by David Humphrey
This largely
complete 77mm German Canon is presently located close to the entrance to the
Canadian Legion which is housed in the basement at the rear of the Heritage Inn
on Cranbrook Street.
Heritage
Value
The heritage value
of this canon lies with its association to all those young men from Cranbrook
and the surrounding area who enlisted in CEF and went off to fight in
WWI.
At the end of the
First World War the Government of Canada established a “Commission on War
Records and Trophies”. One of the mandates of this Commission was to recommend, “the proper policy to be pursued for the distribution of such trophies." The
Commission submitted its report on May 18 1920. It recommended that only
trophies which were of durable nature would be distributed to municipalities.
These war trophies were the exclusive property of the Crown, and the receiving
community was responsible for keeping them in good repair and had no authority
to dispose of them. From the total of the captured German guns it was decided to
distribute them across Canada based on each province’s wartime enlistments in
the CEF. British Columbia had enlisted 61,238 men and this proved to be 10.4%
of the total Canadian enlistments.
The Cranbrook Herald
of August 12th 1920 headlines announce, “Captured German Gun Has
Arrived” “Field Piece Which Helped to Batter Our Fighting Forces Now on
Exhibition”. It had arrived by rail on a flatcar On August 7th
and was initially displayed close to
the “Y” at the end of Baker Street. It was later moved to a more prominent
location beside the City Hall and later to in front of the Court House at the
east end of Baker Street. When the Court House was torn down to make way for a
new shopping mall then this German canon was relocated so as to be close to the
Canadian Legion premises. During the last three Legion moves the gun has been
relocated each time. The Herald sums up its article by stating, “it will long
be a relic to be admired by every patriotic Canadian” and “All who look upon the
destructive instrument cannot help but experience a thrill and swell with pride
the more over the accomplishments of our boys
overseas.”
Research has shown that this
German gun was captured by the 7th Battalion on the 27th
September 1918 close to Marquion. It remains in relatively good repair but its
original camouflage has now been covered with a coat of grey
paint.
Captured German Canon outside Cranbrook Courthouse and in front of the Cenotaph |
No comments:
Post a Comment