remembrance day
DESCRIPTION
Remembering all the people who fought for our country!TRANSCRIPT
Page 10 Humboldt journalNovember 9, 2011
Page 11 Humboldt journalNovember 9, 2011
Box 190
Muenster, SK S0K 2Y0
Phone: 306-682-1770
Fax: 306-682-5285
E-mail: [email protected]
Hwy. #5 East, Humboldt, SK682-2668
NEVER FORGETALWAYS
HONOUR
Lest We Forget
682-5573
616 MAIN STREET • HUMBOLDT
682-3861
HUMBOLDTHUMBOLDTFLORISTFLORIST
Behiel, Will& Biemans
Barristers & SolicitorsBarristers & Solicitors306-682-2642306-682-2642
We Remember
Donna HarpauerMLA, Humboldt
682-5141
813 - 21st StreetHumboldt, SK
Bus. 306-682-5501Fax. 306-682-4212
email: [email protected]
Custom WashingLarge Trucks & Machinery
RO Water Bottle Refills
SALES LTD.1-800-KMK-0500
or(306) 682-0738Humboldt, SK
www.kmksales.com
Ph: 682-2592Highway 5 East
HumboldtParts & Services
682-2591
Farm Equipment Ltd.
www.hergottcaseih.comwww.hergottcaseih.com
520 - 9TH STREET682-2579
Ask for us when booking through SGI Dial-A-Claim1-800-667-8710
‘The Paint & Autobody Specialists’
HUMBOLDTAUTOBODY LIMITED
Call Us For a Tow• Boosts • Fuel Delivery • Lockouts
• Air Delivery • Tire Changes• Accident Calls • 24 Hour Towing
682-4990682-4990
Humboldt Ph: 682-2574 Lake Lenore Ph: 368-2338
Bruno Ph: 369-2830Cudworth Ph: 256-2300
Delbert KirschDelbert Kirsch MLAMLA
Batoche ConstituencyBatoche Constituency
(306) 256-3930(306) 256-3930
www.hzsd.ca
Lest we Forget
1-800-667-2623www.ctrc.sk.ca
Thank you, Veterans,
for our freedom.
buck’s bar & grill
St Gregor, SK 306-366-2225
Schuler ~ LefebvreSchuler ~ LefebvreFuneral ChapelFuneral Chapel
Locally owned and operated.Locally owned and operated. Serving local familiesServing local families
for 19 years.for 19 years.
627 - 7th627 - 7th StreetStreet682-4114682-4114
682-7886
Lest we
Forget
R.S. WELDING &R.S. WELDING &RADIATOR REPAIR LTD.RADIATOR REPAIR LTD.
Mobile Welding ServiceFarm and Industrial Welding
Pressure WeldingMachining
Custom FabricatingCNC Plasma Cutting
Customized Steel Signs
TEL (306) 682-34248 miles North, Hwy #[email protected]
MonicoCresting Inc.
512 Main Street Humboldt
682-6664
682-2632Humboldt, SK
Humboldt Co-op
709 6th AvenueHumboldt, SK
Ph: (306) 682-5717
HonourOur
Veterans
903 - 5th Avenue Humboldt682-4242
In Memory ofIn Memory of WWII VeteranWWII Veteran
Mervin HessdorferMervin HessdorferHumboldt: 682-1912
After Hours: 231-6499Fax: 682-1914
Hwy #5 West in Humboldt, SK.
Lambert & Linda Stumborg
HumboldtVision Centre
316 Main St. Humboldt, SK
Optometrists682-2335
Phone: (306) 682-5038Fax: (306) 682-5538
517 Main StreetHumboldt
OWNER/OPERATORCHAD DOBMEIER
Box 37, Muenster, SK S0K 2Y0
Phone (306) 682-1317Fax: (306) 682-3093
682-1622Hwy 5
East Humboldt
Gloria & ConnieGloria & Connie
Lest We Forget
SOUTH 20DODGE CHRYSLER & R.V. CENTRE
Hwy 20 SouthHumboldt, SK.Ph: 306-682-39001-877-768-8420Parts & Service:306-682-4213
682-2678542 Main Street
Humboldt
Canadian Tire2302 8th Avenue,
Humboldt, SKS0K 2A0
Ph: 682-6299Fax: 682-6286
SCHULTE INDUSTRIES LTD.ENGLEFELD, SK.
www.schulte.caPH: 306-287-3155
FAX: 306-287-3355Email: [email protected]
LEST WE LEST WE FORGET.FORGET.
