The Sarnia Journal - November 4th, 2021

Page 1

Vol. 8, Issue 24

FREE OF CHARGE

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Baby boom

Easy, now

Pandemic has

brought a rise in local birthrate, at hospital and in-home

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TARA JEFFREY THE JOURNAL

he ‘baby chimes’ are ringing more often at Bluewater Health these

days. The Sarnia hospital recorded 583 births between April and September, a 13% increase over the same period in 2020, with 106 new babies in September alone. “I know October is just as busy, and won’t be surprised to see elevated numbers as well,” said Melissa Doan, the interim manager of the Maternal Infant Child Unit. The hospital plays a five-second ‘chime’ of Brahms’ Lullaby over the intercom every time a baby is born. Lately, it’s been sounding three times a day. “We have run into capacity issues, where we are overflowing our postpartum beds into the pediatric unit,” said Doan, adding staff are working “extremely, extremely hard.” “On top of the normal stressors that all health care is feeling through COVID-19, our staff is just doing that much more, and they’re doing a great job.” Continued on 2

DEAR READERS:

The Journal will not be publishing on Nov. 11. The next regular print newspaper will be Nov. 18. For the latest local news, visit the website at www.thesarniajournal.ca or on Facebook.

SARNIA’S HENRI PODLACHA tests his 40-foot paraglider at Canatara Beach last week, in a practice known as ‘kiting.’ Paragliders use thin suspension lines and air entering the wing vents to gain altitude and fly long distances without an engine. Though the wind wasn’t strong enough for flight on this day, practice makes perfect, said Podlacha, who took up the adventure sport three years ago. RONNY D’HAENE Special to The Journal

IMPORTANT NOTICE TO OUR READERS:

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his week’s edition of The Journal contains a full-page advertisement outlining changes coming to our distribution system. Prior to the COVID pandemic, we were able to provide a free publication to our readers based solely on the revenue generated from our advertisers. In addition, we could deliver it free of charge directly to most households in our coverage area. But COVID has had a devastating impact on local retail business operators, and many have had to scale back on their

advertising costs. With reduced revenues, The Journal has needed to make changes as well. We’ve reduced staff and, for much of the pandemic, shifted to every-other week publication. Given the slow on-going economic recovery, we need to make another change. Rest assured, The Journal will remain a free publication, both in print and online. However, we can no longer afford the significant cost of free delivery to households. Starting with the November 18th edition, our readers will

have three options from which to choose: 1) The Journal will be available for pick up at multiple locations in Sarnia and Lambton County (see our ad on page 15 for a detailed list of locations). These locations will be stocked and refilled during the week to ensure you should always be able to find a copy. 2) A home delivery option using Canada Post is also available. The cost for this option is $1.50 per delivery, with the paper arriving as addressed mail to your household. This charge is a delivery fee

to cover the cost of preparation, administration and mailing. 3) A complete virtual edition of The Journal, in its entirety, available on-line on our website at www.thesarniajournal.ca

These are difficult times, and this is a difficult request to ask of our readers. But it’s a change that has to be made to meet the challenges of the current economic environment. Thank you for your understanding. Daryl Smith General Manager The Sarnia Journal

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Page 2

The Sarnia Journal

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Local

Bump-outs bumped, so it’s back to the drawing board

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CATHY DOBSON THE JOURNAL

he crossing guards at Indian and Errol roads aren’t thrilled by Sarnia’s decision to remove the yellow “bump-outs” that slow traffic at the intersection. “Before they put them in I nearly got killed a few times out here,” said Pauline Carr, who has helped students at Errol Road School cross the busy road for eight years. Two years ago council agreed to install large concrete bumpouts to reduce the number of lanes on Indian and slow traffic. A more permanent and aesthetically pleasing corner was planned, but objections from neighbours prompted council

to reverse that decision last week and look for another solution to speeders flying through the intersection. Pauline Carr The bumpouts were removed Friday, leaving the corner with nothing to slow traffic. Malcolm Carr, Pauline’s husband, is the second crossing guard at the intersection. “I don’t think it’s a good idea to remove them,” he said. They were a safe solution. They aren’t perfect but now the NIMBYs have got in the way. Now we’ll have nothing for the winter.” Marnie Mackenzie who lives near the intersection, led the charge at council to have the barriers removed. “My neighbours and myself are done being guinea pigs for this project,” said Mackenzie. The bump-outs are a problem for snow removal and make it difficult for her to back out of her

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Baby:

Continued from 1

The Better Outcomes Registry and Network, or BORN, has noted a ‘pandemic baby boom’

THE INTERSECTION AT Indian and Errol roads is so wide and busy it's the only one in Sarnia with two crossing guards, seen here directing students through the yellow traffic bump-outs. CATHY DOBSON The Journal

driveway, she said. The look of them devalues nearby homes, Mackenzie added. “Let’s face it, this was a very wrong idea in the first place.” Coun. Bill Dennis agreed

in Ontario. Births began rising in March and are exceeding infant numbers from 2018 and 2019. “I know last year we were under 1,000, and this year we are on track to be well over that,” Doan said.

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the bump-outs are an eyesore. Council unanimously backed his proposal to remove them immediately and have staff come back with other traffic calming ideas. The list of possibilities in-

Meanwhile, local midwives are struggling to keep up with demand. “We do have a waitlist every month and we try to accommodate as many as we can,” said Bonnie Slaa of the Midwifery Services of Lambton-Kent. “However, just recently we’ve just had such a large wait list and have had to turn people away. “Every time we

cludes traffic lights, a pedestrian walkway south of Errol Road, a flashing light, bicycle lanes, a roundabout, and better signage. City engineer Dave Jackson said it would be spring before anything further happens.

go to the hospital, the whole ward is full of people who are delivering or have delivered,” she added. “And that’s not something that we’ve seen in other years — just the sheer amount of births happening each day.” Slaa says the service also saw a significant increase in home births in 2020 — about 40% more — and expects that number will be even higher this year,

a trend brought on by the pandemic. “They felt safer, just being at home and not being exposed,” she said. She suspects Sarnia’s baby boom may subside as families get busier and continue towards a ‘return to normal.’ “But it’s great that we’re seeing so many little people coming into our community — we’re pretty excited.”

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Thursday, November 4, 2021

The Sarnia Journal

Local

Page 3

Crowd limits lifted just in time for Nov. 11 services

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TARA JEFFREY THE JOURNAL

arnia’s Remembrance Day services will be an in-person event at Veterans Park after all. “We’re extremely happy,” said Les Jones, president of Sarnia Legion Branch 62, shortly after Ontario lifted capacity limits on all organized public events held outdoors. The Legion was planning for a small, private service, similar to the one held last year, he explained. But following last week’s announcement, organizers decided to open the event to the public. That means a traditional parade beginning at the Legion Hall on Front Street at 10:35 a.m., and a wreath-laying ceremony at Veterans Park at 11 a.m. Though the capacity limits are lifted, COVID-19 protocols remain in place, including masks and physical distancing. “We’re glad to get back to it,” said Jones. “Especially with this year being such a milestone event.” A rededication ceremony was held Saturday for Sarnia’s

100-year-old Cenotaph — one of the city’s most hallowed landmarks ­— which featured the return of the bronze soldier statue known as “Tommy.” It was damaged when vandals pried off its rifle and had been sent away for repairs. That prompted the Sarnia Historical Society and Legion to launch a fundraising campaign to refurbish the statue and upgrade the surrounding park. “I just can’t believe the response we had from the public,” Jones said of the folks that came forward to help, including the Sarnia Lambton Building and Construction Trades Council, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 530, and Bluewater Power. This year also marks the 100th anniversary of the Remembrance Poppy in Canada. “I think we have a very rich military history in Sarnia,” said Jones. “There’s a lot of people from this area who served, and a lot of families still around who continue to remember and honour their loved ones.”

OTHER REMEMBRANCE DAY EVENTS INCLUDE:

Aamjiwnaang First Nation will hold its annual Remembrance Day service on Nov. 8, in recognition of National Aboriginal Veterans Day. Chief Chris Plain said members of the public are welcome to attend a short ceremony at the cenotaph at 11 a.m. on Tashmoo Ave., along with local dignitaries and Legion representatives. Corunna’s Remembrance Day service will be streamed live on Facebook by the Leslie Sutherland Branch 447 Legion on Nov. 11 at 11 a.m. A ceremony at the War Memorial by the clock tower will include Legion representatives and a selected number of dignitaries. The public is not encouraged to attend. Point Edward will host its Remembrance Day service on Sunday, Nov. 7 at the Cenotaph on St. Clair Avenue at 11 a.m. Members of the public are welcome to attend. There is no parade. A small gathering will follow at the Point Edward Ex-Servicemen’s Association Hall.

THE SARNIA CENOTAPH statue known as Tommy is pictured with its still unfinished replacement Lee Enfield rifle at the Artcast foundry in Georgetown, Ont. The restoration was spearheaded by the Sarnia Historical Society and co-ordinated by Memorial Restorations of Sarnia. Submitted Photo


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The Sarnia Journal

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Local

A stranger’s compassion gets teen back in the saddle

ton St

Ross Ave

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nt

ar

io

“We live in such a wasteful society,” he said. “I find them on garbage day with bad shifters or flat tires and I bring them home to fix them.” This summer alone Murray has rebuilt four rides using a collection of spare parts he keeps in the garage. He fixes them up and gives them away to friends, family and his wife’s co-workers. But then he decided to do something extra special for Raquel. “So I bought her a new bike,” he said. “I have standards and the rebuilt one wasn’t good enough for her.” Veronica Ferreira said she cried when she learned of Murray’s generosity. “I couldn’t believe someone who doesn‘t know us would take the time to help,” she said. “It’s amazing. Oh my gosh, how can someone want to help so much?” “I am really surprised,” said Raquel, as she tried out her new Hiland mountain bike with disc brakes and 21 gears. “I won’t take a chance with this one,” she said. “I’ll keep it in the house and make sure it’s safe.”

St

Conrad St

Shepherd St

Talfourd St

Harkness St

Mitton St S

he beautiful smile on Raquel Ferreira’s face says it all. A stranger’s kindness has caused her to reevaluate a belief that Sarnia is full of takers and thieves. “I’ve always thought there are not a lot of nice people in Sarnia,” said the 15-year-old Great Lakes student. “All we ever hear about are negative people.” That felt true a few weeks ago when Raquel’s bicycle - one her grandmother had given her and she relied on to get everywhere – was stolen. “I was at a friend’s birthday party and I put my bike in the backyard so no one would take it,” she said. But it was stolen that night and attempts by Raquel and her mom Veronica Ferreira to track it down went nowhere. “We called police but they didn’t come, so I filled out a report at the police station,” said

Veronica. The bike was a vintage beach cruiser Raquel’s grandmother had used as a teen herself. “She gifted it to me and it was important to me,” Raquel said. But her mom didn’t give up. Veronica Ferreira sent a plea for help to a Facebook group called Stolen Bikes of Sarnia. Then she wrote a letter to The Sarnia Journal expressing her anger that bike theft is so rampant and there’s little anyone can do. “Enough is enough. Our city needs to be cleaned up. Sincerely, a very angry momma bear,” she wrote. Reader Mike Murray saw that letter and responded immediately with an offer of a new bicycle. “I can’t stand to see something like that happen to a young girl,” said Murray. “I believe if you can do good, then do good.” Murray’s initial plan was to provide a refurbished bicycle. For years now, the retired maintenance supervisor has salvaged old bikes heading to the scrap heap. Welling

Proctor St

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CATHY DOBSON THE JOURNAL

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An updated ‘Streets of Sarnia’ now available

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n updated version of The Streets of Sarnia Project is available for purchase at City Hall. A volunteer project by local researchers Tom St. Amand and Randy Evans, the book features the story behind the name of almost every boulevard, road and cul-de-sac in

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the city. The pair began digging into the origin of 700 street names in 2014, hunting through books, newspapers, plans of subdivision, archival material and the tips and leads of nearly 600 residents. An online compendium was released in 2018, and an

additional 20 streets have been added to the updated version. A limited number of copies have been printed thanks to a donation from the Sarnia Historical Society and are available for $10 at City Hall, Customer Service. Limit one copy per person.

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RAQUEL FERREIRA, 15, and her mom Veronica accept the new bicycle from Mike Murray. CATHY DOBSON The Journal

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Thursday, November 4, 2021

The Sarnia Journal

Page 5

Local

Sarnia’s Santa Claus parade will be a drive-thru affair

S

JOURNAL STAFF

arnia’s Santa Claus Parade will be a drive-thru event again this year. “We just didn’t want to jeopardize the safety of the parade,” said Bob Marks of the Sarnia Kinsmen, who made the difficult decision to host the beloved tradition at Lambton College for a second year as a pandemic precaution. “I know there’s been large concerts and events, but everybody was checked [for proof of vaccine] or tested,” he said. “We just felt the large crowds would be too dan-

gerous in the streets.” The parade will be held Saturday, Nov. 27 between 4:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. with floats remaining in place and spectators viewing from their passing vehicles. “No one gets out of their cars; they just drive slowly and watch,” said Marks, adding that last year’s event was a big success with more than 3,500 vehicles coming through. “It went over so well — we were actually really surprised.” This year’s theme is “Support Our Local Food Banks,” as organizers encourage donations of non-perishable food items, hygiene products,

and cash. Canada Post will be on hand collecting letters to Santa. Marks added that efforts are being made to help traffic move along smoother this year including right-turns only. Float submissions will have capacity limits and must adhere to COVID-19 regulations, including masks and distancing. Last year, some $25,000 in donations was collected, said Marks. “We’re already getting requests from participants,” he said. “Including some of the big ones that people always look forward to.”

