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Mystery Solved: Identity of military nurse in northern Ont. portrait found

Mystery Solved: Identity of military nurse in northern Ont. portrait found

CTV News3 days ago
A long-unidentified portrait of a WWI nurse has been confirmed as Callander, Ont.'s Christena Clinton Gordon. Eric Taschner reports.
For years, a portrait of a young woman in a Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service uniform puzzled historians and local experts in and around North Bay, Ont. The mystery has finally been resolved – the painting depicts Christena Clinton Gordon, a nurse from Callander, Ont., who served in Western Europe during the First World War, tending to wounded soldiers.
'Whether they're soldiers or nurses, they were people who dedicated their lives to serving our country,' said Natasha Wiatr, curator of the Callander Bay Heritage Museum.
Natasha Wiatr
Curator Natasha Wiatr reveals the identity of the subject of the mysterious painting found at at North Bay legion at the Callander Bay Heritage Museum on August 6, 2025. (Eric Taschner/CTV News Northern Ontario)
A forgotten portrait resurfaces
The painting once hung in the Royal Canadian Legion Branch #23 on First Avenue West in North Bay before being placed in storage. It was rediscovered in poor condition during a storage room cleanup in the early 2000s.
Sandra Harkness
Callander Bay Heritage Museum curator Natasha Wiatr (right) is shown with Sandra Harkness (left), First Vice-President of Royal Canadian Legion Branch #23 at the museum on August 6, 2025, during a press event to revealing the identity of long unknown nurse - the subject of a portait found at the legion. (Eric Taschner/CTV News Northern Ontario)
'We never really knew where it came from or how it got to our legion,' said Sandra Harkness, First Vice-President of the Legion.
The only clue was a handwritten note on the back: 'Toronto, Canada, May 1917.' No signature or name accompanied it. Despite restoration efforts in Ottawa and inquiries with the Canadian War Museum, the woman's identity remained unknown – until a breakthrough in 2008.
Christena Clinton Gordon
A portrait painting of Christena Clinton Gordon, a nurse from Callander, Ont., who served the Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service during the First World War. Painting posed for in Toronto, Ont., in May 1917. The image show here is from June 2024 after it was restored in Ottawa, Ont. (Supplied/Callander Bay Heritage Museum)
A curator's keen eye solves the mystery
Carol Pretty, then-curator at the Callander Bay Heritage Museum, recognized the uniform in the portrait matched one in the museum's collection. Comparing historical photos, she confirmed the likeness to Christena Gordon.
'They look quite similar,' Wiatr said.
Christena Clinton Gordon - comparison
A photo of Christena Clinton Gordon, a nurse from Callander, Ont. is shown above an image of a painting from Royal Canadian Legion Branch #23 in North Bay, Ont., of a previously unknown WWI nurse. (Supplied/Callander Bay Heritage Museum)
Gordon served in the Canadian Army Medical Corps from 1916 until the war's end, working in hospitals in England and France. After the war, she married Callander's reeve, Ken Morrison, in 1921.
A heroine's legacy returns home
The Legion chose to donate the portrait to the museum, where it now resides alongside Gordon's uniform and wartime photographs, preserving her story for future generations.
Christena Clinton Gordon - Serving
An undated photo of nurse Christena Clinton Gordon serving with the Canadian Army Medical Corps during WWI.(Supplied/Callander Bay Heritage Museum )
'It's giving a voice and a name and a face to somebody who dedicated part of their life to serving our country overseas,' Wiatr said. 'We're able to give it a home.'
Harkness agreed, adding, 'It's only natural that it should return home.'
Public invited to honour Gordon's memory
The Callander Bay Heritage Museum invites visitors to view the portrait and learn more about Gordon's life and contributions. The museum is open Tuesday to Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
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