]

IN MEMORY OF THOSE WHO PAID THE SUPREME SACRIFICE

THE BOER WAR 1899 - 1902
WORLD WAR I 1914 - 1918
WORLD WAR II 1939 - 1945
KOREAN WAR 1950 - 1953

Image
Photo Credit
Pam Coates
Caption
structure (front)
1 of 4 images
Image
Caption
structure (back)
1 of 4 images
Image
Caption
structure (upper plaque)
1 of 4 images
Image
Caption
structure (lower plaques)
1 of 4 images
Province
!4v1616152799849!6m8!1m7!1sDsBT6YiVK_4_p3w_ZY2Cnw!2m2!1d53.55046015382818!2d-113.8983639119335!3f292.1200143515114!4f-0.5617282514755857!5f1.7052326035018552"
Body Content

This memorial to the war dead of the South African War, the First and Second World Wars and the Korean War was erected by the Royal Canadian Legion.

City
Spruce Grove
Country
Type Description
Concrete structure
Memorial CF Legacy ID
2876
City/Municipality
Morinville
Memorial Number
48023-005
Type
Address
10120 - 101 Avenue
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
53.80383, -113.65059
Inscription

[front/devant]

LEST WE FORGET

1914 - 1918
1939 - 1945
1950 - 1953

Image
Caption
cairn (front)
Province
!4v1616152569858!6m8!1m7!1sBq3zav9x3ZrV_krKBxnRmw!2m2!1d53.80363787335866!2d-113.6506566926443!3f9.704518069473094!4f-2.161382194877305!5f3.325193203789971"
Body Content

This memorial, erected by the Royal Canadian Legion, is dedicated to the memory of the First and Second World Wars and the Korean War.

City
Morinville
Country
Type Description
Concrete cairn
Memorial CF Legacy ID
2934
City/Municipality
Morinville
Memorial Number
48023-004
Type
Address
10120 - 101 Avenue
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
53.80371, -113.65049
Inscription

[front/devant]

MORINVILLE BRANCH

Image
Caption
pillars (front)
Province
!4v1616152081375!6m8!1m7!1sTf3j7a2muu1_I0WTWwqwBQ!2m2!1d53.80363272489038!2d-113.6505136933204!3f4.9370184041369525!4f-8.56547393915828!5f3.325193203789971"
Body Content

Erected by the Royal Canadian Legion, this memorial is dedicated to fallen soldiers.

City
Morinville
Country
Type Description
Concrete pillars
Memorial CF Legacy ID
44
City/Municipality
Stony Plain
Memorial Number
48023-003
Type
Address
4902-44 Avenue
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
53.53517, -114.00446
Inscription

[front/devant]

DEDICATED TO THE GLORY OF GOD AND IN MEMORY OF THE MEN AND WOMEN WHO SERVED OUR COUNTRY
1899 BOER WAR 1902
1914 WORLD WAR I 1918
1939 WORLD WAR II 1945
1950 KOREA 1953

"LEST WE FORGET"

Image
Caption
stele (front)
Province
!4v1616151913335!6m8!1m7!1sYqidtDzYfJ43mL-rsXglGg!2m2!1d53.5356030600087!2d-114.0041457918171!3f207.44208388773558!4f-0.5817487573962552!5f3.325193203789971"
Body Content

This memorial to the veterans of the South African War, the First and Second World Wars and the Korean War was erected by Royal Canadian Legion Branch No. 256.