THE SUNCOR SARNIA Refinery float at the 2020 drive-thru Kinsmen Club of Sarnia Santa Claus Parade, held at Lambton College. Lou Sprenger photo

Meanwhile, Corunna is hosting in-person parade

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Page 6

The Sarnia Journal

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Local

SWIFF homecoming a double-dip for filmmaker, musician

S

WIFF patrons will experience the multiple talents of Sarnia native Danny Alexander when he makes his directorial film debut and then performs live with his band on Nov. 19. Alexander’s first full-length documentary about the pandemic’s devastating impact on the live music industry will be shown at the Sarnia Library Auditorium, followed immediately by a live performance with his band Secret Sign at 148 Front St. Alexander, 37, grew up in Sarnia and has been a Toronto-based videographer and musician for the past decade. “It really hit me when the pandemic started and there was nothing going on,” he said. “I had been really busy making videos and doing shows with the band and it all just stopped.” He realized the entire music industry in Toronto was going through the same thing and, with time on his hands, began interviewing venue owners

CATHY

DOBSON

Arts Journal about the prospect of no live shows for months to come. “This sense of loss was a universal feeling for all musicians. “And it was also a loss for anyone who likes to go to live shows. The interviews became addictive,” he said. Before long he had 35 venue owners, band members, entertainment pundits and municipal politicians weighing in. “We had a chance to see Toronto become stripped down without any of the interesting stuff we love about the city,” he said. The resulting 80-minute documentary, ‘No Tickets At the Door,’ was picked up by the prestigious Hot Docs at Home livestreaming platform as part of last summer’s Cana-

DANNY ALEXANDER, WHOSE film 'No Tickets At the Door,' and his band, Secret Sign, are featured at SWIFF on Nov. 19. Photo credit: Alex Carre

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dian Music Week. “I was so happy when it was accepted,” he said. “It was really the best possible scenario because I knew the film was time-sensitive and needed to be released before people were playing live again.” Hot Docs generated media attention and positive critiques for ‘No Tickets At the Door.’ The Sarnia screening will be the first in-person showing of the film, followed by a Q & A with the director. Once the screening is over, Alexander will rush a few blocks over to Collide on Front Street to perform live

Before

music for this year’s Cineglaze. Cineglaze is SWIFF’s two-night concert series and includes Secret Sign, a synthpop band Alexander started in Toronto with friends who had moved from Sarnia. Secret Sign consists of Kaila Moon on vocals, Christine Stoesser and Phil Baljeu on synthesizers, and Alexander on guitar. SWIFF is all about the relationship between film and music, and Alexander points out that one of the songs in ‘No Tickets At the Door’ is a Secret Sign track called Days Bleed released this year. “I’m very excited to play out again,” he said. “We’ve had a lot of shows booked and then cancelled this year.” And yes, there will be tickets at the door.

No matter what happens...

If you go:

WHAT: Cinegaze concert series in conjunction with SWIFF. WHEN: Nov. 19 and 20. Doors open at 9 p.m. WHERE: Collide, 148 Front St. North TICKETS: $15 each night in advance or $20 at the door. $25 weekend pass available in advance. Go to www.swiff.ca/cinegaze/. All film ticket info at www. swiff.ca. The Arts Journal highlights Sarnia’s cultural life. Send your ideas to cathy.dobson@thesarniajournal.ca.

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Thursday, November 4, 2021

The Sarnia Journal

Page 7

Local

The Sarnia Journal’s weekly trivia challenge

Besides Brazil, nine 1what.other countries have language as their

between Tobermory and Manitoulin Island?

An award that 6 4ships.provides scholarto students in the

official language?

. When the Sarnia 2unveiled Cenotaph was first in November

Fire Science Program at Lambton College honours what late Sarnia firefighter?

1921, what was the name of Veterans Park at that time?

which country 5breed.didFromoriginate the Shar-Pei dog over

3 Plank Road delayed . What is the name of the ferry that runs

A

n unexpected deep freeze that hit Texas in February has delayed the reconstruction of Plank Road in Sarnia. Plank was to be done between Indian Road and McGregor Side Road this year, but a shortage of plastic watermain pipe has shelved the project until next spring at the earliest, City Hall says. The Texas cold snap resulted in power outages that shut down that state’s

massive petrochemical plants, contributing to a global shortage of the specialty plastic used to make the large underground pipes, said David Jackson, the city’s general manager of engineering. “It’s not feasible to complete the work and rebuild the road before the onset of winter,” he said. Reconstruction of adjacent Gladwish Drive West could be finished this fall if a pipe delivery is confirmed.

Creative grant application

L

ambton’s Creative County Grant Program is now accepting funding applications for cultural, heritage, and arts initiatives happening in 2022. Organizers of new or expanding initiatives can apply online for funding to cover up to 50% of project costs, including minor capital purchases like specialized equipment, public art installations, murals, monu-

Thinking About

2,000 years ago?

ments, heritage markers/ plaques, signage, etc. The committee will also prioritize projects involving or supporting Indigenous heritage and culture, and the implementation of the calls to action outlined in Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission Report. Applications accepted online only at lambtononline.ca/creativecounty until Nov. 15.

Moving?

. What famous Italian tenor lost his sight completely at age 12 following an injury he sustained while playing soccer (football)?

. Designer brand 8is famous Christian Louboutin for creating shoes with what colour of sole?

9

. Copper turns what colour when it oxidizes in the open air?

How many stars are 7logo?.there . Next to Ontario, in the Subaru 10 which province in Canada has the highest population?

— Tom St. Amand (Column # 337) ANSWERS: 1 – Portuguese; 2 - Victoria Park; 3 - ChiCheemaun; 4 - Rick Fraser; 5 – China; 6 - Andrea Bocelli; 7 – Six; 8 – Red; 9 – Green; 10 - Quebec (8 million).

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Page 8

The Sarnia Journal

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Editorial

Published by The Sarnia Journal, A division of Sarnia Media Group Inc.

P.O. Box 22045, 322 Christina St N., Sarnia, ON, N7S 6J4

Aunty Betty served proudly in Royal Canadian Air Force

I

was 12 when I conducted my first ‘real’ interview. My Grade 7 teacher had asked the class to find the most interesting person in our lives, ask them a series of questions, record their answers, and share their stories. I’d heard that my Great Aunt Betty had served in World War II. Eager to learn more, I took my pen and notepad to her Corunna home. “It was all exciting,” she recalled. “It was 1942. I was 21-years-old.” Elizabeth Gagen (née Proctor) served in the ASO 2nd class Royal Canadian Air Force, Women’s Division — or “the WD Girls” as she called it — between 1942 and 1946. “The Canadian Air Force sent me there to be an Administration Clerk,” she told me at the time. “I worked in England and I visited Scotland, Ireland, France and Switzerland. “I went on a boat trip on the Queen Elizabeth,” she added. “During the time I was there, Canada’s prisoners were being taken home because the war was over.” Aunt Betty was among more than 17,000 Canadian women to serve in the Women’s Division of the RCAF. Though initially trained for clerical, administrative and support roles, many

TARA JEFFREY became parachute riggers, lab assistants and worked in electrical and mechanical trades, according to Veterans Affairs Canada. Here on the farm, we still have a copy of Great Grandma Jeffrey’s ‘Victory at War’ edition of the London Free Press, dated May 8, 1945. The headline on page 10 reads: “Women In War — Victory Impossible Without Them.” “Canadian women became front page news during the war,” wrote F. Beatrice Taylor. “They demanded mobilization and became a part of the army, the navy and the air force. They became a new type of factory worker, fulfilling duties which because of the skill, strength and endurance required, they had not before been thought capable of carrying out.” Few women in Canada didn’t perform some sort of wartime task. If they didn’t put on a uniform in the CWACS and Wrens and W.D.’s, they worked at machines in war plants or became blood donors, canteen workers and transport drivers,

ELIZABETH GAGEN, RIGHT, also known as my Great Aunt Betty, with her fellow "WD Girls." Submitted Photo

the reporter noted. “They packed prisoner of war parcels, taught classes, knit socks, rolled bandages, gave lectures, checked prices, drilled like soldiers, studied nutrition, cooked jam for Britain, stitched layettes for bombed babies, collected clothing for destitute

people in war torn countries,” she wrote. Though Alzheimer’s disease eventually robbed much of her memory, Aunt Betty never forgot her enlistment number, which she often recited: WW306996. I still keep a copy of my interview with her.

As we remember Canada’s military contributions this Remembrance Day, may we also remember the women who served in so many different capacities. As Taylor noted: “These are the spectacular feats which brought womanhood into a new focus under the tragic glare of war.”

GUEST COLUMNIST:

Books from Sarnia Library helped me adjust to new life

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DELIA DE SANTIS

rowing up in Italy we didn't have any books, except a prayer book. Sometimes my mother would borrow a book from the school and read to us. But we couldn't keep it more than a week, and didn’t always get to hear the ending. My father immigrated to Canada in 1954 and my mom, my brother and I followed two years later. I was 13, and when I found out I could borrow free books from the public library

two blocks away, I was thrilled. I began taking out armfuls at a time. I didn't know English, and actually Delia learned the De Santis meaning of words before I could pronounce them. When I found an Italian-sounding word (derived from Latin) I would figure out the rest of the sentence. My brother, older, had studied English in Italy and became fluent quickly. One day, he bought a book called The

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Woman of Rome. Thinking it would be a juicy story about a prostitute, I asked him if I could read it. "Never mind," he said, and went to his room. One day, I snooped and located the book under his mattress. But the next time I looked it was gone, and he made sure I never found it again. Over the years, I have borrowed hundreds of books from the Sarnia Library. I became interested in Russian, French, and American classics. Later I turned to Canadian literature and became engrossed in the works of Margaret Lawrence

and Hugh MacLennan, and the short stories of my favourite writer, Alice Munro. The years went by, and one day in a thrift shop I spotted a copy of The Woman of Rome in translation. I bought it immediately. I was mature by then and knew it wasn’t a book all about sizzling sex, as my young mind had assumed back in my teens. Written by Alberto Moravia, it’s a novel about passion and betrayal and explores multiple themes. Set against the backdrop of Rome, it unveils the immorality in a segment of society and bares the corruption

of Fascism. Lately, I’ve had a lot of time to think about my early years as an immigrant. It wasn’t easy adjusting to a strange country, but I am grateful for the access I had to so many books from the Sarnia Library. One needn’t be rich to read, and reading gave me so much pleasure while provided me with new knowledge. But, best of all, it enriched my life with good memories of my transplanted life in Canada. Delia De Santis is a fiction writer living in Bright's Grove.

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Thursday, November 4, 2021

The Sarnia Journal

Page 9

Comment

Please, don’t let pandemic take away our respect for others

Sir: I was dismayed at Marg Johnson’s piece in your Oct. 7 edition titled “Self-centred vaccine whiners missing the Big Picture.” When has it ever been OK to resort to bullying, name-calling and blanket stereotyping to get your point across? Ms. Johnson’s piece is a glaring example of how COVID has somehow made it OK to have no respect for another’s opinion. I have friends who are vaccinated and unvaccinated. Some of my vaccinated friends did it for the greater good, because a

family member asked them to, for work or travel, or to protect themselves. My unvaccinated friends also have a wide variety of reasons for their decision: some feel it’s unnecessary, some want to

see a longer test period for the mRNA technology, and some follow those scientists, doctors and nurses who feel the risks outweigh the rewards. Some had a bad reaction to the first shot, a family history of blood clot-related illness, or a family member with an adverse past vaccine reaction. Except for one true anti-vaxxer, all of them are up to date on their other vaccines. I can assure you none of them are trying to hurt their fellow man. As long as we all remain re-

Carpenter deserves recognition for effort

Sir: What happens when you have several huge piles of rough-hewn lumber, some faulty architectural drawings and some suspect engineering diagrams? You get an expert to figure it all out. The Seaway Kiwanis Club has been responsible for many fine projects that have enhanced Canatara Park, especially in the area of the Animal Farm. The latest is the new log cabin. As a volunteer who had his

boots on the ground at the construction site, I want to ensure the community knows who took charge of the building and has supervised every facet of its construction. That person is Dan Abraham. A number of people, especially those in Carpenter’s Local 1256 and past carpentry students at Lambton College, will recognize Dan’s name. He retired June 30 after teaching the college’s carpentry course the past 13

years. He took on the challenge of taking piles of lumber and fashioning it into the structure now nearing completion. Dan Abraham’s professionalism, expert knowledge and hands-on work ethic made this abstract puzzle a reality. He is to be congratulated. It’s the house that Dan built.

Sir: Regarding Bob Boulton’s Oct. 21st guest column, “Showing skunks a little love just makes so much scents.” Actually, skunks can carry parasites and disease, including rabies, which they can spread to domestic pets. Many homeowners spend a lot of time working on their lawn to make it look fantastic, only to wake up one morning and find it dug up and heavily damaged by skunks hunting for grubs

underground. Unlike most wildlife that passes through, skunks can destroy a gorgeous lawn overnight, and it will take the homeowner time and mega-bucks to get it back in shape. Burrowing skunks also

damage gardens, and they spray pets and people in the yard at night. It can be very difficult getting everything cleaned up after that.

