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DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20251016T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20251016T203000
DTSTAMP:20260412T053217
CREATED:20250830T142756Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251020T174211Z
UID:10019643-1760639400-1760646600@guelphmuseums.ca
SUMMARY:Military Lecture: Historical Reenacting: Why On Earth Do People Do This
DESCRIPTION:Drawing upon his 20+ years of experience as a War of 1812 reenactor\, Tom Fournier will talk about his motivation for being a reenactor.  He will share his memories on the field\, travelling the globe\, meeting royalty\, and even experiencing the paranormal. \nTom started as a lowly private\, not wanting any responsibility as he already managed an intense corporate career. Circumstances prevailed\, however\, and Tom embarked on a steady journey of promotion. He currently serves as the senior commander for all War of 1812 reenactors portraying British or Canadian soldiers in North America. \nTom will use an image rich slide show to support his talk and will also have on hand a number of uniforms\, accoutrements and weapons for examination. \nDoors open at 6:30 and the presentation starts at 7:00 pm\, followed by a question period. \nThe lecture premiered in-person at the Civic Museum. Due to technical difficulties\, a recorded conversation is unavailable. Guelph Museums’ Military Lecture series is presented in partnership with the Laurier Centre for the Study of Canada. \nAbout the Speaker\n \nIn his working life\, after concluding a 30+ year corporate career\, with much of it spent as a national sales manager\, Tom Fourier founded and currently operates two Cambridge-based businesses.\nTom has a passion for history\, particularly the Napoleonic era and the War of 1812. He has written extensively about both\, as well as presenting lectures and participating on podcasts. \nTom also has several volunteer involvements\, including co-chairing history conferences and live stream events with the History Symposium\, a Canadian not-for-profit and charitable organization. Tom was the chair of the popular War of 1812 conference held at the University of Guelph in 2012. He is a member of the White Hackle Council\, the regimental council supporting the Royal Highland Fusiliers of Canada. He is also involved with promoting history through his volunteer work in War of 1812 reenacting\, where he assumed command as the Brigadier General of the Crown Forces North America in 2024. \nTom’s reenacting career has taken him to events in Canada\, the United States and Europe. \nHe resides in Cambridge\, Ontario.
URL:https://guelphmuseums.ca/event/military-lecture-historical-reenacting-why-on-earth-do-people-do-this/
LOCATION:Civic Museum\, 52 Norfolk Street\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1H 4H8\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Events,Military Lecture Series,Online
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20251115T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20251115T170000
DTSTAMP:20260412T053217
CREATED:20251001T201221Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251105T204305Z
UID:10019646-1763200800-1763226000@guelphmuseums.ca
SUMMARY:Liberation and Remembrance Symposium
DESCRIPTION:This year marks 80 years since the end of the Second World War and the liberation of Europe. Eight decades later we reflect on Canada’s contributions to the war effort\, unsung heroes and narratives that remained “under the radar\,” and the lessons that resonate today\, lest we forget. \nDoors open at 9:15 a.m. Each presentation will last approximately 45 minutes followed by a question period. Snacks and lunch will be provided\, and a cash bar will be available. \n\n10 a.m.-“Stories of Black Canadian Military Service” by Jade Ferguson\n11 a.m.-“The Royal Canadian Air Force during the Liberation” by Mike Bechthold\n12 p.m.-Lunch catered\n1 p.m.- “The Joy and Anxiety of Liberation\, 1944/1945” by Geoff Hayes\n2 p.m.-“The Royal Canadian Navy and the Liberation of North-West Europe” by Roger Sarty\n3 p.m.-“Underwater Munitions and the Environmental Legacies of the Second World War” by Alex Souchen\n4 p.m.-“La Montanara\, a musical remembrance of the Italian Campaign.” by Mike Ford and Murray Foster\n\nPreregistration via Eventbrite is required. A student discount of $40+HST is available. \nHeader image credit: Dutch civilians and Canadian Army troops celebrating the Liberation of the Netherlands\, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Celebrating_Liberation_.png  \nAbout The Presenters\nJade Ferguson-“Duty and Discrimination: Black Soldiers and the Struggle for Civil Rights” at 10 a.m. \n \nThis talk explores the motivations and experiences of Black soldiers\, particularly during World War I\, who saw military service as a path to prove their duty\, earn citizenships\, and affirm their manhood. Despite facing segregation and menial assignments\, Black soldiers sought to use their service to gain