City
Stony Plain
Country
Type Description
Marble stele
Memorial CF Legacy ID
2889
City/Municipality
St. Albert
Memorial Number
48023-002
Type
Address
St. Anne Street
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
53.6341132, -113.6274007
Inscription

[front/devant]

OUR GLORIOUS DEAD

1914 - 1918

ALBERT GOODMAN
CHARLES MALONEY
DOMILL KENNEDY
JOHN KENNEDY
HARRY MALONEY

OUR GLORIOUS DEAD

1939 - 1945

JOHN ARTYNUIK
MOSE BOUCHARD
PHILLIP HARNOIS
EMILE HEBERT
FRANK HOGAN
RAYMOND LIDDY
RYAN MCDONNELL
JOSEPH NOLAL
CHARLES TOUPIN
JOHN TURNBULL

[right side/côté droit]

needs further research/recherche incomplète

[left side/côté gauche]

KOREA
1950 - 53

Image
Photo Credit
Victoria Edwards
Caption
St. Albert Cenotaph
1 of 2 images
Image
Photo Credit
Victoria Edwards
1 of 2 images
Province
!4v1616151699084!6m8!1m7!1syBXkZ9TR3_OQUmwhdpBlNA!2m2!1d53.63410507786192!2d-113.627398527919!3f314.57380176087463!4f-1.6998339497999382!5f3.325193203789971
Body Content

The St. Albert Cenotaph has been updated and relocated multiple times since its creation. The original cenotaph was erected sometime after the end of the Second World War, most likely coinciding with the founding of the Royal Canadian Legion St. Albert Branch in 1957. It was a cement cross approximately four feet high, located on the front lawn of the St. Albert Community Hall. In the mid-1960s, a new cenotaph was constructed on the corner of Sir Winston Churchill Avenue and Green Grove Drive.

Due to noise from passing traffic, especially during each November’s moment of silence, the legion decided to relocate the cenotaph to its present location on St. Anne Street. This site was consecrated in the summer of 1987, with representatives present from the federal, provincial, and municipal governments, as well as dignitaries from the Royal Canadian Legion.

Of the approximately 625 local residents, 61 of them took up the call to arms. The town lent 10 per cent of its population to a fight half a world away. Locally there were 10 killed in action, only five of which had their names inscribed on the cenotaph. For nearly a decade, the names of Privates Moise Beausoleil, Wilfred Chevigny, Hector Duroche, Daniel Flynn, and William Laurence were missing.

In 2012, the Musée Heritage Museum began preparation for an exhibit that it would host two years later to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the beginning of the Great War. Their research determined that the names of five men from St. Albert were missing from the cenotaph. How these men were missed when the cenotaph was first built is still a mystery. Individual names of fallen soldiers were not added to the St. Albert Cenotaph until 2009, nearly a century after the end of the war.

On September 11, 2016, a public ceremony was held at the cenotaph recognizing the names of all 10 fallen heroes.

City
St. Albert
Country
Type Description
Slab - concrete
Memorial CF Legacy ID
2890
City/Municipality
Rocky Mountain House
Memorial Number
48022-037
Type
Address
4911, 49 Street
Location
Royal Canadian Legion R.L. Zengel V.C. Branch No. 8
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
52.3732586, -114.9177366
Inscription

ROYAL
CANADIAN
LEGION

R.L. ZENGEL V.C. BRANCH No. 8

"PRIDE IN OUR PAST, FAITH IN OUR FUTURE"

Image
Photo Credit
Wikimedia - Rkonigs
Caption
Raphael Louis Zengel display - biography, medals, plaque, photo
War or Conflict Term
Province
!4v1717764462524!6m8!1m7!1sP_8NeOw6DIeJT0uIpR09Lg!2m2!1d52.37325859001976!2d-114.9177366243467!3f79.87838466401588!4f11.172029381736607!5f1.8824448630671142
Body Content

Raphael Louis Zengel was born on 11 November 1894 in Faribault, United States. While he was still very young, he and his mother moved from the United States to a homestead in Saskatchewan. Zengel enlisted in the Canadian Expeditionary Force in December 1914. He served overseas with the 5th Infantry Battalion, Canadian Expeditionary Force, taking part in several raids on German trenches. For his role in one of these raids, near Passchendaele in Belgium in 1917, Zengel received the Military Medal.

