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Lost to the Sea Site Shaping Up

Published on June 9, 2013
© The Yarmouth Vanguard
Article/Photos by Fred & Belle Hatfield

It's been years in the planning and on Sunday, Yarmouth's Natal Day, the Lost to the Sea Memorial was dedicated and officially unveiled. Parts of Water Street were blocked off to accommodate hundreds who came out to witness the historic occasion.

The memorial lists over 2400 names of individuals connected to Yarmouth County who lost their lives to the sea down through the centuries. Guest speakers were MP Greg Kerr, Yarmouth Mayor Pam Mood and the chair of the Waterfront Development Corporation, Jim MacLeod. Musical contributions were made by several local performers, with some music specifically for the occasion.

Lost to the Sea Site Shaping Up

Published on June 5, 2013
© The Yarmouth Vanguard
Article/Photo by Belle Hatfield

Landscaping crews, busy on Wednesday adding the finishing touches to the Lost to the Sea memorial park site at the foot of Glebe Street, behind Yarmouth Town Hall. The memorial's official opening is on Natal Day, Sunday, June 9, beginning at 2 p.m.

See story and agenda HERE.

Lost to the Sea Satellite Panels Unveiled

Published on June 1, 2013
© The Yarmouth Vanguard
Article/Photo by Eric Bourque

A ceremony officially unveiling a satellite interpretive panel - part of Yarmouth's Lost to the Sea project - was held Saturday morning, June 1, in Tusket. The panel is located on municipally owned land between the courthouse and archives building.

The panel was unveiled by Argyle Warden Aldric d'Entremont and Councillor Danny Muise.

On Saturday afternoon a second satellite interpretive panel, this one located at the Cape Forchu lighthouse was also unveiled.

The panels provide some historial information on Yarmouth County's history with the sea and the lives that have been lost.

The panels tie in the with the Lost to the Sea memorial, at the corner of Glebe and Water streets. That memorial is being unveiled on Sunday, June 9.

June 9 Ceremony for Lost to Sea

Workers place granite slabs atop the concrete base of the monument's water feature. BELLE HATFIELD PHOTO

Published on May 29, 2013
© The Yarmouth Vanguard
Article/Photo by Belle Hatfield

It has taken eight years and countless more in time and money than anyone anticipated at the project's beginnings, but on Yarmouth's Natal Day, Sunday, June 9, the Lost to the Sea Memorial will be unveiled in a ceremony that marks its completion.

The ceremony will take place at 2 p.m. at the memorial, located on the northeast corner of Water and Glebe Streets, just below the town hall. The ceremony will feature music, much of it original, some written for this specific event.

The memorial project was conceived and managed by a committee of the Yarmouth Waterfront Development Corporation and has received federal and municipal support. The Town of Yarmouth embraced it as a signature legacy project during its 250 anniversary celebrations in 2011.

The goal was to see a memorial on Yarmouth's waterfront to honour Yarmouth County's connection to the sea and commemorate those from here who have been lost.

The monument design has undergone many changes, some prompted by funding limitations and others by logistical constraints. The project's final budget, excluding in-kind contributions, is estimated to be around $500,000. Canadian Heritage provided $225,000 and the municipalities of Yarmouth and Argyle made contributions towards interpretive panels. The rest of the project has been funded by the corporation, which receives its funding from the Town of Yarmouth.

Research was an important component of this project. Actually finding all of the people whose names properly belong on the monument - it includes those from Yarmouth County who died at sea - involved more than anyone originally imagined. At some point it became apparent that a website was a natural and critical extension to the project. Now a searchable database, with all the nearly 2,500 names that have been collected, is available at www.losttothesea.com. It is one of the project's intangible legacies.

The names are engraved by date of death on seven granite slabs, the last of which is only partially full.

In a seafaring community, it is only a matter of time before more will be etched in stone.

In addition to the monument, there will be three display panels, including one at the Cape Forchu light station and in Tusket near the courthouse and archives. They will be unveiled on June 1.

Following is the schedule for the June 9 ceremony:

Lost to the Sea Memorial Unveiling

Sunday, June 9, 2013 at 2 pm.

(Prior to the ceremony, a bagpiper will play in Frost Park.)

Introductions: MC David Warner, Secretary, WDC

Blessing and reading -- Rev. Bill Newell

Hymns by The Yarmouth Shantymen.

-- Eternal Father.

