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Historic cannon will be removed from Brantford park
Historic cannon will be removed from Brantford park

CTV News

time28-05-2025

  • General
  • CTV News

Historic cannon will be removed from Brantford park

The Alexandra Park cannon is seen in this undated image. (Courtesy: City of Brantford/Facebook) A cannon captured during the Crimean War will soon be removed from a Brantford park. The cannon has been a staple at Alexandra Park for years. The Russian cannon was taken during the siege at Sevastopol, between Oct. 1854 and Sept. 1855, and donated to the City of Brantford by the British. Originally, it was placed in Victoria Park but moved to its home on Dalhousie Street before 1900. The city said the cannon has been deteriorating, partly due to years of snowmelt and salt spray. If left outdoors, the city believes it would only last another 10 to 15 years, even with remediation efforts. In March, city staff recommended the cannon be removed from the city's public art collection and donated to the Canadian Military Heritage Museum on Greenwich Street in Brantford. The cannon will leave Alexandra Park on Thursday and a conservator accredited by the Canadian Association of Professional Conservators will get to work preserving the piece of history so it can be properly displayed in a museum.

Civil War-era sword that belonged to N.B. veteran brought back to Saint Andrews
Civil War-era sword that belonged to N.B. veteran brought back to Saint Andrews

CBC

time25-05-2025

  • General
  • CBC

Civil War-era sword that belonged to N.B. veteran brought back to Saint Andrews

A sword from the American Civil War era that belonged to a New Brunswick veteran has made it home. A repatriation ceremony for John S. Stevenson's ceremonial sword was held in Saint Andrews, N.B., on Saturday in conjunction with a graveside service to recognize four Civil War soldiers. Stevenson, who was born in Saint Andrews in the 1830s, was a doctor who completed his studies at Harvard University. During the war from 1861 to 1865, he enlisted in the U.S. Army, serving as a surgeon in the medical corps for the 29th Connecticut. "It's kind of a little-known fact of history that quite a few New Brunswickers actually fought in the American Civil War," said David Hughes, manager of the New Brunswick Military History Museum in Oromocto. Stevenson fell ill while serving in Texas and died shortly after in New York. His body was returned to Saint Andrews for burial but his sword did not make it back to New Brunswick. Early last year, Quispamsis historian Troy Middleton stumbled upon an online listing that offered the sword for sale and was able to confirm it had belonged to Stevenson. Ontario collector Robert Low was asking for $8,000 to $8,500 for the sword but agreed to sell it for a bargain price of $6,200 because he knew of its New Brunswick connections. "When I told him who I was, what we were trying to do and, you know, we're from New Brunswick, he actually lowered the price quite a bit and gave us the opportunity to raise the money," Middleton said. The money was raised in about three months through the New Brunswick Historical Society by way of donations and fundraiser events, he said, and the sword was put on display at the Loyalist House museum in Saint John last summer after the transaction was completed in May. "The Canadian Museum of History heard about us and … they ultimately donated the, you know, a beautiful cabinet for us to put it in to display it. I couldn't be happier," said Middleton. This fall, Stevenson's sword will be part of a larger display about New Brunswickers in the Civil War that will be exhibited at the New Brunswick Military History Museum. Hughes called the sword "an important artifact," and encouraged people to visit the fall exhibition.

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