FROM ALL EMPLOYEES AT
1-866-682-2638Ph: 682-2638
627 - 9th StreetHumboldt
www.thepioneerhotel.com
LEST WELEST WE FORGETFORGET
10:30 Gather in lobby of St. Augustine Church10:45 Parade into Church11:00 Lastpost - 2-Minute Silence - Reveille11:05 Remembrance Day Service12:00 Wreath Laying Ceremony (in church)
Supper in Main Hall 5:30pm(Catered by BV Inn)
Social in clubroom until closing
Supper tickets -$15.00ea/Adult - $8.00ea/ChildAvailable at Legion Clubroom or
Poppy Table in the Humboldt Mall
(under 8yrs)
(Entertainment - The Beer Tent Gang )
2:00 Social in Clubroom and Museum
1:00 Lunch at Legion Hall
Royal Canadian Legion
Branch # 28
Humboldt, Sask
535 Main Street, Humboldt, SK • 682-2561
by Elodie AdamsJournal Staff Writer
A tour of the Benson-Hingley Military Mu-seum at the Humboldt Branch of the Royal Canadian Legion, No. 28, with Reverend Al Hingley reveals a wealth of information on Canada’s military history. Hingley, originally from Nova Scotia, served in the postal corps in the late fi fties and is the Branch Padre and museum curator.
On August 16, 2011, Defence Minister Peter MacKay restored the historic nomenclature to the air force and the navy to honour the military’s royal roots.
More than 40 years after Canada’s navy, army and air force were amalgamated into one uni-fi ed service and renamed the Canadian Armed Forces, Ottawa decided to restore the original names.
“Instead of all being lumped together as the armed forces,” said Hingley, “we are once again the Royal Canadian Air Force, the Royal Cana-dian Navy, and the Canadian Army.”
Hingley says these “little” things, the des-ignation of the troops, are very important to service personnel.
The museum offers a display of many uni-
forms Hingley has collected or had donated over the years, including the Royal Canadian Navy, Royal Canadian Air Force regular dress and mess uniform, Canadian Army, and a nursing sister with the Canadian Army Medi-cal Corps.
These uniforms date from the second world war.
It may seem odd to see items from the German military among the memorabilia in the museum. A glass showcase displays German military badges, medals, insignia, and a Hauser gun, to name a few.
“According to museology,” Hingley explained, “you can have this kind of thing in your mu-seum as long as it isn’t mixed up with other displays.”
Hingley picks up an original 1933 magazine with photos of Hitler before he took over as Chan-cellor of Germany during the war.
“This is a very, very rare document,” said Hingley about one of the photographs in the magazine. “This was the swearing in of Hitler as vice chancellor, and to the best of my knowledge, this is the only picture I’ve ever seen of Hitler dressed in civilians.
Hingley had the idea of reconstructing a wartime trench in a narrow cupboard-like space
tucked away at the back of the museum. An artist friend of Hingley’s, Dr. Zygmond Kondzielewski, painted the sky and landscape that brings this scene to life.
“This is a little display I put together so the kids could have some idea of what the trenches looked like,” said Hingley.
In the trench, a soldier sits with his ammunitions around him. It must be a quiet moment, because the soldier is catching up on the news in a newspaper.
“It is intended to illustrate to the kids – because everything else in the museum is static, and this helps their imagination – that people lived in that kind of a trench.”
A tour of the small, basement museum gives the visitor a fairly complete overview of Canadian military history.
With barely a square inch of empty space on the four walls of the museum, Hingley has managed to fi nd room for one more exhibit, and it’s the one he is working on now.
“This is Original Humboldt from the military perspective,” said Hingley. “The story is quite interesting, and here is a facsimile of the head of Colonel Denison, considered an authority on cavalry in the British Empire’s time, left in charge of a stationary post. ”
Hingley explains that the governor general’s bodyguard — the British Gen-eral Middleton — looked with disdain at the colonialists. Perhaps he was envious of Denison and of his knowledge of the cavalry, but he put the colonel on a sta-tionary outfi t and
marched off to the glory of Batoche. “There were 450 soldiers under Denison’s com-
mand,” Hingley said. “Imagine a cavalry outfi t protecting stores, while Middleton marches off to the glory of Batoche.”
photos by Elodie Adams
Legion museum honours Canadian military history
A display of the Canadian Armed Forces’ WWII uniforms, from left: Royal Canadian Navy, Royal Canadian Air Force (regular dress and mess uniform), Canadian Army, and Canadian Army Medical Corps.
Rev. Al Hingley, branch padre and curator of the Benson-Hingley Military Museum in Humboldt has collected items from people and places all over the world, including this 1933 original magazine, Der Tag von Potsdam.
Left: Tucked away in the back corner of the museum, visitors can get a feel for what a war-time trench looked like. Hing-ley put this display together especially for the benefit of children because everything else in the museum is static. Below: The newest exhibit in the museum honours the cavalry that were stationed at Original Humboldt under the command of Colonel Denison in the late 1800s.
Kevin PhillipsMelfort Constituency
MLA Elect(306) 752-9500
We Salute Our ArmedWe Salute Our Armed Forces and Veterans.Forces and Veterans.