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Brant War Memorial

Hidden photo gallery

  • Brant War Memorial
    (Click for more images)
  • three statues
  • four statues
  • plaque
  • rigth side
  • front

Municipality/Province: Brantford, ON

Memorial number: 35007-009

Type: Shaft, seven bronze statues

Address: 6 Dalhousie Street

Location: War Memorial Park

GPS coordinates: Lat: 43.1390372   Long: -80.26945

Submitted by: Helen Borowicz. City of Brantford.

Photo credit: City of Brantford

The Brant War Memorial was designed by Walter S. Allward and erected in 1933 in memory of the local war dead of the First World War. The pylons dominate, their great mass gives dignity, solemnity and a sense of guardianship over the stone of remembrance. The stone is a raised slab, ornamented with poppies. Above the remembrance stone is a cross, deeply cut in the main pylon. The park land on which the memorial sits was formerly used as a parade ground for those who left Brantford during the First World War.

Brant County, which included the City of Brantford and the Town of Paris had 5,571 enlist in the First World War. 701 died and 58 were reported missing or taken prisoner.

The memorial was later modified to incorporate the commemoration of the local war dead of the Second World War and the Korean War. In 1952, a Memorial Gallery was added and serves as a backdrop to the Brant War Memorial. On July 2, 1954, the memorial was rededicated.

The original design by Allward included a group of bronze sculptures to represent "Humanity", consisting of a wounded youth, a resolute mother and a figure praying. Financial obstacles prevented the completion of the monument according to the original design. The Brant County War Memorial Committee initiated the completion of seven bronze statutes which were designed and sculpted by Helen Granger Young. The figures represent men and women who made the supreme sacrifice and commemorate local Veterans. The statutes were unveiled and dedicated on September 12, 1992.

Sculptor Walter S. Allward left school at fourteen and learned about sculpture through books and magazines at the local library and by studying replicas at a nearby museum. By twenty, he had won his first commission. One of Allward’s first projects was through Sir Edmund Walker, President of the Bank of Commerce. In 1918, Walker asked Allward for memorial ideas honouring bank employees who had served and Allward submitted two wax models sculptures. The first, The Service of Our Women—Healing the Scars of War, depicts a woman sowing seeds on rocky incline strewn with war debris, including a broken canon. The second, The Service of Our Men–Crushing the Power of the Sword, portrays a man standing over a recumbent figure with his sword cast aside, symbolizing the brute beast of willful war waged by a misguided nation. The sculptures were never used, but his proposals explored ideas that would be expressed in his future war memorials: Stratford, 1919–22; Peterborough, 1921–29; and Brantford, 1921–33.


Inscription found on memorial

[front/devant]

1914        1918

THEY GAVE THEIR LIVES FOR HUMANITY

[left side/côté gauche]
1914 † COUNTY OF BRANT HONOUR ROLL † 1918

(list of names)

[plaque]
THESE SEVEN BRONZE STATUES
ARE DEDICATED TO THE MEMORY
OF ALL BRANT COUNTY CITIZENS
WHO MADE THE
"SUPREME SACRIFICE"
AND TO COMMEMORATE OUR LOCAL
ARMED FORCE VETERANS WHO DID
SO HONOUR THEIR COMMUNITY
THEIR COUNTY AND THEMSELVES
FOR THE CAUSE OF PEACE AND
FREEDOM.

BRANT COUNTY
WAR MEMORIAL ASSOC. 1923 - 1960
BRANT COUNTY
WAR MEMORIALS COMMITTEE 1987
CHAIRMAN; R. COUNSELL
DIRECTORS; D. DAVIES, D. G. PITE, J. CROW
H. IRISH, J. PRITCHARD

DESIGNED AND SCULPTERED BY
HELEN GRANGER YOUNG A.O.G.A. M.S.A.

UNVEILED & DEDICATED 12 SEPT. 1992

Street view

Note

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