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Memorial Gates | |
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University of Saskatchewan | |
For World War I | |
Location | 52°07′45.43″N106°38′34.05″W / 52.1292861°N 106.6427917°W near |
Burials by nation | |
Memorial Gates are a military memorial which are part of the University of Saskatchewan, in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. These Gates were originally the entrance gates to the university campus and flanked University Drive. In the 1980s, due to increased traffic to the southwest portion of the campus, primarily Royal University Hospital, a new road entrance was built to the west. The gates remain, with the remnant of University Drive passing through them renamed Memorial Crescent. The gates are now primarily used by pedestrians, though the roadway is open to vehicles.
University of Saskatchewan
These are they who went forth from this University to the Great War 1914–1918 and gave their lives that we might live in freedom
Hugh Carter Allingham | William Mansell Codling |
Renwick William Anderson | John Stewart Cowan |
Reginald John Bateman | James Douglas cumming |
Charles McVicar Boyne | John Kenneth Dawson |
Harold John Blair M.C. | Reginald James Dillan |
Charles Bremner | William Drysdale |
James Brydon | Henry Egar |
Frederick Burd | Lorne Burton Elliott |
Thomas Caldwell | Wilfred John Evans |
Gordon Mortimer Channell | John Pisher |
Ernest R. Gilmer | Perry Dennington Kisbey |
James Donald Graham M.M. | Reginald A. Lovers M.M. |
Robert Carlion Grant | Shuli Gudbrandur Lindal |
Arthur Gordon Gruchy | Arthur Stephen K. Lloyd |
Cyril N. Harrington | Clifford McConnell |
James Gordon Hill | Robert Peveral McClordick |
Lawrence Homer | Louis James McCuien |
Grenville Carson Hopkins | Michael Allan McMillan |
Willis George Hunt | J. Ross McPherson D.S.O. |
William Yrides Hunter | Auned Yuil Mathews |
Franklin Mager Keffer | Enoch Andrew Mitchell |
James Shirley Heathcote | |
John James Moore | Ronald Charles Spence |
Fred Nesbitt | Arthur George Slarkings |
Joseph Lees Nicholls | George Swift |
Angus Nicholson | Robert Sifton Turriff |
George Irving Paterson | Wellesley Wesley-Long |
Arthur Edward Parlett | Edward West |
Elwyn Robert Reid | Frank West |
Thomas Ritchie | Walter Ray Whittingham |
Robert Rensay | Paul P Wiklun |
Roy E. Shuttleworth M.M. | Geoffrey Wilson |
Hugh A. Silcox | Wilfrid Grant Wilson |
Memorial Gates erected 1927 a.d.
The ashes of Frederick W. A. G. Haultain were scattered at the gates.
Regina is the capital city of the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. The city is the second-largest in the province, after Saskatoon, and is a commercial centre for southern Saskatchewan. As of the 2021 census, Regina had a city population of 226,404, and a metropolitan area population of 249,217. It is governed by Regina City Council. The city is surrounded by the Rural Municipality of Sherwood No. 159.
Saskatoon is the largest city in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. It straddles a bend in the South Saskatchewan River in the central region of the province. It is located along the Trans-Canada Yellowhead Highway, and has served as the cultural and economic hub of central Saskatchewan since its founding in 1882 as a Temperance colony.
The University of Saskatchewan is a Canadian public research university, founded on March 19, 1907, and located on the east side of the South Saskatchewan River in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. An "Act to establish and incorporate a University for the Province of Saskatchewan" was passed by the provincial legislature in 1907. It established the provincial university on March 19, 1907 "for the purpose of providing facilities for higher education in all its branches and enabling all persons without regard to race, creed or religion to take the fullest advantage". The University of Saskatchewan is the largest education institution in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. The University of Saskatchewan is one of Canada's top research universities and is a member of the U15 Group of Canadian Research Universities.
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Royal University Hospital, often abbreviated RUH, is one of four hospitals in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. It is located on the University of Saskatchewan campus. RUH is a teaching hospital and closely tied to the College of Medicine within the university. It was opened on May 14, 1955 by Saskatchewan premier Tommy C. Douglas.
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Canada is a constitutional monarchy, and connections to the Canadian Crown in Saskatoon, the most populous city in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan, are visible in visits from the Sovereign of Canada, the Canadian Royal Family and vice-regal representatives, and also in the prominence of names and symbols in civic traditions. The Crown's image appears in the centrepiece portrait at Saskatoon City Council chamber and also in the badges of Saskatoon Police Service officers. On one of several visits to Saskatoon, Queen Elizabeth II said "Constitutional Monarchy has always placed the emphasis on people in community – as it were, a national family with the Sovereign as its head." Saskatoon's manifold connections include more than a dozen royal visits, frequent vice-regal visitors, namesakes for schools, streets and neighbourhoods, and the regular inclusion of its own namesake, the saskatoon berry, on menus for royal and vice-regal functions. Canada's 2008 definitive postage stamp features a photograph of Queen Elizabeth II taken in Saskatoon.
University of Saskatchewan has over 200 academic programs on its Saskatoon, Saskatchewan campus, and is internationally known for its teaching and research. The on-campus synchrotron Canadian Light Source makes it the only Canadian institution for such nuclear and biotechnology research. Canadian Light Source nuclear research facility provides research and analysis of the internal structures of advanced materials and biological samples. The College of Arts and Science is the largest of the U of S and comprises five separate health science fields in addition to numerous other programs in the Arts, Social Sciences, Humanities, and Natural Sciences. The Department of Computer Science as well as the College of Engineering are ranked highly within their fields. The founding college, the College of Agriculture, is still providing agricultural breakthroughs which are utilized worldwide.
U of S Lands South Management Area is an area of and located in east-central Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. It is a categorized as a management area, as it lacks the residential, industrial or future development characteristics present in most neighbourhoods. The area is home to 1,103 residents living in residences belonging to the University of Saskatchewan. The neighbourhood is considered a lower-income area, with an average family income of $36,760, an average dwelling value of $221,222 and a home ownership rate of 0.2%, though this is, of course, due to residents being primarily students renting accommodation from the university.
Memorial gates and arches are architectural monuments in the form of gates and arches or other entrances, constructed as a memorial, often dedicated to a particular war though some are dedicated to individuals. The function, and very often the architectural form, is similar to that of a Roman triumphal arch, with the emphasis on remembrance and commemoration of war casualties, on marking a civil event, or on providing a monumental entrance to a city, as opposed to celebrating a military success or general, though some memorial arches perform both functions. They can vary in size, but are commonly monumental stone structures combining features of both an archway and a gate, often forming an entrance or straddling a roadway, but sometimes constructed in isolation as a standalone structure, or on a smaller scale as a local memorial to war dead. Although they can share architectural features with triumphal arches, memorial arches and gates constructed from the 20th century onwards often have the names of the dead inscribed on them as an act of commemoration.
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This article uses the primary source images as documentation for this article. The memorial gates etch the University of Saskatchewan alumni who have fallen in the great war into the stone work. Click on an image for more detail.