— Brian MacDonald Sarnia

spectful, it truly doesn’t matter to me what decision they make. It’s their body, and that is very personal. Those of us who are vaccinated should feel safe knowing we are protected, and those of us who aren’t must feel comfortable knowing that – like anything in life – there are potential consequences to our decisions. This risk assessment applies to everyday life: not exercising, smoking, speeding, and eating fast food all contribute to ill health, potential loss of life, risk

to others, and a taxation on our health care system. Looking at the statistics, what makes this any different? So much has been taken away from us. Please don’t let it take our kindness and respect for each other on top of everything else. We can – and should strive to – live together in harmony, despite the division we’ve seen over the past year and a half thanks to COVID. — Lynae Morningstar Sarnia

Pondering a sports complex

Sir: It is interesting to note that city council is looking into the potential of building of an indoor sports complex. A few years ago, when council was mulling over what to do with the closure of Germain Arena, a sports interest group from the Toronto area came to Sarnia with plans for an indoor sports facility. They were seeking commitment from local sports groups. They had

a site picked out. However, council had yet to arrive at a final decision on the old arena. I agree that a sports complex is long overdue in Sarnia, but at what cost to the taxpayer? I wonder about that as I dodge the sunken manhole covers on the streets. — Phil Nelson Sarnia

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The Sarnia Journal

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Comment Attention-seeking drivers the real problem Widespread student testing could

Sir: To the outspoken few that would impose a 40-km/ hour speed limit in Sarnia, please think about it before you speak. Speaking with emotion, and not reason, will punish all local drivers. And the speeders, well, they will continue to speed. They know the difference between right and wrong, and they don't care. Some say the police aren’t doing enough. But it’s difficult and time consuming to stake out and catch speeders, and they don't have the time or resources to do more than they

We live in a large subdivision (663 homes) and many of these vehicles pass our house, twice, every day. There are at least 20 souped-up cars, an equal number of trucks, and at least seventeen motorcycles. Only one has not been altered to produce noise. And they all speed. At least one car has a trunk full of amplifiers complete with microphones and speakers. He sucks in the noise, amplifies it, and blows it out, at whatever level he wants. Seriously. Downshifting, gearing up, revving, tire-squealing, deliberately getting their ride to back fire. This is what get’s people’s attention. This is the speeder they want. I have a suggestion. Contact the police and let them know the true hot spots. Then noise and speed- activated cameras can catch them in the act. It works on Highway 402, why not in Sarnia? Did you ever ask yourself why motorcycle riders aren't deaf? I asked one. He took his helmet off and said, "What?" as he took out Be welcomed by a warm community of like-minded peers. his earplugs. Cheers. do now. What people are really complaining about are the individuals who have had their vehicle noise abatement systems altered. Why? To produce the most noise possible and attract the most attention possible (low self-esteem). Manufacturers have rules they must comply with when they manufacture vehicles. Is it not a crime to alter these systems? The Ministry of Transportation has numerous studies attesting to the seriousness of damage caused by noise.

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Sir: Regarding the Oct. 14 story, ‘Teachers warned not to give students advice on vaccines.” Local Catholic school board director Scott Johnson cites a policy requiring teachers who choose not to be vaccinated to undergo rapid testing and verify negative COVID-19 results at least twice a week. This is a sensible policy decision. So why can it not be used selectively to screen our children? My two grandchildren attend Gregory A. Hogan School, which recently experienced it its second brush with COVID-19. I realize that rapid testing is not 100% accurate, but if it’s sufficiently accurate to test teachers, why can it not be used to test students? Testing would avoid the blanket policy of keeping whole

classes in quarantine when one student is infected. Why can’t a ready supply of rapid test kits be supplied to the families of students in the affected class, to be administered by the parents two to three times weekly? Such a policy has been has been widely used in schools in the U.K. Though other measures are in place, we can do no more until a vaccine in available for children under 12. I would like to understand, with a logical explanation, why this isn’t happening. I would also like to welcome back Dr. Sudit Ranade, Lambton’s medical officer of health. Ottawa’s loss is our gain. Perhaps he can supply some answers.

Sir: When I see large, hulking Sarnia Transit busses on the streets I am always struck by the fact they are either empty or have one or two passengers. Regardless of the current dip in ridership from Lambton College, city busses have always seemed to run far under capacity. Large busses are more suitable to large cities that actually do operate mass transit. Replacement by small “han-

di-bus” sized vehicles; adjusting allocation to seasonal demand at Lambton College; or even perhaps “bus-on-demand” as some cities have implemented, are alternatives worth considering. Surely, we do not need to expand the tax base to support such an underutilized service.

— Paul Spiers Sarnia

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November 11, 2021

SARNIA A SPECIAL TRIBUTE TO OUR LOCAL HEROES


Page R2

The Sarnia Journal

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Storytelling has a unique ability to help us remember

W

hat you have before you is The Journal’s sixth annual Sarnia Remembers edition. This 24-page special section is published for Remembrance Day to recognize Sarnia’s military contributions over the past 125 years. The goal is to commemorate the men, women, and even children who fought to protect our way of life, and pay tribute

GEORGE MATHEWSON to those who continue to serve today. Storytelling is a powerful way to connect people while conveying the history and

values that unite us. As with previous editions, most of the stories contained within have never been widely told before, beyond the families involved. They are about ordinary local residents who left their jobs, schools and farms to fight in extraordinary conflicts. Some are sad; some inspiring. All are true. This edition draws heavily on the Sarnia War Remembrance

Project, the exhaustive reservoir of military history compiled by retired teacher Tom Slater. Slater began the undertaking in 2012 after discovering no formal record existed of Sarnians who died while serving Canada. The third and final edition, a two-volume set, was published earlier this year. I would like to thank the talented writers, researchers and

fact-checkers for the content in this year’s Sarnia Remembers, especially Slater himself, Tom St. Amand and Randy Evans. Thank you to the families who so generously shared their family tales, letters and photo albums. And kudos to our sales team, graphic artists and all of our advertisers, without whom this special edition would not be possible.

We are proud to support our Canadian Veterans

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NEW RECRUITED SOLDIERS, with guns over their shoulders, march to a waiting train for deployment to the First World War in this image recorded at Ferry Dock Hill in downtown Sarnia. Photograph courtesy of the Lambton Heritage Museum, Grand Bend. COVER ART: A detail from Gassed, a painting by John Singer Sargent completed in 1919, which depicts the aftermath of a mustard gas attack in the First World War. Page 1 design, Erika Last.

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Thursday, November 4, 2021

The Sarnia Journal

Page R3

Submarine torpedo ended the life of young neighbours TOM SLATER & TOM ST. AMAND FOR THE JOURNAL

I

t happened in the North Atlantic on Dec. 1, 1940 and it changed the lives of two Sarnia families forever. The HMCS Saguenay was among the destroyers escorting a convoy of ships headed northeast towards Britain. At 3:30 a.m., in radio silence and about 300 nautical miles west of Ireland, the Saguenay was on high alert for enemy submarines, zigzagging at twelve knots.

Hector Le Gare

Aboard the A-class destroyer were Hector Le Gare, 21, and Paul Brown, 20. The two men shared similar backgrounds, having grown up within

two blocks of each other in Sarnia. They attended SCITS a year apart and both men lost their fathers at a young age.

Paul Brown

Le Gare was diminutive and had served six years as a navigator with the Canada Steamship Lines before enlisting in the Canadian Naval Reserve. Three months earlier, he had said goodbye to his mother Hazel and five sisters and joined the Saguenay as an Able Seaman. Though a year younger, Paul Brown enlisted earlier. Presenting consent papers signed by his mother, he signed up with the Royal Canadian Navy in January of 1938, six months before turning 18. Almost two years later, the strapping six-footer was assigned to the Saguenay as a pompom

NEVER FORGOTTEN

gunner. Brown and his three siblings had been devastated in August of 1940 when their mother, a local schoolteacher, died suddenly. Ada Brown, in what was ruled an accident, fell from a second storey window of their Maria Street home and landed on the paved driveway. She incurred severe brain injuries, a fractured pelvis and died the following day. Nearby, at her home on North Mitton Street, Hazel Le Gare prayed continually for the safety of her only son. And so it was that THE BOW OF the HMCS Saguenay was largely blown off. the two young Sarnians were aboard the Saguenay together that bitter managed to fend off the But it was too late. December morning. Argo, which left the area The Argo’s torpedo An Italian submarine unscathed, sank a freightstruck the destroyer’s named the Argo slipped bow. The fiery blast killed er in another convoy on to the surface behind Dec. 5, and and arrived 21 crewmembers, most the convoy and moved safely back at its base in of them on the forward forward, its movements Bordeaux, France. mess decks where the masked by darkness. Ninety members blaze and acrid smoke Watchers aboard the of the Saguenay were prevented firefighting. Saguenay saw a flare transferred to the British Among them were shoot up from the dark destroyer Highlander and Hector Le Gare and Paul sea and Commander a skeleton crew operated George Miles ordered his Brown, who became the the crippled destroyer. It second and third Sarship to increase speed nians to die in the Second arrived four days later in and head toward it. The World War. England. crew spotted the sub half The Saguenay’s crew At SCITS, a period of a mile away.

Submitted Photo

silence was observed as Principal F.C. Asbury announced the death of the two former students. Hector Le Gare was buried in a cemetery at Barrow-in-Furness, Lancashire, and his name is engraved as H. Legarrie on the Sarnia cenotaph. Paul Brown’s body was never recovered. He is memorialized on the Sarnia cenotaph and the Halifax Memorial in Nova Scotia.

They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old: Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn; At the going down of the sun and in the morning We will remember them. -Laurence Binyon, “Ode of Remembrance”

746 Exmouth St. Sarnia, ON 519-337-5491 Email: flowersplussarnia@gmail.com Website: flowersplus.com

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The Sarnia Journal

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Affable young navigator crashed after bombing run TOM SLATER & TOM ST. AMAND FOR THE JOURNAL

A

s a boy, Howard Morris loved building model airplanes, and so when the Second World War broke out he naturally enlisted in Royal Canadian Air Force. The Morrises lived on Christina Street, just south of Exmouth. Howard was born on Sept. 19, 1921, the only son of Marie and Lloyd, and an older brother to Georgina. The dad worked worked at Imperial Oil. Howard Morris was educated at London Road School and SCITS, played several different sports and was interested in hunting and camping. He joined the local Boy Scouts, was active in the Century Club, and

Howard Morris

was a devout member of Central United Church, where he served as an usher during Sunday services. He was good at music, and earned several medals while playing with the Robinson’s and Pressey’s Boys’ bands. After finishing high school in 1940, the sixfoot-one grad became a stock manager at Woolworth’s on Front Street,

and then worked at Imperial Oil doing asbestos insulation and brick masonry. In July 1941, he enlisted in the RCAF and after extensive training in Canada earned his Air Observers Badge. The following October he headed to England, took additional training, and in May of 1943 became a Navigator with the No. 426 Thunderbird Squadron. Navigators were responsible for plotting a precise course for the planes to their target and back, which was difficult enough under normal conditions. But it was especially dangerous for Morris’ squadron, which took part in many night bombing raids over Germany. Nevertheless, Howard excelled at plotting out the sorties, and his superiors assessed the quiet

HOWARD MORRIS worked at Imperial Oil before he enlisted in the RCAF. Submitted Photo

Sarnian as “capable and efficient.” On Dec. 16, 1943, Morris and his plane were one of 483 Lancaster bombers participating on a night raid over Berlin. He laid out a course for Lancaster II DS779, and after it struck its target, Pilot R.D. Stewart followed Morris’ route back to Yorkshire 1,000 kilometres away. It was an uneventful trip but the Lancaster had been in the air for more than seven hours, which might accounted for what happened next. As the heavy, four-engine bomber approached the RAF base at Lintonon-Ouse it descended through darkness and heavy cloud cover but, through some fatal miscalculation, struck

the ground and plowed on for several hundred yards. Propellers snapped off along with the oil cooler, part of one rudder and other frame parts. Though it managed to get airborne again and clear some trees and high-tension wires the plane crashed a mile farther on and burst into flame. Howard Morris, Pilot R.D. Stewart and three other crewmembers died. Two survived but were seriously injured. The fateful telegram arrived in Sarnia days later, informing Lloyd and Marie Morris that their 22-year-son was killed in active service. Two weeks later a letter arrived from the Wing Commander of Squadron No. 426. “The news of Howard’s

death came as a severe blow to the members of this Squadron. He completed several operational sorties over enemy territory,” he wrote. “ (Howard had a) quiet and efficient manner with which he carried out his duties as a Navigator. Theresa Graham, his cousin, remembered the young man as “a genuinely nice person, with such an agreeable, friendly manner.” The boy who liked to build model airplanes at his Sarnia home is buried at Harrogate (Stonefall) Cemetery in Yorkshire, England. His name is engraved on the Sarnia Cenotaph and on a plaque at Imperial Oil dedicated to the 24 company employees who died in the war.

We at the International Union of Painters and Allied Trades District Council 46- Locals 1590/1494 would like to say

to all our current acting and past veterans for their services.

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Mayor Mike Bradley

and Sarnia City Council


Thursday, November 4, 2021

The Sarnia Journal

Page R5


Page R6

The Sarnia Journal

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Brothers fought at one of bloodiest battles in history TOM SLATER & TOM ST. AMAND FOR THE JOURNAL

I

n 1916, Hector Cowan left SCITS at the age of 18 and signed up to fight in the First World War, two months after his older brother had enlisted. Hector became a sergeant in the 43rd Battery of the Canadian Field Artillery; brother Stewart was a 26-year-old lieutenant in the infantry. On Oct. 1, they both found themselves in France, near the banks of the Somme River. A staggering three million men fought the Battle of the Somme and more than one million were killed or wounded, making it one of the bloodiest in human history. Hector Cowan and his artillery unit were behind the front lines, unleashing shells on the enemy. Stewart Cowan and the 24th Battalion were right at the front, and that night he was killed while leading his platoon

over a parapet to attack German trenches near Courcelette, France. Back in Sarnia, John Cowan received a letter from his son on Oct. 22. Hector wrote that no doubt the news of Stewart’s death was a shock to everyone: “But to me, Dad, it was different. I knew Stew would fall sooner or later, the sooner the better for him; it’s the same

Sgt. Hector Cowan Submitted Photo

WE WILL REMEMBER

with all infantry men. They might get wounded, but it’s just a prolongation of the worst. It’s simply impossible to live through what they have to endure,” he said, going on to add: “I’ve been trying to locate Stewart’s grave through his regiment’s chaplain and I expect word any day from him. I’ll see that the grave is tended and fixed up to the best of my ability. I’ll also mark and locate it well,” he wrote. Despite best efforts of all involved, Stewart Cowan’s grave has never been found. Hector also reassured his father he was relatively safe because of his place in the artillery, not the infantry. And true to his word, Sergeant Cowan survived the war and returned to Sarnia in late January 1919. He not only survived, he thrived to become a prominent lawyer, family man and accomplished athlete. His nephew, John, remembers Hector as “a prankster who loved to laugh and to have fun.” After graduating from Osgoode Hall with a law degree in 1921, Hector Cowan set up a practice in Forest and in 1924 married Sarnian Lillian “Onnie” Hayes. By 1930, the couple had moved to Sarnia with children Joan and Anne, and for five years Hector practiced law with the Sarnia firm established by his father. The year 1935 was an important one for the Cowans. The family home at 536 Lakeshore Rd. was completed and Hector, 38, was named Crown Attorney for

Lambton County. He conducted himself with integrity and dignity, one peer noted, and Toronto Attorney-General Arthur Roebuck said he “quickly revealed a remarkable grasp of his duties.” Outside legal circles, people recognized “Hec” as a beloved and accomplished man who played all sports and games proficiently—whether it be golf, hockey, tennis, hunting or fishing. Perhaps his greatest sporting achievement was in curling. In February 1936, Cowan skipped his foursome to victory at the prestigious Ontario Tankard.