-- Partons, la Mer est Belle

Greetings from West Nova MP Greg Kerr

Original song by Kelly Bellamon

-- Fisher of the Sea

Greetings from Yarmouth mayor Pam Mood

Untitled song by Floyd d'Entremont

Greetings from WDC chair Jim MacLeod

Song about the monument by David Mahoney

-- Lost to the Sea

Monument unveiling

Songs by Phil DeMille performed by the duo, Pendulum

-- Ocean's Harvest

-- The Ocean's Last Word

Lost to the Sea Memorial Panels Installed

Published on May 15, 2013
© The Yarmouth Vanguard
Article/Photo by Tina Comeau

After years of envisioning, planning, researching and prep and site work, the first of seven memorial panels inscribed with the names of people from Yarmouth County who lost their lives at sea was carefully positioned into place on the morning of Wednesday, May 15.

And then came a second memorial panel. The others would follow throughout the day.

By the end of the process the seven memorial stones - which will make up the Lost to the Sea Memorial - will bear the names of around 2,500 people, with room left on the final stone for the addition of another 200 names if, or when, needed. Additional names would include those in the future who are lost or die at sea, or names that may have been missed or not provided during the research stage.

The Lost to the Sea Memorial is located at the corner of Glebe and Water Streets. It will be officially unveiled on Yarmouth's Natal Day on Sunday, June 9 at 2 p.m.

For years this memorial was a conceptual drawing - the original drawings were produced in 2006 following a motion in 2005 to undertake the project. As the memorial now takes shapes physically, those who have been involved in the project - including the project committee, the Yarmouth Waterfront Development Corporation and staff at the Yarmouth County Museum - are feeling a great sense of satisfaction and pride.

"We're just delighted that we finally got this in place and we're getting ready for the unveiling on June 9," said Jim Corning, executive director of the waterfront development corporation, as he watched the work taking place on Wednesday morning. "The committee that we've had has stuck with us for the six to seven years it's taken. Dick Stewart, a board member, was the original mover and shaker who wanted something on the waterfront to remember those lost, so we're finally going to see it come together."

A bronze ship's wheel and a water feature are also being incorporated into the memorial's design.

A week prior to the June 9 unveiling of the Lost to the Sea Memorial on Yarmouth's waterfront, ceremonies will be held on Saturday, June 1, in Tusket at 11 a.m. (adjacent to the Argyle Township Court House and Archives) and at the Cape Forchu lighthouse at 2 p.m. where interpretive panels drawing people's attention to the memorial will be unveiled.

A crew from Yarmouth Crane was putting the panels into place on May 15. Committee member Dave Warner said each panel weighs 7,700 pounds so additional work was needed to prepare the site for the crane. Given the weight of the panels they could not be brought to the site all at once. The first two panels were in place by 9:30 a.m.

The first of the panels includes the names of people lost at sea during unknown timeframes. After that the names are in chronological order, dating back over the past few centuries with the most recent name being that of 20-year-old Michael Doucette of Wedgeport who was lost at sea in January of this year.

There is set criteria for being included on the memorial, most importantly, the person had to be born in Yarmouth County or be a resident of Yarmouth County. Names that were submitted that didn't meet the criteria are still included on the Lost to the Sea Memorial website, but not on the panels. Stories of those whose names are on the memorial are also included on the website - losttothesea.com.

Originally the plan had been to unveil the memorial during Yarmouth's 250th celebrations in 2011. But funding and the added time required to research all of the names pushed the project back.

The total cost of the project, including in-kind donations, is expected to be just under $510,000. Canadian Heritage provided $225,000 towards the memorial and the municipalities of Yarmouth and Argyle made contributions towards interpretive panels. The rest of the project has been funded by the corporation, which receives its funding from the Town of Yarmouth.

QUICK GLANCE:

The criteria for being included in the Lost to the Sea List:

  1. Born in Yarmouth County or a resident of Yarmouth County.
  2. Drowned in salt water.
  3. Ship is missing - entire crew lost.
  4. Fell overboard and drowned.
  5. Killed by an accident while on board a ship at sea.
  6. Killed in a mutiny.
  7. Died of disease while on a ship.
  8. Died at sea or in a foreign port (having arrived there on a ship).
  9. Died of wounds while serving on a ship, or with a connection to the ocean.

Finish Line Near for Lost to Sea

Lost to the Sea committee member Dick Stewart joins Phil DeMille, Dave Warner, Waterfront Development Corporation executive director Jim Corning, museum director Nadine Gates, Eric Ruff and Nancy Hood as they examine mockups of the commemorative panels that will be erected as part of the Lost to the Sea project. BELLE HATFIELD PHOTO

Published on Mar. 14, 2013
© The Yarmouth Vanguard
Article/Photo by Belle Hatfield

For Dick Stewart the Feb. 17 sinking of the Miss Ally off Liverpool brought back a wave of memories. Memories of being a kid in Lockeport, in March 1961. Three trawlers - the Muriel Eileen, Marjorie Byrl and the Jimmy and Sisters - set out for the Scotian Shelf on a fishing trip from which they never returned.

