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Look what they ve done to the Mounties | Maclean s

Look what they’ve done to the Mounties They don’t wear scarlet coats or ride horses or stand six feet tall or always get their man . . but the story of these quiet men with brief cases is more dramatic than even Hollywood suggests July 1 1954 ALAN PHILLIPS Look what they’ve done to the Mounties Articles They don’t wear scarlet coats or ride horses or stand six feet tall or always get their man . . but the story of these quiet men with brief cases is more dramatic than even Hollywood suggests ALAN PHILLIPS AS DERWENT CONNISTON lay dying in the frozen Arctic wasteland, the words of burly, steely eyed Inspector McDowell echoed in his mind: “Don’t come back until you get your man, dead or alive!”

YATES: Demolition of Wingham Armoury an incalculable cultural loss | Exeter Lakeshore Times Advance

Article content In April 2021, the Wingham Armoury, one of the county’s most historically significant buildings, was demolished. Its destruction may have been inevitable but through its gates, Wingham and area men marched off to two world wars. Not only was the armoury a military post, it was also an important hub of the area’s social history as well. Its demise is an incalculable cultural loss. As the headquarters of the 33rd Huron Regiment, Goderich lobbied hard for an armoury. Yet, in May 1913, for reasons unknown, the controversial and sometimes erratic Minister of Militia, Sir Sam Hughes, favoured the Wingham site. With “much pleasure,” Hughes appointed the Wingham location for the county’s only Crown funded armoury on the condition that the town provide the land free and, that construction “may be proceeded with at the earliest possible convenience.” The town eagerly ceded to the Crown the land behind the town hall fronting on Edward Street.

YATES: Demolition of Wingham Armoury an incalculable cultural loss

Demolition of Wingham Armoury an incalculable cultural loss | Exeter Lakeshore Times Advance

Article content In April 2021, the Wingham Armoury, one of the county’s most historically significant buildings, was demolished. Its destruction may have been inevitable but through its gates, Wingham and area men marched off to two world wars. Not only was the armoury a military post, it was also an important hub of the area’s social history as well. Its demise is an incalculable cultural loss. As the headquarters of the 33rd Huron Regiment, Goderich lobbied hard for an armoury. Yet, in May 1913, for reasons unknown, the controversial and sometimes erratic Minister of Militia, Sir Sam Hughes, favoured the Wingham site. With “much pleasure,” Hughes appointed the Wingham location for the county’s only Crown funded armoury on the condition that the town provide the land free and, that construction “may be proceeded with at the earliest possible convenience.” The town eagerly ceded to the Crown the land behind the town hall fronting on Edward Street.

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