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Canadian Virtual War Memorial

John Walker Hildred

In memory of:

Private John Walker Hildred

May 8, 1915

Military Service


Service Number:

51211

Force:

Army

Unit:

Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry (Eastern Ontario Regt.)

Additional Information


Born:

December 11, 1889

Commemorated on Page 19 of the First World War Book of Remembrance. Request a copy of this page. Download high resolution copy of this page.

Burial Information


Cemetery:
Grave Reference:

Panel 10 - 58

Location:


The Menin Gate Memorial is situated at the eastern side of the town of Ypres (now Ieper) in the Province of West Flanders, on the road to Menin and Courtrai. It bears the names of 55,000 men who were lost without trace during the defence of the Ypres Salient in the First World War. Designed by Sir Reginald Blomfield and erected by the Imperial (now Commonwealth) War Graves Commission, it consists of a Hall of Memory", 36.6 metres long by 20.1 metres wide. In the centre are broad staircases leading to the ramparts which overlook the moat, and to pillared loggias which run the whole length of the structure. On the inner walls of the Hall, on the side of the staircases and on the walls of the loggias, panels of Portland stone bear the names of the dead, inscribed by regiment and corps. Carved in stone above the central arch are the words:


TO THE ARMIES OF THE BRITISH EMPIRE WHO STOOD HERE FROM 1914 TO 1918 AND TO THOSE OF THEIR DEAD WHO HAVE NO KNOWN GRAVE.

Over the two staircases leading from the main Hall is the inscription:

HERE ARE RECORDED NAMES OF OFFICERS AND MEN WHO FELL IN YPRES SALIENT BUT TO WHOM THE FORTUNE OF WAR DENIED THE KNOWN AND HONOURED BURIAL GIVEN TO THEIR COMRADES IN DEATH.

The dead are remembered to this day in a simple ceremony that takes place every evening at 8:00 p.m. All traffic through the gateway in either direction is halted, and two buglers (on special occasions four) move to the centre of the Hall and sound the Last Post. Two silver trumpets for use in the ceremony are a gift to the Ypres Last Post Committee by an officer of the Royal Canadian Artillery, who served with the 10th Battery, of St. Catharines, Ontario, in Ypres in April 1915."

Information courtesy of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

Digital Collection

Send us your images

  • Photo of JOHN WALKER HILDRED– In memory of the employees of the T. Eaton Company that went to war and did not come home.  Submitted for the project, Operation: Picture Me
  • Memorial– In memory of the employees of the T. Eaton Company that went to war and did not come home.  Submitted for the project, Operation: Picture Me
  • Newspaper clipping– John is mentioned in this article about his brother. In memory of the men and women of London, Ontario (and area) who went to war and did not come home. Remembered on the pages of the World War One issues of the London Advertiser. Submitted for the project Operation Picture Me
  • Photo of John Walker Hildred– The quotes below are from the death notice in the Woodstock Sentinel Review.John was the eldest son of Thomas and Mary Hildred nee Walker. He was killed "at Armentieres by the bursting of a shell in a trench during the second battle of Ypres".  The notice says the Canadian Red Cross Society in London England had received the information about his death from Private J. K. Mulqueen of his regiment "who was near when the Woodstock soldier received his wounds, which terminated fatally almost immediately".  John was 26 years old when he was killed.  He had been employed in Winnipeg by the T Eaton Co. and came east to his home town to enlist with his brother Warren. The notice indicates that they stayed together and "went overseas with a special draft about the middle of January of last year. His first experience in the trenches was about the first of March, 1915, and he saw much fighting before he was killed on the 8th of May, after fifteen days of terrific fighting.  A brother Pte Warren Hildred is now home in Woodstock on the wounded list, the two having gone through several battles together."  John is commemorated on the family monument in the Anglican cemetery in Woodstock and on the T. Eaton Co. war memorial in the Eaton Centre in Toronto.  Hildred Lake, located in north western Saskatchewan within the Meadow Lake Provincial Park, is named in memory of John W. And Warren D. Hildred.
  • Eaton's Memorial Plaque– Pte. John Walker Hildred's name is included on this bronze memorial designed as a tribute to the men of the Eaton's company who died as a result of service in the First World War.   3,327 Eaton's staff enlisted in the war. It was unveiled in Toronto on November 15th, 1923 by Mrs. Timothy Eaton and on November 26th an identical memorial was unveiled in the Winnipeg store. The shield of the female figure bears the coats of arms of the provinces of Canada.  The Toronto memorial is located today in the Eaton Centre at Yonge & Dundas and is accompanied by a WWII memorial.
  • Memorial– Menin Gate - October 2009 … photo courtesy of Marg Liessens
  • Memorial– Panel 10 of the Menin Gate - August 2012 … photo courtesy of Marg Liessens
  • Memorial– Inscription on the Menin Gate - August 2012 … photo courtesy of Marg Liessens

Learn more about the Canadian Virtual War Memorial

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