91大黄鸭

Skip to content

One veteran鈥檚 quest to honour another

Missing information on 91大黄鸭-area cenotaph finally included on memorial
9327879_web1_1711110-KCN-Al-Schmidt
Al Schmidt at the cenotaph in Lions Park in 91大黄鸭 with the new plaque that includes information about Private James Eastwood. 鈥擨mage: contributed

After two years of perseverance, a local veteran will honour a comrade-in-arms he never even met.

Al Schmidt, a veteran now living in 91大黄鸭, was visiting the Cenotaph in Lions Park in Rutland in 2015 when a soldier鈥檚 name鈥擯rivate James Eastwood鈥攃aught his eye.

While the name wasn鈥檛 familiar, it was how it was listed that struck Schmidt as odd. The name had no listed battalion, dates, or information about where he died, just his name.

Schmidt set out to find some answers. He chronicled his endeavors to hunt down this information, determined to discover even the slightest information about why this information wasn鈥檛 on the Cenotaph. Why was there was no information listed about this soldier? Where did he live? What war did he serve in?

The granite cenotaph at Rutland Lions Park was updated in 2009 with bronze markers in order to help preserve the names and information of those remembered. However, no one involved with the renovation knew why Private Eastwood鈥檚 information was not included.

After a year and a half of searching and documenting and arriving at numerous dead ends, Schmidt wrote to the City of 91大黄鸭, and his inquiry eventually landed with the city鈥檚 Parks Services department.

This is where the search changed gears. Cemetery manager David Gatzke started working with Schmidt and the pair turned their attention to finding out the missing information and making sure it was included.

鈥淭here was something truly inspiring about the effort that Al Schmidt put in to recognize this soldier, someone he never even knew,鈥 said Gatzke. 鈥淲hen he walked in to my office carrying a two-inch folder filled with documentation of his attempts at finding out why the information was missing for this soldier, you could tell there was a connection that only a veteran could fully understand.鈥

Working closely with the Royal Canadian Legion, the Army, Navy and Air Force Veterans Association, Veteran Affairs Canada and the Okanagan Military Museum, Gatzke and Schmidt backtracked to find records from when the plaques went up for the new cenotaph in 2009, as well as details of Eastwood鈥檚 service. They discovered the original cenotaph that sat by the old school in Rutland never had Eastwood鈥檚 information to begin with.

Eastwood as a 91大黄鸭 resident and millwright who was 33 when he enlisted for overseas service in 1914. He served primarily with the 15th Battalion in France and was killed in action at Vimy Ridge on April 9, 1917. He is buried at the Nine Elms Military Cemetery in Vimy, France.

鈥淥nce we had the information and started to focus on making sure all the details where included, everyone jumped on board,鈥 said Gatzke. 鈥淲e ordered the marker. Jim McCaffery, president of the 91大黄鸭 legion, made a petition to the his organization鈥檚 Poppy Fund to purchase the new bronze marker, and Parks Services took care of the installation.鈥

Even now it鈥檚 still unknown exactly why the original cenotaph was missing Eastwood鈥檚 details. But what is most important is that his service is commemorated there now, in time for Remembrance Day 鈥 100 years after Vimy Ridge.

And it was all thanks to the enduring efforts of a fellow soldier.