The original banner commemorating the feat has hung at the Sarnia Golf and Curling Club since November 1936. Unfortunately, he never lived to see the banner installed at his home club. Eight months after winning the provincial championship and twenty years after Stewart’s death, he was killed in a car accident in Detroit on Oct. 17, 1936. A soldier, family man, athlete, and lawyer held in high esteem by peers, Hec Cowan lived not a long life, but a full one. He is buried at Lakeview Cemetery.

AFTER THE WAR Hector Cowan, left, skipped Sarnia to victory at the Ontario Tankard, the annual provincial curling championship. Submitted Photo

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Thursday, November 4, 2021

The Sarnia Journal

Page R7

Allan brothers fell battling in brutal trench warfare

T

TOM SLATER & TOM ST. AMAND FOR THE JOURNAL

he writer H. G. Wells was born nearly three decades before Sarnians Arthur and James Allan, but outlived them by three decades. Shortly before Wells died in 1946 he warned, “If we don’t end war, war will end us.” His words came far too late for the Allan brothers. The family’s life in Sarnia began in 1893 when James and Florence Allan arrived from Palmerston, Ont. By the turn of the century they and their nine children lived at 382 Brock St. and were parishioners at Central United Church. The children probably attended Devine Street School, two blocks away. The senior Allan worked as a brakeman with the Grand Trunk Railway until he found a better-paying job as a stationary engineer in the local oil industry. Son Robert Allan, 22, succumbed to tuberculosis in August of 1915 and the following November, Arthur, 24,

Mount Sorrel only to fall and James, 27, headed three months later at the overseas together as Battle of the Somme. He soldiers with the 34th was last seen in a trench Battalion D Company. near Courcellette on Sept. The diminutive 27. brothers had dark hair Arthur’s remains were and blue eyes. They later recovered and he was worked as brakemen buried in France. James and enlisted in Sarnia was buried in Belgium. with the Canadian In Sarnia, Central Baptist Over-Seas ExpeditionChurch held a memorial ary Force. service that November The pair arrived in for the Allan brothers. France together on After acknowledging their May 26, 1916 and besupreme sacrifice, Pastor came members of the Mackay stated: “Only 7th Battalion, Canadian faith in the righteousness Army Infantry, British of our cause . . . and in Columbia Regiment. God, could lead men to And just days later endure what our men have they were marching endured and to meet so into Belgium to fight heroically every demand at the Battle of Mount made upon them.” Sorrel, where the Allies War is, according to were defending a hill overlooking the city of JAMES ALLAN, LEFT, and brother Arthur Allan, right, with an unidentified officer. H.G. Wells, a “curtain of Submitted Photo dense black fabric across Ypres. all the hopes and kindliThe Germans launched an artillery ness of mankind.” Over a though. More than 8,700 The 7th Battalion was barrage on June 2 that lasted century ago, James and Arthur Canadian men were killed, tasked with attacking enemy for 11 days. The brutal battle Allan were small threads in wounded or reported missing. that dark curtain. positions, and the Canadians was waged in heavy rain and Private James Allan who managed to reclaim the hill, constant shelling blew apart The names of both young had landed in France only two men are recorded on the Sardespite incessant rains, heavy trenches and reduced the landweeks before was killed on the nia Cenotaph. artillery bombardment and scape to a soggy mess pocked final day of fighting. lethal machine gun fire. with craters. His brother Arthur survived The cost was horrific,

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Page R8

The Sarnia Journal

Thursday, November 4, 2021

By the numbers: WW1 took heavy toll on local families RANDY EVANS FOR THE JOURNAL

G

ermany was a formidable enemy in the First World

War. By the end of the conflict, the industrial nation had brought to the fight 68,000 tons of poison gas, tens of thousands of machine guns firing up to 600 rounds per minute, and an estimated 275 million exploding artillery shells. Given such numbers it’s not surprising Canada suffered such heavy losses — 61,000 killed and 172,000 wounded. In Sarnia, the death of at least 121 men took a heavy toll on their families, friends and community. The youngest was Private Robert Batey, 15; the oldest Major Dr. David Bentley, 52. All but a handful of

Sarnia’s fallen had signed up for the army. Five served in the Air Corps, and Private David Smuck, though a member of the Army Medical Corps, died at sea when the Canadian Hospital Ship HMHS Llandovery Castle was torpedoed by a German submarine. The vast majority also died in combat; 13 fell to disease or war-related accidents. One Sarnia man, traumatized by the horrors around him, died by suicide by slitting his throat in a trench. The first Sarnian killed in the First World War was Private Roy Iliffe, 28, on April 22, 1915 at Ypres. He has no known grave. The last to die on foreign soil was Private Alfred Corrick, who succumbed to infection from gunshot wounds on Jan. 13, 1919, two months after the fighting ended. In total, 111 troops died

CANADIAN PRISONERS of war held at Bischofswerda, Saxony, Germany in 1915-16

On November 11, Imperial remembers We remember Imperial employees like Wallace Carman Horley who made the ultimate sacrifice. Before enlisting in the naval reserve in 1942, Wallace was a pipe fitter at the Sarnia refinery. In January 1944, he was assigned to the crew of the HMCS Alberni and served in the Battle of the Atlantic. On August 21, 1944, the ship was struck by a torpedo fired by a German submarine. Four officers and 55 crew members were lost in the attack, including Wallace. Later that month, Walter and Rachel Horley in Sarnia received a telegram informing them their 22-year old son was missing at sea. Four months later, Wallace was officially listed as missing and presumed dead.

Image courtesy M. I. Pirie, Canadian Great War Project

overseas. One of those who made it back to Canada was Private Frank Hickey, whose name appears on the Sarnia Cenotaph. He served 11 months in France but died at home of his war-related injuries on Sept. 1, 1919. Many local soldiers fell during major battles, including three at Ypres, 20 at the Somme, four at Vimy Ridge, and 33 during Canada’s Hundred Days, the name given to the war’s final offen-

sive, when the Canadian Corps played a pivotal role in victory. More than a century later, the remains of 42 brave Sarnians still have no known grave and lay beneath the soil of France and Belgium or the waters of the Atlantic. It’s said that generals die in bed. But it’s also true that 13 local officers perished on the front. The remains of three were never found, attesting to the fact they were killed with their men in the heat

of battle. War is an equal opportunity killer and bullets, shrapnel and poisons don’t care about a person’s station in life or whether they’re single or married. All of their deaths caused immeasurable loss and grief for their families, and 31 children back home were left without a father. With acknowledgment to Tom Slater and the Sarnia War Remembrance Project

We will always remember them

We will never forget. Special thanks to research by The Sarnia War Remembrance Project by Tom Slater, Tom St. Amand and Lou Giancarlo.

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Thursday, November 4, 2021

The Sarnia Journal

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Thursday, November 11th, 2021

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The Sarnia Journal

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Flying officer heading home when his plane disappeared

I

TOM SLATER & TOM ST. AMAND FOR THE JOURNAL

t was a blustery day in Gander, Newfoundland on Oct. 19, 1943 and Jay Johnston, 21, was eager to get home to Sarnia. He’d told his father his leave from the RCAF would start that day and he’d see him shortly. The previous three years had been eventful ones for the young flyer: enlistment, training, and joining No. 10 squadron, based out of Atlantic Canada and Newfoundland. By that point of the Second World War German U-boats were a constant threat and the squadron used long-range “flying boats” to hunt for enemy submarines, provide reconnaissance, and protect vital shipping convoys. It was dangerous work. Two weeks earlier Johnston, a Flying Officer and both a wireless operator and air gunner, was

part of a five-man crew that sank a surfaced U-boat in the mid-Atlantic. That same crew was now waiting at Gander Airport, where all flights had been grounded by bad weather. The plan was to board a B-24 Consolidated Liberator aircraft bound for Mont-Joli, Quebec, and from there Johnston would continue on to Sarnia. He must have felt relief when the Liberator finally lifted of with a crew of six and 18 passengers - all members of the RCAF starting some time off. Those waiting for him in Sarnia included his widowed father John, who worked as a school custodian, and sister Eloise, who was about married the following month. Her fiancée, Sarnia’s Mike Paithowski, 26, had enlisted with the Royal Canadian Naval Volunteer Reserve. Their mother had died when Johnston was in high school, and brother Roberts was overseas with an infantry unit of the

Royal Canadian Engineers. But Jay Johnston never saw his family again. As their plane approached Mont-Joli the crew learned heavy snow had closed the airport. The Liberator turned for Dorval Airfield near Montreal. The Liberator should have arrived by 3:45 a.m. but air controllers there lost contact. In Sarnia, the Johnstons awaited news. A few days later, the heartbreaking telegram arrived with word Jay Johnston was “missing after air operations.” The Canadian Air Force made 700 sorties over the next five weeks but found no trace of the missing plane. In late November, authorities called off the search, certain the plane was at the bottom of the St. Lawrence River. With Jay missing and presumed dead, life did not get easier for the Johnston family. Though Eloise married, her husband died when his ship was torpedoed on Nov. 24, 1944, almost a year after their wedding. Mike Paithowski left behind Eloise and their three-month-old son. Robert Johnston returned from the war but, according to a relative, was never the same. The following year, father John Johnston was told by the Air Force his son had been officially declared dead, and in April of 1946 he received a Wartime Service Gratuity of $651.13 for his loss.

THESE RCAF crew members, including Flying Officer Jay Johnston of Sarnia, upper left, were heading home on leave when their plane disappeared, just weeks after successfully attacking a marauding U-boat in the Atlantic. RCAF Photo

Then, two months later, news arrived in Sarnia the missing

Liberator had been found. Continued on page 11


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Horrific crash was worst in Canadian military history TOM SLATER & TOM ST. AMAND FOR THE JOURNAL

Continued from page 10

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n June 26, 1946, a pilot on an aerial search for a different plane that was missing spotted charred wreckage near the top of Black Mountain in the Laurentians. The nearest community was St. Donat, Quebec, a village 150 kilometres northwest of Dorval.

One can only hope the airplane’s discovery and subsequent burial provided some closure for the family. That same day, a search party blazed a trail through the rugged terrain and found the bodies of 24 RCAF men inside the burnt wreckage. Experts speculated a mix of snow, rain and fog combined with a mapping error and improperly calibrated altimeter had contributed to the crash. It

was the worst aviation accident in Canadian military history. Because only three bodies could be identified and the terrain was rugged and remote, authorities decided to bury the remains of the fallen at the crash site. On July 3, 1946, friends and family of the crew and passengers attended the funeral and burial near the Black Mountain crash site. Services were conducted in the Catholic, Protestant and Jewish faiths and a simple white cross erected for each airman. Jay Johnston was gone but not forgotten. He was mentioned posthumously in dispatches in connection with the King’s birthday honours list. He had earned the award while serving as a radio operator and gunner, the only Sarnian mentioned among several hundred Canadian servicemen listed. THE 1943 Saint-Donat crash site monument and graves, taken from an observation tower. One can only hope the Simon Mercier Photo airplane’s discovery and subsequent burial provided some closure for the family. name is inscribed on the SarIn 1985 the Commonwealth Cairn remains at the crash site, ers can find remnants of the along with scattered pieces of aircraft, plaques detailing the nia cenotaph as J. S. Johnston. War Graves Commission the Liberator. accident, and a monument ordered the men’s remains Today, an 11-kilometre trail honouring the victims. moved to the parish cemeleads to the site, where hikIn Sarnia, Jay Johnston’s tery in St. Donat. A Memorial

We shall remember the Men and Women who have sacrificed for our freedom.