respect\, achieve racial uplift\, and fight for political equality. This talk examines the sacrifice and service of local Black men who served in the No. 2 Construction Battalion and the 107th Pioneer Battalion. \nJade Ferguson is an Associate Professor in the School of Theatre\, English\, and Creative Writing and the Assistant Vice President\, Academic Equity and Anti-Racism at the University of Guelph. Her research focuses on segregation and civil rights activism in Canada. She is currently writing a book entitled “Jim Crow Canada: Segregation and Civil Rights in Canadian Literature and Art.” \nMike Bechthold-“The Royal Canadian Air Force during the Liberation” at 11 a.m. \n \nMike Bechthold holds a PhD in History from the University of New South Wales\, Canberra\, Australia and an MA & Honours BA from Wilfrid Laurier University\, Waterloo\, Ontario\, Canada. Mike is the author or editor of eight books and numerous articles. His most recent monograph is “Flying to Victory: Raymond Collishaw and the Western Desert Campaign\,” (University of Oklahoma Press\, 2017) and he is the co-author of a series of guidebooks about the Canadian battlefields of the Second World War. He specializes in the fields of military air power (especially tactical air operations in the First and Second World Wars)\, the Canadian army in Normandy and Northwest Europe\, and the Canadian Corps in the Great War. \nBechthold was recently employed as a historian with the Royal Canadian Air Force History and Heritage section. He has taught history at Wilfrid Laurier University\, the University of Waterloo\, Conestoga College\, and the Schulich School of Business at York University. For 22 years he worked as the Communications Director of the Laurier Centre for Military Strategic and Disarmament Studies and the Managing Editor of Canadian Military History\, an academic quarterly journal. He is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society in the UK\, a Fellow of the Gregg Centre for the Study of War and Society at the University of New Brunswick\, a Research Fellow at Nipissing University Centre for the Study of War\, Atrocity\, and Genocide\, and he recently served as the Executive Director of the Juno Beach Centre Association. \nGeoff Hayes-“The Joy and Anxiety of Liberation\, 1944/45” at 1 p.m. \n \nThe Dutch people still celebrate the role that Canadian troops played in the liberation of the Netherlands. With good reason. The occupation and the liberation came at an enormous cost to the Dutch people. But that joy brought anxiety. While Canadian soldiers needed to get home\, Dutch civilians needed to get on with their lives. This talk explores some of the complexities of liberation in 1944 and 1945. \nGeoff Hayes is a professor of history at the University of Waterloo where he teaches Canadian and Canadian military history. He is also the editor of Canadian Military History.  His current research centres on the challenge of morale in the wartime Canadian army. \nRoger Sarty-“The Royal Canadian Navy and the Liberation of North-West Europe” at 2 p.m.  \n \nThe Canadian navy\, at the peak of its wartime expansion with 90\,000 personnel and more than 250 seagoing warships\, played a major part in the Allied victory campaign in Europe. From early 1944 the Canadian navy took over responsibility for the escort of Allied convoys across the North Atlantic\, while dispatching destroyers and frigates to protect British waters in preparation for the Normandy invasion in June 1944. The navy committed a hundred warships crewed by 10\,000 personnel to the landings and follow on operations in northern France. These forces\, strengthened with fresh ships and personnel from Canada\, then operated all along the European coast into the Arctic\, engaged in some of the most intense combats of the war against a still capable and determined enemy. \nRoger Sarty began his career as a historian at the Department of National Defence\, and  later moved to the Canadian War Museum where became deputy director. In 2004 he joined the History Department at Wilfrid Laurier University\, and retired in 2022. Roger co-authored the two-volume official history of the Royal Canadian Navy in the Second World War\, and has published several other books on Canadian naval history. \nAlex Souchen-“Underwater Munitions and the Environmental Legacies of the Second World War” at 3 p.m.  \n \nWhen the Second World War ended in 1945 the Allied powers encountered an enormous problem: how to destroy the immense stockpiles of surplus and captured weapons and munitions leftover in Europe and around the world. This presentation will explore that history by examining how and why millions of tons of conventional and chemical munitions ended up underwater\, dumped there by Allied forces to expedite demobilization. The presentation will also discuss the role of historians and historical research in addressing the environmental legacies of the Second World War and especially these dangerous weapons corroding away at the bottom of the world’s oceans and lakes \nDr. Alex Souchen is an Associate Professor at the University of Guelph\, cross-appointed between the Department of History and the Bachelor of Arts and Sciences Program. His interdisciplinary research explores the history of science and technology and the environmental legacies of warfare in the 20th century. He is the author of “War Junk: Munitions Disposal and Postwar Reconstruction in Canada\,” (published by UBC Press in 2020)\, and co-editor of “Silent Partners: The Origins and Influence of Canada’s Military-Industrial Complex\,” (published by UBC Press in 2023). He has also published many articles on military pollution and the ocean dumping of munitions after the World Wars in North America and Europe. His next book will examine the history of Canada’s industrial front during the Second World War and the environmental and health risks of explosives production. \nMike Ford and Murray Foster-“La Montanara: A musical remembrance of the Italian campaign” at 4 p.m. \nFord and Foster bring a wealth of musical achievements: their diverse projects (including as members of Great Big Sea and Moxy Früvous) have sold well over half a million albums\, garnered numerous songwriting awards\, received nominations for multiple Juno and Canadian Folk Music Awards\, earned a Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medal\, and have created critically acclaimed musicals\, films\, and internationally performed historical plays. \n“La Montanara” by Mike Ford and Murray Foster is an original song-cycle exploring Canadian soldiers’ involvement in the Italian campaign of 1943-45. Inspired by the writings of Farley Mowat\, Fred Sederberg\, Mark Zuehlke\, Caroline Moorehead\, Tim Cook and others\, this performance presents a musical tapestry that spans various styles\, with masterful guitar work and soaring harmonies that evoke the passion\, sacrifice\, camaraderie\, and challenges central to the Italian Campaign.
URL:https://guelphmuseums.ca/event/liberation-and-remembrance-symposium/
LOCATION:Civic Museum\, 52 Norfolk Street\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1H 4H8\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Events,Online
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://guelphmuseums.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Revised-Liberation-and-Remembrance-Symposium-Featured-Image-For-Webpage.png
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20251120T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20251120T203000
DTSTAMP:20260412T053217
CREATED:20251024T194612Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251121T204049Z
UID:10019650-1763665200-1763670600@guelphmuseums.ca
SUMMARY:Military Lecture: Training the Ukrainian Army Before Russia Attacked
DESCRIPTION:Capt. Jeff Fry will share his experience training the Ukrainian army before the start of the war with Russia. Capt. Fry was deployed on OP UNIFIER in Ukraine from July 2020 to May 2021 where he served as the Officer Development Team Lead at the Odessa Military Academy and Airborne Assault School. He will talk about instructing Ukrainian officer cadets on Troop Leading Procedure and Ukrainian Army Brigade Staff on Military Decision Making Process (OPP)\, and advising and assisting Academy staff at a national level to develop new course material and training. \nDoors open at 6:30 p.m. and the presentation starts at 7 p.m.\, followed by a question period. \nThe lecture premiered in-person at the Civic Museum. The recorded conversation is available on YouTube\, and our Museum Everywhere Portal. Guelph Museums’ Military Lecture series is presented in partnership with the Laurier Centre for the Study of Canada. \nWatch The Recording\n\nAbout The Speaker\nCaptain Jeffrey Allan Fry\, CD was born in Toronto Ontario on 20 March 1976 and raised in Guelph after his family moved for work in 1982. After completing high school\, Captain Fry was enrolled into the Army Reserve in 1995.  He served two years with the Royal Highland Fusiliers in Cambridge after completing basic training. In the winter of 1997\, he was accepted as an Officer Cadet. In the spring and summer of 1997\, Captain Fry completed Phases 1 and 2 at the Combat Training Centre at Canadian Forces Base Gagetown\, New Brunswick. \nUpon moving to Toronto in 1998\, Captain Fry transferred to the Governor General’s Horse Guards and was selected to attend the armoured crew commander course with Royal Canadian Armoured School (Wainwright\, Alberta) during the summer of 1998. After completion of the course\, he returned to the regiment and continued armoured officer OJT. In June 1999\, he returned to Wainwright\, Alberta and completed the armoured Troop Leader course. \nCaptain Fry continued to serve with the GGHG as a troop leader in A Squadron and subsequently a battle captain until moving back to Guelph Ontario for civilian work in 2001. \nOn his return to Guelph\, he was attached to the 11th Field Regiment\, Royal Canadian Artillery. After some persuasion\, the decision was made to officially transfer to the Royal Canadian Artillery and\, in 2002 Captain Fry attended the Command Post Officer and Reconnaissance Officer course\, Royal Canadian Artillery School. He returned to the regiment and was employed as a Command Post Officer and Reconnaissance Officer in the autumn of 2002.  