Nobody would ever say it out loud, but in a strange sort of ways, the vandals who stole the rifle from the statue, atop the Sarnia Cenotaph in Veterans Park may have done those that cherish the park a favour. "This project all started because a gentleman named Tom Slater was receiving a donation from the Sarnia Historical Society," says Ron Realesmith, vice president of Sarnia Legion Branch 62. At the ceremony, Realesmith was presenting him with a cheque for his latest research book, The Sarnia War Remembrance Project. "While we were doing this, Slater looked up and said, 'Hey, Tommy's rifle is missing!' We pulled out old pictures of the statue and he was right." Tommy is the nickname of the soldier that has stood atop of the Sarnia Cenotaph in Veterans Park for more than 100 years.
"Some misguided fool climbed atop of the statue and pulled the rifle off, that was attached to Tommy," Realesmith said. The vandals didn't stop there and attempted to unbolt the soldier but were unsuccessful. "We put out a press release saying we were mortified, and we were going to start a fundraising campaign to raise money to have the statue restored." As soon as the release was sent, the media reached out, and it became a big story. John Swart, President of the Sarnia-Lambton Building Trades Council contacted Realesmith almost immediately. "He said, 'Whatever your costs are, don't worry about it, we've got it covered.'"
Days later, once the initial funding came through for the rifle, Realesmith, and Patti Ross, Parks Manager for the City of Sarnia, began exploring security upgrades needed for the park. "That's when my phone rang again" recalls Realesmith. "As I am standing in the park with Patti Ross, John Swart is on the line saying they want to do more. We told him to walk over to the park and brainstorm." Realesmith and Ross explained they wanted to install better lighting and more surveillance. "and John said, 'Okay, we'll make that happen.'" 
Right there on the spot, they created the Veterans Park Lighting Campaign Project, for which Realesmith was the project manager. "We got quotes to remove old light poles, install new, Grand Victorian-looking light poles, and run new ethernet lines for surveillance cameras. In less than three months we had raised over $120,000 to complete the project and move forward."
Veterans Park is located on the corner of Christina Street and Wellington Road in downtown Sarnia. The site is home to the Sarnia Cenotaph, or empty tomb, that serves as a monument to all the veterans who never made it home. "It is hallowed ground for our community," shares Realesmith. Throughout the park, there are storyboards that tell the stories of Sarnia and the conflicts the city has been involved in back to the Boer War in the 1800s. "All of Sarnia's history of war is in that park. And now, at night, you could land a plane in the park, because that's how bright it shines."
"This story is brought to you by the Rotary Club of Sarnia.
St. Joseph's Hospice was created in 2005 in the wake of the closing of St. Joseph's Hospital. Since 1944, St. Joseph's had provided healthcare services to Sarnia-Lambton and they wished to continue to do so by meeting an existing gap in end-of-life care to the terminally ill and their families.
Alicia Hardman thinks it's high time that people started showing hard cider some love. Alicia, who along with her husband Garren, owns and operates Shale Ridge Estate Winery in Thedford, Ont., 20 minutes south of Grand Bend. The couple feels hard cider is rightfully starting to make a name for its
Peter Sparks started at the bottom and worked his way right up to the top as owner of All Seasons Trophies (AST). The business opened in Sarnia in 1975 and I started working there in 1999, Peter says. Then I purchased the business in 2007. Peter claims he didn't originally have designs
Jack Botma immigrated to Canada from Holland in 1962. Initially, he settled in Owen Sound with one of his brothers. “One of my uncles convinced Dad to move to Canada and start farming sugar beets. When the sugar beet market crashe...
In March 2007, Dr. Lenka Kucerova and Don Conant opened MedAesthetics, a cosmetic medicine clinic. They leased a beautiful space on Exmouth Street with four treatment rooms and invested in two gold standard lasers. They quickly ou...
Dave Duguay knows coffee. He has been in the coffee business in various capacities for over 30 years. Born and raised in Toronto, a getaway in the summer of 2009 to his wife Alyssa's hometown of Sarnia led him to visit the Blackwater Coffee & Tea Company on Christina Street. That trip ultimate
Things have changed a bit for In Motion: Health Wellness & Fitness since the doors opened in 2007. When recent graduates Dr. Brendan Carney Kilian and Dr. Luke Winegard started the business, their vision was to create a multidisciplinary clinic that could help clients set and achieve their health
As he approaches his 50th birthday, Jason Blais is not even close to retirement. Instead, Jason continues to look to the future for ways he can fine-tune his business, Atlas Technologies, and continue to service Sarnia-Lambton. A lot has changed since I started this business nearly nine years ago