Constituency Office: 805 Christina St. North Suite 102 • Point Edward www.bobbaileympp.com Tel: (519) 337-0051 Email: bob.baileyco@pc.ola.org


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The Sarnia Journal

Thursday, November 4, 2021

We the m will never COUR

Remembering and Ho


Thursday, November 4, 2021

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members of UA Local 663 r forget the sacrifice of our RAGEOUS VETERANS. Supporter of

onouring our Heroes


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The Sarnia Journal

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Sarnia’s namesake ship set war mine-clearing record TOM SLATER & TOM ST. AMAND FOR THE JOURNAL

W

hen the residents of Sarnia learned in July of 1942 that a warship was being named for the city they proudly adopted her as their own. Groups of citizens and dignitaries attended the commissioning HMCS Sarnia in Toronto the next month bearing gifts for the crew and officers. And when the new minesweeper joined the Newfoundland Task Force in September, city council announced two more: a crest of the city to hang in the commander’s cabin and a large washing machine for the 83 men on board. In fact, Sarnians never stopped sending gifts to make the sailors’ lives more comfortable: scarfs, gloves, soap, cigarettes and cigars, chocolate and baked goods. And when

Ship logo

the officers mentioned the crew could use hot plates and electric irons, the local HMCS Sarnia committee promised to do its best. In reality, the crew lived in tight quarters and took on dangerous assignments in bone-chilling temperatures. They welcomed any comforts from home to tolerate the unpredictable weather while escorting ships and clearing mines. As one officer aboard the

Sarnia put it: “On convoy duty … I had the pleasure of being frozen to death in the North Atlantic.” Clearing mines was painstaking and hazardous, especially in turbulent waters. It wasn’t unusual for the Sarnia to sweep up to twelve or fifteen mines in a single patrol. During the process, “You could THE HMCS SARNIA, as she appeared in October of 1943. cut the tension on the ship with Photo courtesy, Department of National Defence, J-309 a knife,” noted Petty Officer Liam Dwyer. whirlwind 48 hours dignitaries the Sarnia never forgot the They did an exceptional job. and residents treated them bleak rescue scene. Lieut. MosIn fact, the Sarnia cleared more to a sightseeing tour, formal sop, the Sarnia’s commander, mines from waters off the East- dinners, and large parties. visited Sarnia after the war and ern seaboard of North America The crew’s mettle was tested described how his men saved than any other ship, Canadian again just three weeks before several of the Esquimalt’s men, or American. the war’s end. In March 1945 hauled them from the ocean During the Second World the Sarnia was assigned with and applying artificial respiraWar, more than 300 other minesweepers to the tion. They also brought aboard ships were named after Halifax Defence Force to hunt the bodies of 13 dead. Canadian communifor German U-boats suspectIt was another example, ties. But the relationMossop told his audience, of ed to be lurking in Halifax ship Sarnia forged with Harbour. the ship upholding “Sarnia the men aboard HMCS traditions to the highest.” In the early morning of Sarnia was something The men who served on April 16 the submarine U-190 special. HMCS Sarnia never forgot the torpedoed Sarnia’s sister ship, To acknowledge the HMCS Esquimalt. She sank in sacrifice and generosity of the support, the officers four minutes, taking 28 men to community. and crew donated two For three years, when most their deaths. photographs of the needed, Sarnians did their best Forty-three survivors clung ship to the city. And to help the officers and crew to floats in the icy Atlantic. in September 1944, perform their duties at the While the arriving Sarnia while the ship was highest level. managed to pull 27 of them being refitted in Nova from the water alive the others Scotia, four crewmem- perished from exposure. bers visited Sarnia for Many crewmembers aboard two days. During the Continued on page 15

“Thank-you” veterans and current military personnel, for the precious “gift of freedom”, to all Canadians. We are forever indebted. Blessed are the led, in the way, Who walk in the law of the Lord, day by day. His precepts and statutes they faithfully keep, Unashamed, His commandments they diligently seek. Bible in hand, our fore-fathers, settled this “great” land, Fearing God, our constitution re ected, their stand. Prayer and God’s Word, guided our courts and school, Respect and humility, governed their rule. Have we become so morally insensitive, we can’t discern the way? Do the gods of materialism, egotism and power, rule the day? Have we deceived our next generation, being politically correct? Are the statistics of divorce and suicide, the future’s effect? Life has many choices, but eternity only two, Who will you be found serving, when your life, is thru. You see, “repentance” is required, for you and for me, Bringing Jesus unending “forgiveness”,to set us free. If we “humble” ourselves and “pray”, God promises to heal our land, His righteousness exalts a Nation, with one accord, we will stand. So we say, “God Bless Canada” and earnestly pray, Forever, your mercy endures Lord, change our hearts to-day. “If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land.” 2 Chronicles 7:14

PRAYER:

Dear Lord Jesus, “thank-you” for the price that you paid for me. Because of the sin in my life, I find myself separated from you. I ask for your forgiveness and invite you into my heart, to be Lord of all the areas of my life. Thank-you for the “gift” of salvation and the assurance of an eternal home in Heaven with you. Amen

Grogan, Watford

The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 530 would like you to join us and our members as we commemorate Remembrance Day on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month of the year.


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HMCS Sarnia lives on through legend and artifacts TOM SLATER & TOM ST. AMAND FOR THE JOURNAL

Continued on from 14

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he HMCS Sarnia was decommissioned in 1945 and later transferred to the Turkish Navy where, until 1972, she served as a patrol boat, the Buyukdere. When Lieut. Mossop visited Sarnia after the war he presented the city with the nameplate from the deck of the ship, along with the ship’s ensign. The minesweeper’s bell is still maintained, in trust, by the local Royal Canadian Sea Cadet Corps HMC. Repulse. Beginning in 1995, crewmembers held reunions to recognize the 50th anniversary of the dramatic sea rescue and rekindle friendships forged in war. Lou Howard, a former Navigation Officer aboard HMCS Sarnia, visited Sarnia in 2010 on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the Canadian Navy. The 86-year-old veteran presented Mayor Mike Bradley and the city with a commemorative

plaque honouring Sarnia and its minesweeper. Included with the plaque, which hangs at City Hall, was a photo of the ship. Later, Howard and Bradley and a few others stood on the shore of the St. Clair River, where the visitor became emotional. Over lunch, a tearyeyed Howard described the vital role the Sarnia played in rescuing the sailors of the Esquimalt. Though 65 years had passed, he remembered every detail. In 2017, Howard was in St. John’s, Newfoundland where he donated the pennant from the HMCS Sarnia to the Crow’s Nest, a unique national historic site that houses hundreds of original maritime artifacts from the Second World War. Founded in 1942 as a gathering place for seagoing officers, the Crow’s Nest is a veritable time capsule of the 1940s when Canada and Newfoundland fought Germany in the Battle of the Atlantic. Today, the triangular pennant of HMCS Sarnia hangs at The Crow’s Nest, not far away from the periscope of the German sub U-190.

WE SHALL NOT FORGET

SURVIVORS OF the minesweeper HMCS Esquimalt are helped off the deck of the HMCA Sarnia in Halifax after the Esquimalt was torpedoed by the German submarine U-190 on 16 Apr 1945. Source: Lt Richard G. Arless / Canada. Dept. of National Defence / Library and Archives Canada / PA-157021


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Thursday, November 4, 2021

Many local families suffered long after fighting ended RANDY EVANS FOR THE JOURNAL

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he First World War was a cruel conflict and its repercussions were felt for decades among some Sarnia families. Margaret Reid of Dundas Street, for example, lost husband Pvt. George Reid on Oct. 5, 1915. Almost three years later her brother Pvt. Cameron Bissett was killed at Amiens, with no known grave. Maud Guertin, who lived on Maxwell Street, also suffered the loss of her husband and brother. Husband Percival Guertin and brother Urban Noel were each killed in action. And though two of her brothers-in-law survived they came home wounded from the war. The Knowles family on London Road received notice in April of 1918 that one of their sons had been killed and another wounded. Five

CANADIAN NURSING SISTERS tend to wounded soldiers in a hospital during the First World War. Photo courtesy, Library and Archives Canada

months later came word that another family member, Lt. John Knowles, was in a hospital, paralyzed, with wounds to

At Praill’s, we take this Day to

his face and legs. The Cunningham, Nash and Lumley families suffered the sad fate of losing a son, and their siblings coming home injured. The James Ross family on Emma Street sent four sons to the battlegrounds of Europe. After the eldest William was maimed, second son Peter was reported as “dangerously wounded” but did survive. James was medically discharged as a result of gunshot wounds to both legs and forehead, and the youngest Edward returned home gassed, burned, with wounds to the left leg and head. Another four lo-

cal families – the Allans, MAXWELL STREET RESIDENT Crawfords, Simmons and Maud Guertin, seen with with son Timpsons – contended Francis Alexander, lost her husband with multiple sons and and her brother to the war. husbands not returning Submitted Photo home. It’s estimated 172,000 Canadians were physically tribute to those who paid the wounded or shell-shocked ultimate sacrifice. during combat in the First And while we remember World War. Those soldiers did those from the First World not return to Canadian soil in War whose names are enone piece, either physically or graved on the Sarnia Cenomentally. And not all of them taph, let us also remember recovered from their injuries. those whose names are not reThe cost of The Great War corded there: Pvt. Ivan Collins, in grief and pain and mental Cpt. Dr. Walter W. McKenzie anguish continued long after and Pvt. John D.B. Rae. the Armistice for individual Lest we forget. soldiers, their families and the Sarnia community as a whole. With acknowledgment to On Nov. 11, local residents Tom Slater and the Sarnia gather to remember all vetWar Remembrance Project. erans with gratitude and pay

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On behalf of the over 1000 members and staff of LiUNA 1089, Thank you to all who served.

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Thursday, November 4, 2021

Headline-making flying ace wouldn’t talk about the war TOM SLATER & TOM ST. AMAND FOR THE JOURNAL

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arry Dowding emerged from the Second World War as one of Sarnia’s most accomplished and decorated military heroes. But he rarely discussed his involvement, so his story can never fully be told. Born in 1921, Harry was the older son of Ivan and Rhea Dowding. The family lived on John Street, and Harry and younger brother Jack attended Devine Street School and SCITS. Harry was 20 when he enlisted in the RCAF in March of 1941 and after extensive training was called overseas. From June 1942 to October 1943 he was a pilot and instructor

Harry Dowding

with the No. 403 Wolf Squadron. His squadron flew Spitfires, the iconic single-seat fighter-interceptor that combined speed, maneuverability and firepower.

Submitted Photo

Harry Dowding’s exploits in the sky made headlines in Europe. He was one of two Spitfire

We will Remember Them

pilots that attacked and stopped a Nazi freight engine during a low-level sweep across France in March 1943. Two months later, while escorting Allied bombers on a daytime raid in northern France, he destroyed a German Messerschmitt, and with two other fighters brought down one Focke-Wulf and damaged a second. That September, he flew within 200 feet of a German plane to send it down in flames. That same month, he was one of three Canadian fighter pilots that each shot down a German plane while escorting bombers attacking a railway yard

at Abbeville, France. And on June 7, one day after D-Day, he became the first Allied airman to make a “both-wheelsdown-landing” in occupied France. What happened reads like a Hollywood film script. When enemy anti-aircraft fire struck his Spitfire the flak ripped through the fuselage between his legs and tore holes in the roof, narrowly missing his head. Bullets punctured the fuel tanks, spraying gasoline into the cockpit as he desperately searched for a place to land. Another Allied pilot flew on ahead and strafed a farmer’s field

with warning shots in an attempt to clear it of people, equipment and animals so Dowding could put down on the improvised runway. Though he managed to land the plane on the ground a farmer, a suspected German sympathizer, pushed a cart directly into its path. The Spitfire hit the cart and burst into flame. However, members of the French Resistance managed to pull Dowding from the cockpit, and later arrange his passage back to England before German soldiers could find him. Continued on page 19

A 403 SQUADRON Spitfire, somewhere in France.

Submitted Photo

Lest We Forget www.federalbridge.ca/ConneXion


Thursday, November 4, 2021

Continued from page 10

Undaunted by that brush with death, he returned to the skies again and downed two more Messerschmitts in June, lifting his total to six kills. That made Harry Dowding an official “flying ace” for having shot down five or more enemy aircraft in aerial combat. He returned to Canada after his tour of operations ended in October 1944, and left the RCAF the following February with a remarkable record: 220 operational sorties and credited with at least six enemy planes destroyed and two damaged. He had already received the prestigious Distinguished Flying Cross in 1942, and was later awarded the Bar to Distinguished Flying Cross. After the war he settled back in Sarnia, married Joyce Stark, was father to three children, and became president of Mueller Brass, one the city’s leading industries. But Harry Dowding rarely mentioned the war and never attended local Remembrance Day ceremonies or squadron reunions. His attitude was: “I served my country. I just want to put it behind me,” his son Jeff said. His mother said her son’s reluctance to talk about it stemmed from his “bad memories about the war.” Sarnia’s Harry Dowding became an ace fighter pilot and one of the city’s most decorated soldiers in the Second World War. And when he died in 2003 he took many personal stories of his military accomplishments to the grave.

The Sarnia Journal

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Death of younger brother left family devastated TOM SLATER & TOM ST. AMAND FOR THE JOURNAL

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hen he was 16, Jack Dowding did something he’d wanted to do for eight months. He left SCITS halfway through Grade 11 and lied about his age to enlist in the Royal Canadian Air Force. He told a recruitment officer he wanted to “follow in his brother’s footsteps.” Older brother Harry had enlisted two years earlier, in 1941, and was a highly decorated fighter pilot in England. Ivan and Rhea Dowding were opposed to their son’s decision. But the teen was determined to do his part in the war, and after nearly a year of training as an Air Gunner he got his wish and headed to England in July 1944.