He attended the Officer Staff Course\, Canadian Army Staff College Toronto from January to April 2003. \nBetween 2002 and 2009\, Captain Fry held various positions\, including Command Post Officer\, Reconnaissance Officer\, Gun Position Officer\, Battle Captain and Adjutant. In 2009 he transferred to inactive supplementary reserve to start a civilian company. \nIn 2016\, while still residing in Guelph\, Captain Fry returned to primary reserve with the 7th Toronto Regiment\, Royal Canadian Artillery as there were no positions available with 11th Field Regiment. He proudly accepted the chance to return to the Royal Canadian Artillery when a position was made available at 7th Toronto Regiment. He returned as CPO\, GPO\, Recce O and then\, BK 9 Battery. \nWhile serving with 7th Toronto\, he deployed with the CAF support to flooding in Northern Ontario OP Lentus from April to June 2019 as Officer Commanding A Company\, 32 Brigade. During this command\, 32 Brigade conducted a Relief in Place of Regular Army (2 Brigade led by the 3rd Battalion Royal Canadian Regiment)\, and was the largest Reserve relief of Regular army since WW2. \nIn June 2019 Captain Fry attended the Army Tactics and Operations Course\, Tactics School\, Gagetown and\, in September 2019 returned to 11th Field Regiment in Guelph Ontario as the Battle Captain of 29 Battery.As part of the CAF response to the COVID Pandemic\, Captain Fry deployed on OP Laser between April and July 2020 as a Company 2IC and subsequently OC of B Coy\, 31 Territorial Brigade Group. \nCaptain Fry is a graduate of the Canadian Army Command and Staff College (2024) in Kingston Ontario and currently is the Battery Commander for 29 Battery Guelph and\, 16 Battery (the operational field battery). \nCaptain Fry has spent his civilian career in investment banking and commercial real estate and has experience working in Canada\, US\, UK and Europe. \nHonours and Awards: \nCanadian Forces Decoration (CD)\nSpecial Service Medal (SSM)
URL:https://guelphmuseums.ca/event/military-lecture-training-the-ukrainian-army-before-russia-attacked/
LOCATION:Civic Museum\, 52 Norfolk Street\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1H 4H8\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Events,Military Lecture Series,Online
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://guelphmuseums.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/November-2025-Military-Lecture-with-Captain-Jeff-Fry-Featured-Image-For-Web-1.png
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20260122T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20260122T203000
DTSTAMP:20260412T053217
CREATED:20260106T231857Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260126T230545Z
UID:10019666-1769108400-1769113800@guelphmuseums.ca
SUMMARY:Military Lecture: The History of the University of Guelph War Memorial Hall
DESCRIPTION:Austin Foster presents the history of the University of Guelph’s War Memorial Hall\, based on archival research for the War Memorial Hall: Its Early History\, Heritage\, and Legacy – A Centennial Retrospective (1924–2024) report. The presentation addresses the Ontario Agricultural College’s military context\, focusing on its experience during the First World War\, the fundraising campaigns and commemorative efforts that supported the project\, and the active involvement of students and the wider community. It also examines the design propositions considered for War Memorial Hall\, the practical challenges faced during its planning and construction\, and the building’s role throughout the interwar years and the Second World War. \nDoors open at 6:30 p.m. and the presentation starts at 7 p.m.\, followed by a question period. \nThe lecture premiered in-person at the Civic Museum. The recorded conversation is available on YouTube\, and our Museum Everywhere Portal. Guelph Museums’ Military Lecture series is presented in partnership with the Laurier Centre for the Study of Canada. \nWatch The Recordings\nPart 1 \n\nPart 2  \n\nPart 3  \n\nAbout the Speaker\n \nAustin Foster\, MA\, CAHP-In\, is a historical researcher and writer specializing in heritage conservation. He holds an Honours Bachelor of Arts in Classical Studies and History and a Master of Arts in History from the University of Guelph. His professional and volunteer experience spans academia\, archival management\, archaeology\, municipal heritage planning\, and historical conservation. He has contributed to Euro-Canadian and Indigenous archaeological projects\, worked on heritage conservation initiatives\, and conducted research for the Canadian War Memorials Database. Foster is a professional member of the Canadian Museums Association and an intern member of the Canadian Association of Heritage Professionals.