On 9 August 1918, Sergeant Zengel was leading his platoon forward during the second day of the massive Allied offensive against the German lines around Amiens, in France. When he noticed a gap on the flank of his platoon and an enemy machine gun firing on the advancing Canadians at close range, he quickly decided to deal with the machine gun position himself. Rushing 200 metres ahead of his platoon, Zengel charged the German emplacement, killing two of the machine gun’s crew and compelling the rest to flee. Later that day, when the progress of the 5th Battalion was blocked by heavy machine gun fire, he demonstrated great tactical skill in directing the fire of his platoon to eliminate the enemy resistance. Sergeant Zengel’s courage, leadership and disregard for his own safety inspired his men, and were important factors in enabling the advance to continue. For his conduct on this day, he was awarded the Victoria Cross. Zengel died in Vancouver, British Columbia on 27 February 1977.

After the war, Zengel lived in Calgary and joined the Calgary Fire Department in 1919 and served until 1927. He spent most of the rest of his life in Rocky Mountain House where the local Royal Canadian Legion Branch No. 8 was named in his honour. He donated his Victoria Cross to the Legion where it is kept in a safety box and a replica along with the rest of his medals are on display. His headstone can be found at Pine Grove Cemetery, Rocky Mountain House, Canada.

City
Rocky Mountain House
Country
Type Description
Building - legion
Memorial CF Legacy ID
10471
City/Municipality
Penhold
Memorial Number
48022-036
Type
Address
Needs Research
Location
Former CFB Penhold
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
52.17708, -113.88723
Image
Photo Credit
Victoria Edwards
Caption
Penhold Field of Honour
1 of 2 images
Image
Caption
Penhold Field of Honour
1 of 2 images
Province
Body Content

From 1941 to 1944, 35 pilots and instructors with the Royal Air Force were killed in Central Alberta. They were not killed in battles raging over war-torn countries in Europe or Asia; they died in Penhold and Bowden, while training for those dangerous assignments.

In 1941, the British Royal Air Force established the No. 36 Service Flying Training School in Penhold, just south of Red Deer. At its peak, up to 1,400 people trained in Penhold, with another 800 in training at Bowden. During day and night training fl ights, a variety of accidents occurred, claiming the lives of 35 airmen – students and instructors from Canada, Britain, Australia and New Zealand. The names of all 35 individuals are listed on the grey granite monument in the Penhold Field of Honour. However, only 22 of these men are buried in Red Deer Cemetery, and the remaining 13 are interred in Innisfail.  The Penhold Field of Honour is maintained with funding from the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

 

City
Penhold
Country
Type Description
Field of Honour
Memorial CF Legacy ID
9834
City/Municipality
Red Deer
Memorial Number
48022-035
Type
Address
2810 Bremmer Avenue
Location
Royal Canadian Legion, Branch No 35
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
52.24536, -113.81058
Image
Photo Credit
Victoria Edwards
Caption
Royal Canadian Legion 35 anchor
1 of 2 images
Image
Caption
Royal Canadian Legion 35 Howitzer gun and plaque were installed in October 2001, to commemorate the Korea Veterans Unit #67
1 of 2 images
Province
!4v1616151146141!6m8!1m7!1slq694h2KiS4Ee7b_XBewDQ!2m2!1d52.24492959961051!2d-113.8111671793677!3f71.98834770312568!4f0.4506933850394148!5f3.325193203789971"
Body Content

In the grounds of the Royal Canadian Legion there are three memorials. In September 1996 a plaque was erected in memory of the members of  the Canadian Army who were killed during the First and Second World Wars, Korean War and Kuwait. A howitzer gun and plaque were installed in October 2001 to commemorate the Korea War Veterans. A large anchor and bronze plaque commemorates the men and women who served in the Royal Canadian Navy and the Merchant Navy during the First and Second World Wars, Korean War and Persian Gulf.

This anchor and plaque commemorate the men and women who served in the Royal Canadian Navy Merchant Marine. They also commemorate those who served in the First and Second World Wars, Korean War, Persian Gulf, and who participated in NATO and United Nations missions.