Jack Dowding

Submitted Photo

Jack and his brother Harry hadn’t seen each other in three years, but enjoyed a weekend leave together before Jack took

further training. They would never see each other again. While Harry returned to Fighter Command in France, Jack headed to an operational training unit in Scotland. For the next ten weeks he trained as an Air Gunner in Bomber Command. His interest was “keen” and his airwork “steady and confident,” instructors noted. There is no easy way to learn to fly a heavy bomber and the novice crews were training in out- A TWIN-ENGINE WHITLEY bomber, seen here circa 1940, were unreliable and dated, battle-scarred earned the nickname “flying coffin.” two engine Whitleys, Photo courtesy, RAF - RAF website planes so prone to mechanical failure they’d earned the tion absolved anyone of blame decades slipped by. If someone nickname “Flying Coffin.” asked about his brother, Harry for the air disaster but noted On Tuesday, Oct. 17, 1944, would tersely reply, “He died in that a violent electrical storm Jack’s crew was doing its fifth was moving through the area at the war” and invite no further night training flight. Visibility discussion. the time of the crash. was 23 kilometres in condiIn 1952, Harry Dowding and On Friday, Oct. 20, at their tions described as clear to wife Joyce named their firsthome on John Street in Sarfair, with breaks in the storm nia, Ivan and Rhea Dowding born son Jack in his late uncle’s clouds. As their plane lifted off received a heartbreaking telehonour. at 7:06 p.m. for a solo five-hour gram from Ottawa with word Rhea often cried when asked flight, distant lightning flashes Jack had been “killed on active about her younger son, and unpunctured the night sky. service overseas.” His funertil her death in 1987 kept Jack’s The cause of the crash photo on a bedside table. al was held with full service remains unsolved to this day. Jack Dowding, 18, was the honours and military officers Observers and investigators youngest Sarnian to die in the present, and he was buried confirmed that around 9:30 Second World War. in Harrogate R.A.F. Regional p.m. Dowding’s plane disinteInscribed on his gravestone Cemetery in England. grated in mid-air. Pieces of it are the words: He Challenged Harry returned home a war crashed about five kilometres Those Who Would Destroy The hero, but neither he nor his from the North Sea with the Innocent And The Way Of Life parents spoke much about wreckage scattered over a large Jack. The memories were too He Loved So Well. area around Slingsby Farm raw, too painful even as the in County Durham, England. 3 YEARS STRO All six crewmembers NG VER O perished from horrific injuries but, mercifully, their deaths were quick. An official investiga-

Remembering Our

B UI

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Thursday, November 4, 2021

Airmen jumped from burning plane, landed in Germany TOM SLATER & TOM ST. AMAND FOR THE JOURNAL

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Point Edward -Warrant Officer Eiler Villy Andersen. “Andy,” as he was known, was on just his fourth mission when spears of light from powerful searchlights pierced the night sky and flak exploded all around the squadrons of Allied

s the British bomber approached Hagen, Germany on March 15, 1945, what had been a routine flight turned chaotic. The aircraft, known as “Moonlight Mermaid,” was famous among airmen for its nose art - a pin-up girl reclining on a crescent moon. The plane was on its 81st mission in nine months, an astonishing number given the inherent danger of bombing runs. The wireless operator aboard “Moonlight Mermaid” that clear Thursday evening was a 22-year-old from Eiler “Andy” Andersen

aircraft. And then the improbable happened. Shortly after “Moonlight Mermaid” had released its payload a high-flying bomber from the same squadron dropped an incendiary bomb that struck the Halifax. Fire spread quickly in the cockpit, and with his aircraft losing altitude pilot Stewart Bonter yelled, “Abandon Aircraft!” Four men, including Andy, parachuted. The “Moonlight Mermaid,” engulfed in flame, continued on for seven or eight kilometres until it crashed near Dusseldorf at 8:45 p.m. Bonter and two other men perished in the crash. Only after the war ended did authorities learn that four crewmembers had bailed out. Each of the survivors landed in enemy territory, alone and on their own. Sgt. Thomas Scott was caught the next day and executed in cold blood by the Hagen Gestapo. Two others were caught within days and imprisoned until the war’s end. “Andy” Andersen

THE ILL-FATED CREW, with Point Edward’s Eiler “Andy” Andersen, centre. Submitted Photo

was also captured by the Germans shortly after he landed. Now a prisoner,

he had time to reflect: On his Danish parents who had immigrated to Canada in the late 1920s; on his childhood in Point Edward and graduation from SCITS; on enlisting and meeting the lovely Maureen Clarke during RCAF training in Manitoba; and on their marriage and first child, Gail, who was born

before he headed overseas. The toddler turned two on March 15th; the very day he narrowly escaped death. Maureen had given him a shamrock for good luck and protection, and throughout the war it never left his side. Back in Canada, the authorities notified the family that the “Moonlight Mermaid” and its crew were missing. All they could do was wait and pray.

Continued on page 21 LEST WE FORGET

we thank our local veterans

Lest We Forget

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Thursday, November 4, 2021

The Sarnia Journal

Plane found, family invited to service

Continued on from 20

On the 18th of May, Maureen Andersen received a telegram in Winnipeg from her husband with joyous news: “REPATRIATED TO ENGLAND PRISONER OF WAR RCAF OVERSEAS AM WELL AND FIT ALL MY LOVE.” That October, Andy was discharged and the couple moved to Sarnia. They had five more children and several grandchildren, and Andy worked a number of jobs to support his growing family: a delivery man, car salesman, real estate agent, and the owner of Andy’s Variety, a convenience store. He loved watching college football on TV, doing crossword puzzles and visiting the Cenotaph on Remembrance Day. But Andy, a humble man who didn’t like talking about himself, rarely mentioned the war and, in particular, the final flight of the “Moonlight Mermaid.”

Humane Society releases war pins

T

he Ontario SPCA and Humane Society has released a new commemorate “Animals in War” pin to honour the wartime contributions of animals. The sale of each pin provides a $1 donation to Royal Canadian Legion branches to support veterans as well as care for animals in need. Mules carried artillery, horses transported troops and hauled field guns, pigeons delivered crucial messages, cats served as companions and kept ships free of vermin, and dogs have served as messengers, medical assistants, bomb detectors and search and rescue workers, the SPCA said. This year’s pin features a cat. Pins are available at ontariospca.ca/ AnimalsInWar or by calling 1-888668-7722, ext. 360.

Page R21

TOM SLATER & TOM ST. AMAND FOR THE JOURNAL

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hen Eiler “Andy” Andersen died in 1997 he knew the head of the Hagen Gestapo had been hanged in 1947 for the execution of Thomas Scott. He also knew Scott and his crewmates who died in the plane crash were buried in a British Military Cemetery in Germany. But the final resting place of the famed bomber had always been a mystery. Finally, two decades after his death, three German archaeologists found pieces of Halifax NP689 scattered 30 centimetres underground in a bucolic meadow near Dusseldorf. They obtained names and their search for remaining family members led them to Lori Williams in Burlington, Ont. For Lori, Gail’s daughter, her grandfather, lovingly called “Papa,” was a hero. “He was the kindest person I have ever known. I also knew he had been in the war and he always treated me as the most important person in the world,” she said. After Andy passed away, Lori’s mission was to keep her grandfather’s memory alive. She spent years on the Internet looking for

THE AIRCRAFT HALIFAX NP689, better known as the Moonlight Mermaid, was downed by an Allied bomb. Submitted Photo

any information about his squadron and crewmates. Fortunately, one of the German archaeologists found her name and email on an Internet forum. They invited Williams and other family members to a memorial service on March 15, 2020 - 75 years after the bomber crashed. Lori and husband Clint made the trip, but the pandemic prevented her two cousins in Sarnia from travelling to Germany. In the end, the commemorative service was cancelled, but the couple met the archaeologists, visited the final resting place of “Moonlight Mermaid”, and paid their respects

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WE REMEMBER

to the crew members at Reichswald Forest British Military Cemetery. Williams said the time in Germany allowed her to reflect “about all that my

Papa went through at such a young age.” It was a special trip, one she plans to make again.

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Page R22

The Sarnia Journal

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Canadian initiative provides dolls to war-stricken kids tours in the embattled countries of Kuwait and Croatia. And he was especially moved few days after his by children caught son Brent was in lethal crossfire killed in Afghanor killed by land istan in April 2007, mines. The lucky Camlachie’s Don Poland ones survived, received a call from Brian but often without Isfeld. parents, limbs, or It was a “father to possessions. father” conversation, for Isfeld’s life Isfeld also had lost a son changed one day overseas during a peacedriving through keeping mission. Through a Croatian village him, Poland learned in 1993. Artillery about Mark Isfeld and the shells had flattened Izzy Doll. a house and atop The story of the Izzy the debris lay a AN IZZY DOLL Doll began three decades small unmoving The Canadian Military Engineers figure in a blue top. ago in a village in warAssociation Photo torn Croatia. British Fearing the worst Columbian Mark “Izzy” as he neared the Isfeld was a Master Corfigure, Isfeld was and IEDs (Improvised poral with the Royal Carelieved to see it wasn’t a Explosive Devices). nadian Engineers, tasked child, but an abandoned He had witnessed with clearing and defusdoll. He took a photo, but war’s devastating impact ing land mines, bombs never forgot the doll. during peacekeeping While home on leave that Christmas, Mark showed the photo to his mother Carol, and said, “Some little girl has lost her doll, and a doll has lost her little girl.” Moved by her son’s compassion, Carol got to work. When Mark returned to Croatia for his third peacekeeping mission a package from home awaited him. It contained 22 woollen dolls, each stuffed with cotton batting and about 12 centimetres (five inches) in length, perfect TOM SLATER & TOM ST. AMAND FOR THE JOURNAL

A

for fitting inside uniform pockets. Carol asked her son to give them to children who needed consoling. And Isfeld did so. His section commander noted: “Mark collected little hearts, he collected little smiles, and he collected little handshakes.” Just months later near the village of Kakma, Croatia, Mark Isfeld, 31, was killed by a roadside bomb. His life had ended on June 21, 1994, but his legacy did not. Fellow soldiers asked Carol Isfeld if she would continue making the dolls so they could give them to children in Mark’s memory. The regiment even had a name for them: “Izzy Dolls.” She recruited other women in her community and for the next decade they continued to make Izzy Dolls for Canadian engineers and other peacekeepers, wherever they were deployed. Carol Isfeld eventually put the pattern for the Izzy Doll on the Internet, but obtained a copyright for the name and the pattern, so Izzy Dolls could be given only for charity and never for profit. The grassroots movement expanded, and pockets of volunteers across Canada have made more than 1.3 million Izzy Dolls over the past

We Will Remember Them

Don Poland

two decades. Corporal Brent Poland’s death on Easter Sunday of 2007 left many grief stricken. Lorena Macklin, who knew Brent’s parents Don and Pat Poland, wanted to “help in any way I could.” Don told her about the Izzy Dolls and Macklin obtained the pattern and started knitting. Word soon spread and individual volunteers and church groups eager to honour Brent Poland’s memory began making Izzy Dolls and giving them to

Macklin. The following June, Don and Pat Poland brought the dolls to a Toronto depot from where they would be shipped to Afghanistan. “(The) Honda Accord was stuffed with bags of dolls. People at the depot said it was one of the largest donations they had ever received,” Don Poland recalled. Mark Isfeld’s life and death were like the dolls he inspired: their impact was significant; their value immeasurable.

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Thursday, November 4, 2021

The Sarnia Journal

Page R23

Recruiters turned a blind eye to underage enlistees RANDY EVANS FOR THE JOURNAL

I

n the early stages of the First World War, Canadian recruiters adhered to military regulations requiring soldiers to be a minimum age of 18 (later 19). But following heavy carnages at Ypres and on the Somme the strict age rule was supplanted by the military’s need for additional manpower. War historian Tim Cook estimates as many as 20,000 underage Canadian soldiers saw duty during that war. One of them, William Henry Hutchinson, actually served five months in France with the Cana-

dian Railway Troops at the age of 12. War hype no doubt prompted some to enlist, but the economic realities of the day were another factor. Many young enrollees were not in school but working at difficult and low-paying jobs. In contrast, three square meals and $1.10 a day in the pocket of a snazzy looking uniform would look attractive. Alfred Manning of Victoria Street in Point Edward was just 16 and stood five-foot-one in height, but successfully joined the ranks in Sarnia in January of 1916. He kept up the charade for 14 months and managed to get to France, where he eventually turned

himself in and was discharged as underage. Kenneth Bissell, of RR2 Sarnia, was also 16 years when he deceived recruiters in London in June of 1917. After nine months in uniform, all served in Canada, he turned himself in and was discharged. At least they survived. Sadly, at least two local underage soldiers are known to have died. They didn’t join the army as a result of complicity on the part of recruiters, but were allowed in by ill-advised parental consent. Robert Batey enlisted as a 14-year-old and was killed at the age of 15, with no known grave. Baden Powell Pickell, of Thedford, enlisted with

his mother’s consent at 16 year and headed overseas to Europe. He survived two years of fighting major battles, but his luck ran out in the trenches at Arras in September 1918 after receiving shell shrapnel in the head. Because he didn’t die in the midst of battle military brass regarded his death as “wastage.” The Commonwealth War Graves Commission confirms the deaths of 385 under-aged soldiers in the First World War. But with enlistment papers full of false birthdates, the real number may never be known.

One of Sarnia’s bravest soldiers died in key WW1 battle

S

TOM SLATER & TOM ST. AMAND FOR THE JOURNAL

arnia’s Royal “Roy” Crawford arrived in France with the Canadian 1st Battalion and a heavy heart. His father Roy had drowned in the St. Clair River the previous summer, leaving mother Lomila a widow with seven children. Shortly after Roy enlisted, so did two of his brothers. But when Roy reached France on Sept. 22, 1916 he learned that big brother Rob, 29, had been shot and killed 10 days earlier at the Battle of the Somme. Sorrow notwithstanding, the 19-year-old was eager for action. He’d reverted to the rank of Private at his own request just two weeks earlier so he could get to the front quicker. Over the next two years Roy Crawford exemplified the ideals of bravery, heroism, and leadership on the battlefield. Soon he was promoted to Lance Corporal, continued to fight and excel, and on Nov. 1,

1917 became a Corporal, then Lance Sergeant, and rising to the rank of Sergeant on Dec. 1.

Royal Crawford

That same month he was awarded the Military Medal for bravery for his bold action at the Battle of Passchendaele. When his commanding officer died early during an attack, Crawford immediately assumed command of the platoon and under his leadership

they reached their objective. Despite being wounded in battle, “his courage and skill assisted greatly in keeping up the spirit of the men,” a fellow officer reported. Recognizing a leader when they saw one, Crawford’s superiors recommended him for a commission, and early in 1918 he returned to England for senior officer training. He emerged a Lieutenant, and by Sept. 27 was back in France. Crawford had arrived just in time for the Battle of Canal-du-Nord and Cambrai, part of a major offensive during the Hundred Days Campaign that forced the German Army into retreat and led to the end of the First World War. Against overwhelming odds and a desperate enemy, Canadian troops fought a series of brutal engagements over a two-week period. Channelling through a narrow gap in the canal, they punched through a series of fortified villages and deep interlocking trenches to capture Bourlon Wood and the City of Cambrai.

It was a major Allied victory, but it left 14,000 Canadians dead and wounded. As one historian noted: “German machine-gunners proved to be the Canadians’ nemesis through the last half of the 100 days.”