URL:https://guelphmuseums.ca/event/military-lecture-the-history-of-the-university-of-guelph-war-memorial-hall/
LOCATION:Civic Museum\, 52 Norfolk Street\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1H 4H8\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Events,Military Lecture Series,Online
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20260319T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20260319T203000
DTSTAMP:20260412T053217
CREATED:20260131T155314Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260323T234224Z
UID:10019675-1773946800-1773952200@guelphmuseums.ca
SUMMARY:Military Lecture: From Sherbrooke with Love: Illicit Correspondence\, Civilian Internment\, and Canada in the Second World War
DESCRIPTION:Gillian Wagenaar examines a case of illicit correspondence between a Canadian teenager and a group of civilian internees in Quebec in the early years of the Second World War. Through a micro-historical assessment\, she explores context regarding the development and use of internment systems in Canada\, the social dynamics within and beyond these camps\, and the afterlives\, expected and otherwise\, of wartime stories and sources. \nDoors open at 6:30 and the presentation starts at 7 p.m.\, followed by a question period. \nThe lecture premiered in-person at the Civic Museum. The recorded conversation will be available on YouTube\, and our Museum Everywhere Portal. Guelph Museums’ Military Lecture series is presented in partnership with the Laurier Centre for the Study of Canada. \nWatch the Recording\n\nAbout the Speaker\n \nGillian Wagenaar is a SSHRC-funded PhD candidate at the University of Waterloo. Her research looks at Canadian correspondence at both the heart and margins of the Second World War\, connecting homefront and battlefront\, and examining the meaning of letters and how they get from one point to another. Through this work\, she aims to make the exploration of history more accessible through digital methods\, storytelling\, and hands-on engagement with the past.
URL:https://guelphmuseums.ca/event/military-lecture-from-sherbrooke-with-love-illicit-correspondence-civilian-internment-and-canada-in-the-second-world-war/
LOCATION:Guelph Civic Museum\, 52 Norfolk Street\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1H 4H8\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Events,Military Lecture Series,Online
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20260416T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20260416T203000
DTSTAMP:20260412T053217
CREATED:20260319T155430Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260319T155430Z
UID:10019688-1776366000-1776371400@guelphmuseums.ca
SUMMARY:Military Lecture: Lives of Servitude and Service: British Home Children and the Making of Wartime Canada by Kelly Morrison
DESCRIPTION:At 102\, Sir George Beardshaw is the last surviving veteran of the Second World War-era Queen’s Own Rifles and the only surviving British “Home Child” left in Canada. He is one of approximately 100\,000 poor or orphaned child migrants sent to this country as part of British social and philanthropic programs developed across the United Kingdom between 1869 and 1939. Many Home Children\, despite enduring hardship and abuse in their placements\, chose to stay in Canada and contribute to this country’s efforts in the First and Second World Wars—approximately 10\,000 in the Great War and 20\,000 in the Second World War. Countless others served in various ways on the Canadian home front. Kelly Morrison’s presentation introduces Beardshaw and a select group of Home Children\, revealing how this marginalized group helped to define Canada’s national wartime and postwar identity. \nDoors open at 6:30 p.m. and the presentation starts at 7:00 p.m.\, followed by a question period. \nThe lecture premieres in-person at the Civic Museum. The recorded conversation will be available on YouTube\, and our Museum Everywhere Portal. Guelph Museums’ Military Lecture series is presented in partnership with the Laurier Centre for the Study of Canada. \nAbout the Speaker\n \nKelly Morrison is a PhD candidate in history\, specializing in War & Society studies at Wilfrid Laurier University. She earned her Honours BA and MA in history at the University of Toronto. Morrison has published two articles: In 2016\, “The North West Rebellion Monument and its Enduring Place in the Historical Landscape of Toronto\,” for ImagiNATIONS\, the University of Toronto’s Journal of Canadian Studies; and in 2020\, “The Missing and the Missed of Lanark County\, Ontario: Great War Sacrifice and the Memorialization of Exclusion in ‘The Volunteer’ Monument\,” for the Journal of Ontario History. She has guest lectured on the subject of War\, Commemoration and Propaganda at the University of Toronto and Wilfrid Laurier University. She has been a guest speaker on Home Child history at the Brant Museum and Archives and the British Consulate in Toronto. She is a regular keynote speaker at Remembrance Day luncheons hosted by the Royal Canadian Navy and HMCS York from 2020-2025.
URL:https://guelphmuseums.ca/event/military-lecture-lives-of-servitude-and-service-british-home-children-and-the-making-of-wartime-canada-by-kelly-morrison/
LOCATION:Guelph Civic Museum\, 52 Norfolk Street\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1H 4H8\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Events,Military Lecture Series,Online
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