 

 

City
Red Deer
Country
Type Description
Anchor
Memorial CF Legacy ID
9833
City/Municipality
Penhold
Memorial Number
48022-034
Type
Address
Willow Crescent
Location
Mynarski Memorial Park
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
52.17342, -113.87442
Inscription

(needs further research/recherche incomplète)

Province
!4v1615996296395!6m8!1m7!1s_ZMPjh4W0tKjSPHSBlf30A!2m2!1d52.17405324477828!2d-113.8744810645556!3f186.11403879042956!4f-2.3563889753373957!5f1.619285171258067"
Body Content

The Willow Crescent Playground was renamed the Mynarksi Memorial Park in September 2004. Dedicated to the memory of Pilot Officer Andrew Charles Mynarksi, VC, a Second World War gunner who lost his life trying to rescue his crewmate in a burning Lancaster.

The following is an excerpt from the National Defence - Directorate of History and Heritage - Victoria Cross Biography

Victoria Cross - Second World War, 1939-1945 - Andrew Charles Mynarski

Andrew Charles Mynarski was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba on 14 October 1916. He joined the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) in 1941. On the night of 12 to 13 June 1944, Pilot Officer Mynarski was the mid-upper gunner in an Avro Lancaster bomber of 419 Squadron, RCAF during an attack on the railway yards at Cambrai, in France. When the aircraft was attacked by a German night fighter, both port engines failed, and fire broke out between the mid-upper and rear gun turrets, as well as in the port wing fuel tanks. Soon the flames grew to such an extent that the pilot ordered the aircraft abandoned. As Mynarski left his turret and proceeded toward the escape hatch, he saw that the rear gunner, Flying Officer G.P. Brophy, was unable to get out of his turret, which could not be moved due to the failure of both the hydraulic and manual systems. At once Mynarski made his way aft through the fire in an attempt to free Brophy. With his parachute and the clothing below his waist now on fire, Mynarski strained to move the turret and release Brophy, but to no avail. At this point, Brophy indicated clearly that there was no more to be done, and that Mynarski should save himself. Reluctantly, Mynarski went back through the flames to the escape hatch and jumped, his parachute and clothing all on fire. After landing, he was eventually found by the French, but died due to the severity of his burns. For his courageous and selfless attempt to save his crewmate, Pilot Officer Mynarski was awarded the Victoria Cross posthumously. Miraculously, Flying Officer Brophy survived the crash of the stricken and abandoned Lancaster, and, courtesy of the French Resistance, was back in England in September.

City
Penhold
Country
Type Description
Playground and plaque
Memorial CF Legacy ID
8034
City/Municipality
Red Deer
Memorial Number
48022-033
Type
Location
In the Lodge Room
in Canada
Yes
GPS Coordinates
0, 0
Inscription

[Honour Roll/tableau d’honneur]

HONOUR ROLL
Of members of Red Deer Lodge
No.12 A.F.&A.M. who volunteered for
service in the great war

[left column/colonne de gauche]

Wilfred Patterson
R.W. Alcock
G.W.G. Moore
G.R. Broughton
H.E. White
B.P. Alford
R.W. Harrison
J. Nurcombe
R. Parsons
R.W. Faulks
H.B. George
H.H. Kingzell
S.S. Sands
H. Wallace

[centre column/colonne du centre]

FOR
KING
AND
COUNTRY

[right column/colonne de droite]

W.H. Hadley
H.H. Drake
J.W. Hagey
H.J. Snell
E.H. Adair
J.G. McGregor
W.H.F. Harris
E.W. Bjorkeland
J.I. Mann
T.H. Edis
E.G.B. Greenwood
T.H. Reade
W.W. Webb

Image
Caption
Honour Roll
Province
Body Content

This Honour Roll lists the members of Red Deer Lodge No. 12 who volunteered for service for the First World War.

City
Red Deer
Country
Type Description
Honour Roll
Memorial CF Legacy ID
7125