Robert Crawford

Lieutenant Roy Crawford’s 1st Division suffered more than 1,000 casualties on Oct. 1 alone. He was fatally injured himself when his platoon confronted the enemy near the

French villages of Blecourt and Sancourt and machine gun fire lacerated his stomach and lung. News of his death hadn’t yet reached Sarnia when The Observer ran an article in mid-October about the two Crawford boys. The story described how Roy was doing his city proud while Robert had made the supreme sacrifice. “His mother received [Roy’s] Military Medal a few days ago and is justly proud of the honour her son has brought on her home,” it read. A few days later, Lomila received a telegram stating Roy had been wounded Oct. 1 and was missing. Within a week, a second telegram confirmed the war had stolen a second son from her, two years after the first. Royal Crawford, 21, is remembered today as one of Sarnia’s bravest fallen soldiers. He is buried in Sancourt British Cemetery, Nord, France. His headstone is inscribed with the same words as brother Robert’s: HE DIED FOR KING AND COUNTRY.

WE REMEMBER

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Page R24

The Sarnia Journal

Thursday, November 4, 2021

The Staff and Members of Carpenters’ Local 1256 thank our Veterans as well as the men and women of the Canadian Armed forces for everything they have done to keep us safe

CANADIANS ARE CELEBRATING THE 76th ANNIVERSARY ~ ENDING OF WWII

THANK YOU “YOU ARE OUR HEROES”


Thursday, November 4, 2021

The Sarnia Journal

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hat’s happening events must be open to the public or virtual, of general interest, 60 words or less, and received at least two weeks prior to the event. Please include ticket prices, if any, and a phone number or website where readers can obtain more information. Email notices to info@thesarniajournal.ca THURSDAY, NOV. 4

Grief Support St. Joseph’s Hospice Caring Hearts Children’s Program offering a 6-week grief support group for children aged 6-9. 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Thursdays until Dec. 9. Assessment required. For more or to register, contact

The Sarnia Journal

Local

What’s Happening 519-337-0537, ext. 126 or supportiveservices@sjhospice.ca Give-a-Book Literacy Lambton launching the 2021 Give-a-Book campaign. Donate new books at Literacy Lambton’s office, 180 College Ave. N.; Coles, Lambton Mall and The Book Keeper in Northgate Plaza until Dec. 3. For more info, or to make a tax-deductible donation, visit www.literacylambton.org FRIDAY, NOV. 5 New Exhibit Lawrence House hosting a

First Friday “Wrap it up and put a bow on it” members’ exhibit of seasonal gifts and local art. The Lawrence House is open Wednesday to Sunday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. For more, www.lawrencehouse.ca or on Facebook. SATURDAY, NOV. 6 Gallery Gifts Gallery in the Grove’s Gifts of the Season showcases handmade pieces by local artists. Open until Dec. 18. 2618 Hamilton Rd. Tuesdays and Wednesdays, 2 p.m. to 5 p.m., Thursdays 2 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., Fridays and Saturdays 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Follow COVID protocols. For more, visit www.galleryinthegrove.com or call 519-8694643 Poppy Boot Drive The Forest Legion is holding its annual Poppy Boot Drive at the King and Main traffic light, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. For more, call 519-7865357 TUESDAY, NOV. 9 Rotary Auction Rotary Club of Sarnia is using its Nov. 9-14 online auction to promote local businesses by prominently featuring donors on their website and social media. To donate goods or services, contact info@rotarysarnia.com Bingo Lunch Bluewater Outreach hosting a lunch, bingo and euchre every Tuesday at Community of Christ Church, 1104 Leckie Dr., 11 a.m.

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Health and safety rules in place. Open to public. $5. For more, call 519-332-7808 THURSDAY, NOV. 11 Genealogy Sheila Hewett to speak about war brides at a virtual meeting of the Lambton County Branch of Ontario Genealogical Society. 7 p.m. Free & open to public. For more, email lambton@ogs. on.ca or visit www.lambton.ogs. on.ca Remembrance Day The Forest Legion’s annual Remembrance Day ceremony will take place at the Forest Cenotaph, Townsend Line, 10:45 a.m. For more, call 519-786-5357 FRIDAY, NOV. 12 Rock and Fossil club The Sarnia Rock and Fossil Club is meetings again and at a new location, the New Horizons Community Church, 383 Russell St. N., at 7:30 p.m. For more info., see The Sarnia Rock and Fossil Club on Facebook. SATURDAY, NOV. 13

food, including butter tarts, fruit pies, preserves, frozen turkey pies, soups, and more. 757 Rosedale Ave., 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. Free admission. Accessible building. COVID rules apply. For more, call 519-337-3061 or visit www.dunlopuc.ca MONDAY, NOV. 15 Grief Support Temple Baptist Church, in partnership with GriefShare, is hosting a support group for those grieving the death of a spouse, child, or other family member or friend. 1410 Quinn Dr., 6 p.m. Every Monday until Nov. 29. $20 donation asked for workbook cost. To register, call 519-542-1427 or visit www. templebaptist.com TUESDAY, NOV. 16 Coq Au Vin Dinner Last day to order Rotary Club’s Coq Au Vin Curbside Dinner. Includes mashed potatoes, vegetables, and a brownie. Wine/beer available. Pick up Nov. 19, Sarnia Golf and Curling Club, 500 Errol Rd. W., 2 p.m. through 7 p.m. One dinner $46, two for $67. Includes $25 charitable tax receipt. To order, visit rotarysarniaBWL.org or call 226-349-3524

Fruit Cakes Kiwanis Golden K Club holding its annual Claxton fruit cake sale at Big Sisters Show and Sale, at the old Tepperman’s location, WEDNESDAY, e stewilNOV. h t e. 17 s i Lambton Mall. Nov. 13, 9 a.m. s m i s h T a Festival to 5 p.m. and Nov. 14, 11 a.m. ingsFilm r b t a to 4 p.m. All proceeds support The 7th South Western Interth national Film Festival features projects for children. For more, 14 films ineperson, a selection of contact Sheila at s.donald@ ew th stonline, is available and cogeco.ca Thisfilms !a free e il m s a s workshop series for individuals g rin at blooking Christmas Bazaarth to enter the film, arts, Dunlop United Church is and culture industry. Runs until holding an Old Fashioned Nov. For and inforstew etickets is21.th mation, visita www.swiff.ca Christmas Bazaar featuring This gs smile! in r b t handicrafts and homemade a h t 2641 London 3.33 x 5.14 1-877-404-4246

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Thursday, November 4, 2021

The Sarnia Journal

Page 13

Local

New Canatara Park cabin built in true community style CATHY DOBSON THE JOURNAL

A

new log cabin now stands at the entrance to the Children’s Animal Farm in Canatara Park, thanks to the effort of local volunteers and the business community. It took three months to build the one-room cabin out of squared hemlock from Northern Ontario, says Ken Stothers, a Seaway Kiwanis member and co-chair of the cabin construction. “This has been a tremendous project supported by so many people,”

he said. “It’s just amazing how people helped out.” The structure replaces a pioneer log cabin of similar size that was about 180 years old but no longer safe to use. That cabin was dismantled and sent to the Lambton Heritage Museum in Grand Bend, making way for a replacement able to host public events. It’s hoped the first community use will be this year’s Christmas on the Farm. The project was kick-started by a $35,000 donation from the Judith and Norman Alix Foundation, and the Seaway Kiwanis raised another $55,000.

The construction was done by many local groups and skilled tradesmen who donated their time, labour and equipment. Two benches placed outside the cabin give special thanks to Dan Abraham for leading the construction and Aluma Safway for assisting. Old barn-wood furniture has been built by Seaway affiliate Don Ver Beem, and Kiwanian Mark Gagnier is doing the stonework on the fireplace. Other members and the Northern Key Club pitched in to do landscaping on Oct. 23. The new cabin is only

MEMBERS OF THE Seaway Kiwanis and Northern Key Club help landscape the new Canatara Park cabin, which officially opens with a ribbon cutting on Nov. 19, at noon. RONNY D’HAENE Special to The Journal

the latest addition to the popular Children’s Farm spearheaded by the Seaway Kiwanis Club, in

conjunction with the city. Over the past 50 years it has also built a train station, pavilion, carriage

house and a gazebo, and continues to maintain the barns and outer buildings.


Page 14

The Sarnia Journal

Thursday, November 4, 2021

PICK UP YOUR FREE COPY! The Journal is available at these County locations: CORUNNA

PETROLIA

WYOMING

• Corunna Foodland 420 Lyndoch St • Chris’s No Frills 175 Bunker Ave • Corunna Home Hardware 372 Lyndoch St • Kens Mini Mart 572 St. Clair Pkwy

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• Wyoming Foodland 610 Broadway St • Paul Marley Pharmacy 607 Broadway St • Wyoming Dairy Mart 642 Broadway St

REECES CORNERS

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FOREST • Main Street Variety 10 Main St S • Forest Foodland 88 King St E • Pro Stop Convenience 91 King St E

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BRIGHT’S GROVE • Bright’s Grove Foodland 2600 Lakeshore Rd

PORT FRANKS/ KETTLE & STONY POINT

The Journal is also offering a home delivery option using Canada Post starting with the November 18th edition. The cost for this option will be $1.50 per delivery, taxes included, with the paper delivered by Canada Post. This charge is a delivery fee to cover the cost of preparation, administration and mailing.

Call our office at 519-491-5532 or email us at distribution@thesarniajournal.ca to get started! There is a minimum commitment of 6 editions per order, non-refundable, at a cost of $9 taxes included.

The Sarnia Journal 519-491-5532 • 322 Christina St N. www.thesarniajournal.ca


Thursday, November 4, 2021

The Sarnia Journal

Page 15

PICK UP YOUR FREE COPY! Look for our Story on page 1 outlining our changes to City distribution. SARNIA, PT. EDWARD & BRIGHT’S GROVE LOCATIONS Pick Up a copy where you shop for Groceries • Real Canadian Superstore

(located at customer service counter)

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Food Basics Kyle’s No Frills Metro London Road Metro Exmouth Street Brights Grove Foodland Davy Jones Confederation Davy Jones Point Edward

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Copies are also available at • The Journal Office • The Sarnia Main Library

The Journal is also offering a home delivery option using Canada Post starting with the November 18th edition. The cost for this option will be $1.50 per delivery, taxes included, with the paper delivered by Canada Post. This charge is a delivery fee to cover the cost of preparation, administration and mailing.

Call our office at 519-491-5532 or email us at distribution@thesarniajournal.ca to get started! There is a minimum commitment of 6 editions per order, non-refundable, at a cost of $9 taxes included.


Page 16

The Sarnia Journal

Lives Lived

Death Notices Death Notices Recent Passings Up To October 28, 2021 D.J. ROBB FUNERAL HOME • • • • •

Cottrelle, Kevin (Oct 25, 2021) Thompson, Anne Marie (Oct 23, 2021) Longley, Elisabeth (Oct 22, 2021) Losier, Roselle (Oct 18, 2021) Lindsay, Sheila (Oct 16, 2021)

McCORMACK FUNERAL HOME • • • • •

VanCowenberg, Homer (Oct 21, 2021) Couture, Marcel (Oct 21, 2021) Mitton, Doreen (Oct 18, 2021) Davies, Isobel (Oct 16, 2021) Oxlade, Geraldine (Oct 14, 2021)

McKENZIE & BLUNDY FUNERAL HOME • • • • • • • • • • •

Jans, Jean (Oct 27, 2021) Holmes, Peggy (Oct 25, 2021) Cracknell, Orlo (Oct 22, 2021) Nelson, Bertha (Oct 21, 2021) De Melo, Dorvalina (Oct 20, 2021) Haley, Maryke (Oct 20, 2021) Donaldson, Ethel (Oct 19, 2021) Bore, Margaret (Oct 19, 2021) Tinman, Audrey (Oct 18, 2021) Clarke, Donald (Oct 17, 2021) DeKoning, Jan (Oct 17, 2021)

SMITH FUNERAL HOME • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

Cordeiro, Tiberio (Oct 29, 2021) Mackey, Betty (Oct 28, 2021) Patterson, Patricia (Oct 25, 2021) Konrad, Linda (Oct 25, 2021) VanderHeide, Kelly (Oct 24, 2021) Hill, Gary (Oct 23, 2021) Boyle, A. Nan (Oct 22, 2021) Ross, Elizabeth (Oct 22, 2021) Berg, Fred (Oct 21, 2021) Lucas, Sharon (Oct 21, 2021) Picciuca, Enzo (Oct 20, 2021) Westra, Geertruida (Oct 20, 2021) Ouellette, Allan (Oct 19, 2021) Core, Rose (Oct 18, 2021) Simpson, Robert (Oct 17, 2021) Smith, Kevin (Oct 17, 2021) Van Oosten, Hendrikus (Oct 16, 2021) Hedley, Jeffrey (Oct 15, 2021) Wright, Lawrence (Oct 15, 2021) Wilson, Harvey (Oct 14, 2021) Van De Wetering, Ann (Oct 13, 2021) Lambert, Paula (Oct 13, 2021) Morningstar, Helen (Oct 12, 2021)

This information is provided as a community service. For detailed information on the lives lived, please refer to the funeral home website listing.

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Thursday, November 4, 2021

Obituary CORDEIRO, Tiberio

MITTON, Mary Doreen (nee Spragge)

April 6, 1929 - October 18, 2021 Our beautiful and spirited Mom and Grandma passed away, surrounded by love, at St Joseph’s Hospice on October 18, 2021, as the result of complications from a fall. Doreen was the beloved wife of the late Kenneth Mitton (d.2012) and adored friend of the late William (Bill) Wise (d.2019). Doreen will be lovingly remembered by her children, Gord, and his wife Lorelei, and Gail and her husband Rob Collie, her four grandchildren, David (Melissa), Krista (Dave), Patrick (Ali) and Owen, her great-grandchildren, Abby and Lily, and her nieces and nephews. Doreen was predeceased by brother Allan Spragge (Audrey), sister June Smith (Art) and nephew Michael Spragge. Doreen was raised in London, Ontario and moved to Niagara Falls as a newlywed and later to Sarnia when Ken accepted a transfer with CN. Doreen loved fashion and worked in ladies’ retail for many years. After retiring from retail Doreen babysat Shaun and then her youngest grandchildren, Patrick and Owen Collie. Doreen had a short journey with Alzheimer’s which she made easier for all of us by seeing the humour in this terrible disease. Doreen lived at Rosewood Manor for the last year where she said she felt very well looked after by the staff. The family would like to sincerely thank nurse Danielle, surgical floor, Bluewater Health and all the staff and volunteers and Dr. Orla MacSweeney at St. Joseph’s Hospice. A special thank you to Dr. Kolano who looked after Mom right up to the end. You are all angels. A private family service will be held at Lakeview Cemetery. In memory of Doreen, if desired, donations may be made to St. Joseph’s Hospice, Chron’s and Colitis Canada or Alzheimer Society of Sarnia Lambton. Remembrances and condolences may be expressed to the family online in “Doreen’s Guestbook” at mccormackfuneralhomesarnia.com.

It is with broken hearts that we announce the passing of our son, Tiberio Rodrigues Cordeiro on October 29, 2021. Beloved by his mother, Tiberia Cordeiro and father, John Cordeiro Sr., his brother John Cordeiro Jr., and his wife Wendy Cordeiro. As well as his godchild (niece) Alyssa Cordeiro, his niece Hailee and nephew Jesse Cordeiro. Lovingly remembered by Sherri Cain. He now joins his grandparents Jose and Virginia Cordeiro, Ramiro and Joanna Rodrigues as well as his aunt, Margarida Cordeiro in heaven. Survived by his aunts and uncles Fatima and Claudio and cousin and best friend Joe DeMelo, Lourdes and son Joe Cabral and predeceased husband and father Miguel Cabral, Aldora and predeceased husband Joe Cordeiro, Alda and predeceased husband Antonio Bento, aunt Deolinda Cordeiro, and uncle Luis and predeceased aunt Jilda Cordeiro. Loved and adored by all his cousins. Tiberio had a love of antique cars, Johnny Cash, Elvis Presley and a sharp sense of style. He and his brother John shared the love of motorcycles and enjoyed riding their bikes together. Tiberio was caring, thoughtful, and cherished his mother and father tremendously. Tiberio will be missed by all who knew and loved him. Rest and be at peace with the love of God - we love you. Family and friends were received at Smith Funeral Home, 1576 London Line, Sarnia, on Tuesday, November 2, 2021 from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. A private interment of ashes will be held. Sympathy may be expressed through donations to the Heart & Stroke Foundation (cheques mailed to the funeral home or made online, please). Memories and condolences may be sent online at smithfuneralhome.ca

August 4 1923-June 6 1944.

Died of wounds, Sword Beach, Normandy age 20. Never forgotten by The Gulvin Family.

Prayer PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN:

PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN:

PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN:

PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN:

(Never known to fail): Oh most beautiful flower of Mt. Carmel, fruitful vine, splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Son of God, Immaculate Virgin, assist me in my necessity. Oh Star of the Sea, help me and show me you are my Mother, Oh Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and earth, I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in my necessity (make request). There are none that can withstand your power. Oh Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee (three times). Holy Mary, I place this prayer in your hands (three times). Say this prayer for three consecutive days and then you must publish it and it will be granted to you. Grateful thanks. K.K.

(Never known to fail): Oh most beautiful flower of Mt. Carmel, fruitful vine, splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Son of God, Immaculate Virgin, assist me in my necessity. Oh Star of the Sea, help me and show me you are my Mother, Oh Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and earth, I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in my necessity (make request). There are none that can withstand your power. Oh Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee (three times). Holy Mary, I place this prayer in your hands (three times). Say this prayer for three consecutive days and then you must publish it and it will be granted to you. Grateful thanks. G.G.

(Never known to fail): Oh most beautiful flower of Mt. Carmel, fruitful vine, splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Son of God, Immaculate Virgin, assist me in my necessity. Oh Star of the Sea, help me and show me you are my Mother, Oh Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and earth, I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in my necessity (make request). There are none that can withstand your power. Oh Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee (three times). Holy Mary, I place this prayer in your hands (three times). Say this prayer for three consecutive days and then you must publish it and it will be granted to you. Grateful thanks. G.A.

(Never known to fail): Oh most beautiful flower of Mt. Carmel, fruitful vine, splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Son of God, Immaculate Virgin, assist me in my necessity. Oh Star of the Sea, help me and show me you are my Mother, Oh Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and earth, I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in my necessity (make request). There are none that can withstand your power. Oh Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee (three times). Holy Mary, I place this prayer in your hands (three times). Say this prayer for three consecutive days and then you must publish it and it will be granted to you. Grateful thanks. C.M.


Thursday, November 4, 2021

The Sarnia Journal

Page 17

Community

Birthday

Shopping

Happy 90th Birthday!

Lessons

PIANO LESSONS

To our dear Mom - Marg White

Piano and/or theory lessons in Sarnia ON, for grades 0-8.

Lots of love, John, Sarah, Liz, Mary, Margaret, David and their spouses, Grandchildren and Great-Grandchildren. Dad (Bill) is looking down from Heaven and sharing in your special day!

Contact: leahspianoandtheory@gmail.com

Memoriam In Loving Memory of Robert “Bob” Pierce Gone are the days we used to share But in our hearts you’re always there Never more than a thought away Loved and remembered every day And never forgotten

February 23 1939 November 6 2018

Love Katie, Mike & Sue, Jeff & Estelle, Lori & Dale, Taylor & Courtney

TWO PLOTS FOR SALE AT CEMETERY

Our Lady of Mercy Cemetery Glen Allen Dr & Errol Rd (entrance off Michigan Rd) Sarnia, ON

Plots in Prime Location For more information, please call 519-336-9388

FOR SALE

2 Cemetery Plots Resurrection Cemetery & Crematorium

Events In Memory of

Corenne Bettridge Who passed away 8 years ago

CORN HOLE LEAGUE

November 5, 2013

Missing her laugh, her love and her homemade French fries. Loved and missed by family and friends. We miss you Granny!!! Love, Nolan, Jackson, Sloane and Nick Xoxo

Event

STUDIO ART SHOW SAVE – No Gallery Commission Professional Quality Figurative Art Work Local Plien Air Lake Scenes, Landscapes & Florals

INTERNATIONALLY KNOWN J. ALLISON ROBICHAUD Saturday & Sunday 12:00 - 4:30 November 6th & 7th 705 Michigan Avenue Point Edward, Ont

COVID PROTOCOL IN EFFECT

1885 London Line, Sarnia

$2,500.00

JANUARY 2022 - MONDAY EVENINGS Youth League Ages 8-16 5pm to 6:30pm Couples Adult League 7pm to 9:30pm League will run 13 weeks plus closing tournament Youth registration is limited to first 32 Adult Team Registration is limited to 16. Please contact the branch for further information or to register.

Royal Canadian Legion - Branch 447 Corunna - (519) 862-1240

Christmas 2021

UPCOMING EVENTS

All in support of The Inn of Good Shepherd Dec 4. Two Sittings: 10am - 12pm & 2pm - 4pm SCITS Front Door Entrance 260 Wellington St Decorate a Gingerbread House with Mrs Claus Sing along and party with the Elves Advanced Tickets Only, til Nov 20. Call 519-328-9035 for info & tickets, $30 each Dec 14. 3:30pm - 7pm Paddy Flaherty’s - Photo Session. Bring the kids out and have their photo taken with Santa & Mrs Claus. $20 for onepose or $25 for multiple poses. (Digital photo sent to your email) Dec 17. 6pm - 8pm

Includes transfer fee (current cost is $1850.00 per plot)

If interested please call 519-491-5535

The Corunna Royal Canadian Legion, Branch 447, is starting up a

Sarnia Sting Game, Progressive Auto Arena Main Entrance Selfies with Santa & Mrs Claus

Art is Forever

All proceeds go to support The Inn of Good Shepherd

SantaGee.com


Page 18

The Sarnia Journal

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Fun Stuff ALL WEEK

SPECIALS

UNTIL NOVEMBER 23, 2021

UNTIL NOVEMBER 24, 2021

UNTIL NOVEMBER 25, 2021

UNTIL NOVEMBER 26, 2021

4 PM - 7 PM

4 PM - 7 PM

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2 pc. Fish & Chips $ .40

2 pc. Haddock

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13

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1 pc. Fish 4 Shrimp

Fries & Coleslaw

$

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12.95

12

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13.45

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Don’t Forget We Carry: Crab Legs, Shrimp, Lobster, Frog Legs & More

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Brighten Someone’s Day We’re located:

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RIGHT X HERE!

For the answers to this week’s puzzles, see page 19

PRO-TAX (Pro-Tax is a division of Teogotha Inc.)

Professional INCOME TAX SERVICES

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Life’s brighter under the sun John Pilkey* BBA, CHS™

Sun Life Financial advisor Pilkey Financial Solutions Corp. Tel: 226-402-3813 john.pilkey@sunlife.com www.sunlife.ca/john.pilkey

Appointments Drop-Offs Contactless **

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*Mutual funds distributed by Sun Life Financial Investment Services (Canada) Inc. Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada is a member of the Sun Life group of companies. © Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada, 2021.

Copiers/Printers

Copiers & Wide Body Printers Engineering Plotters - Mailing Systems

149 N. Christina St, Downton Sarnia

519-332-2777

SARNIA • CHATHAM • WINDSOR

Drew Wygiera


Thursday, November 4, 2021

The Sarnia Journal

Page 19

Sports Referees are quitting, and kids are paying the price TARA JEFFREY THE JOURNAL

W

ith Sarnia-Lambton facing a dire shortage of referees it’s time parents started giving on-ice officials the respect they deserve, says Kirstin Salisbury. “We need to remember that everyone in these roles is human,” said the mom of two daughters, who are actively involved in minor sports. “I recognize that most parents think they are expressing their passion and advocating for their player… But I am realizing that we as parents, in an attempt to be super fans and advocates for our athletes, are impacting our children’s' opportunities. “Personally, if I was a ref, the pay isn't worth the harassment I've witnessed.” The Bluewater Referee Association has issued a desperate plea for more

on-ice officials as it grapples with dwindling numbers. Minor hockey games are being cancelled outright, especially on weekends, and other games rescheduled for lack of officials. A trend that began a decade ago was exacerbated by the pandemic, said president Joel Hodgson. “We’re down to 40 active officials skating, and we’re usually at over 100 in a normal season,” said Hodgson, noting many are facing burnout just weeks into the hockey season. “We’ve had officials skate more hockey than ever before, at a really unsustainable pace. Refereeing isn’t like playing hockey — they’re on the ice for every minute of the game — and if they’re doing two or three games in a row, that’s a lot of time to be skating, and hard on your body. “We have referees who are easily skating 20 games a week.” After the pandemic

wiped out last year’s hockey season and put recruitment for new refs on hold, many local officials, already nearing retirement age, decided to hang up their skates, Hodgson said, noting Hockey Canada estimates the loss of 10,000 — or one in three — officials ever year. “When we knew this was coming we reached out to all of our partners and associations, and they’ve all been great at working with us on the scheduling, and promoting for more refs,” he said. “But even with all that we’ve had to move games and cancel games already. “So we’re really taking anybody we can get; anyone in the community that wants to come and chip in, we’re happy to try and get them signed on.” Hodgson said some people have come forward — including retired referees willing to lace up again, and younger athletes interested in taking the training

course. Another bright spot is the women and girls expressing interest. “I’ve actually been very impressed with the amount of women and girls that have put their names forward,” he said. “We still have a lot of men that officiate women and girls hockey.” And it’s not just hockey. Salisbury, whose girls also play softball, pointed to a scarcity of local umpires, coaches, board members, team managers and volunteers. “As a volunteer coach, the commitment and sacrifices aren't worth the headache of angry parents,” she said. “Calls may be missed, players may play fewer minutes, teams will be built, and perhaps not everyone will agree but I am asking that we, as parents, try harder to respect these roles and be an example for our children.” Hodgson echoed Salisbury’s concerns about the way parents and players

treat game officials. “We’ve seen over a decade the kind of maltreatment, and issues with the cost of reffing increasing — that’s all contributed to the decline and really come to a head here over the past year in the pandemic. People just decided it’s not worth it,” he said. “We want to change the lens on it, where people view referees as part of the hockey community, as opposed to the antagonist out there.” Anyone interested in becoming a referee can contact bluewaterrefereeassociation@gmail.com

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Tourney Champions

FINDLEY’S

DRIVER EDUCATION THE SARNIA STING MD U12 team won the Early Bird MD Tournament held in Cambridge, Ont. recently. From left are, back row: D.J. Hillier, Matthew Ray, Declan Craievich, Jackson Forbes, Levi Toenders, Eli Odolphy, Alex MacDonald, Carter Macklin, Daniel Guenette and Brody Debrun: front row, kneeling, Nevin Stewardson, Matthew Megeney, Ben Slade, Chase Richard, Gavin Kraayenbrink, Ben Knowles and Kaleb Orrange. Submitted Photo

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Diabetes Month

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STUDENT CONTROLS PACE

Call Julie Munday, PEDORTHIST at 1-888-971-6345 for appt. at 303 Davis St. by Mitton St. in Sarnia

www.FINDLEYS.ca


Page 20

The Sarnia Journal

Thursday, November 4, 2021

4177 Petrolia Line, Petrolia ON 519-882-1840

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CENTRUM, ONE A DAY, FLINTSTONES, REDOXON, PRIORIN, CITRACAL, DISNEY, NATURE’S BOUNTY or WAMPOLE Vitamins or Supplements Selected Types and Sizes

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selected types and sizes

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guardian-pharmacy.ca

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PUREX Laundry Detergent 1.47L or Pods 23’s

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CASHMERE or PUREX Bathroom Tissue 8 Double Rolls

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