An unexpected gale blew in and the boats' 17 crewmembers were lost to the sea. The small Shelburne County community was quite literally devastated, not only by the loss of husbands, sons, fathers, brothers and friends, but also by the economic hardship that the loss of those bread-winners created.

"It marks you forever," says Stewart.

It is also, as the Miss Ally tragedy so painfully demonstrates, part of the fabric of coastal life.

Stewart is sitting in the archives at the Yarmouth County Museum surrounded by committee members who have organized the work that has gone into building the Lost to the Sea monument and finding the names of the people it will commemorate.

It was Stewart who, as a member of the Yarmouth Waterfront Development Corporation, originally made the motion to undertake the project back in 2005.

His goal was to see a memorial on Yarmouth's waterfront to honour Yarmouth County's connection to the sea and commemorate those from here who have been lost.

From the project's original concept drawings rendered by James Colbeck in 2006, the monument has undergone many design changes, some prompted by funding limitations and others by logistical constraints, but as Stewart looks forward to the project's completion and its eventual unveiling, he is satisfied with the result.

"When we started this I said I wanted water and a wheel, and we'll have that." A fleeting smile crosses his face. Life - as he learned in the aftermath of the devastation wrought on the Lockeport of his youth - is about moving forward and adapting to the unforeseen. Like life, the Lost to the Sea project has moved forward, despite unexpected hurdles.

Since its inception the project has both expanded and shrunk. Costings for the original design concepts forced a rethinking of its scale and a loss of some of the originally conceived elements - it was going to have a water wall, for instance.

But even as the bricks and mortar of the project were being down-scaled, it was becoming apparent that the research portion of the project - actually finding all of the people whose names properly belong on the monument - was more involved than anyone originally imagined. At some point it became apparent that a website was a natural and critical extension to the project.

The research end of things was coordinated by the former archivist with the Yarmouth County Museum. Jamie Serran (who recently accepted a position at the Council for Nova Scotia Archives) oversaw the work of the volunteer team and the student interns who were employed to sift through thousands of documents, comb the archives and tramp through graveyards.

Nancy Hood, one of the volunteers, got involved because of her interest in genealogy, admitting that she finds looking for needles in haystacks an interesting diversion. Perhaps that's because behind every needle/name found there is a story.

Take Jack Hatfield of Tusket. He was an officer in the air force and became the first Nova Scotian to die in aerial combat during the Second World War. His plane went down over the English Channel.

More recently, there's the story of the Miss Charity. The lobster boat, with a crew of three, set out on Christmas Eve 1990 for the last trip before the holidays. The boat sank and the crewmembers were lost. It is suspected that the vessel was capsized by a rogue wave.

Former museum curator Eric Ruff also sits on the committee. He points out that finding the names of every person from Yarmouth County who has been lost to the sea is a daunting task. They have been combing records that date back hundreds of years. In many cases, he says, there are variations in how an individual's name is spelled in the records. At one point in the region's history some record keepers attempted to Anglicize French names, so Pothier might be Potter. Figuring out if the Potter mentioned in one record is the same person as the Pothier mentioned somewhere else has been a time-consuming challenge, he says.

Despite the hurdles and the naysayers, and the unexpected turns and twists, by staying focused on the goal and just putting one foot in front of the other, the project committee is almost ready to complete its work and turn over the monument and the website to the Town of Yarmouth.

The site preparations were finished last fall and installation of the panels and water/wheel feature is expected to be completed within a month.

The memorial is located on the northeast corner of Water and Glebe Streets, just below the parking lot in back of the town hall. Measuring 30 feet deep by 90 feet wide, it is backed by a 22-feet-high, 100-foot-long wall. The site is owned by the Town of Yarmouth and is near Frost Park (an early burial site) and very close to Yarmouth harbour.

The monument is scheduled to be unveiled on Yarmouth's natal day, Sunday, June 9 at 2 p.m. Phil DeMille is coordinating the musical entertainment for the afternoon ceremony, which will include performances of original compositions around marine themes. And there will be lots of stories.

With the addition of around 50 more names of people identified since November, the committee says the list is now just under 2,500. These names will be inscribed on seven granite panels, one of which will be incomplete to ensure room for additional names.

In a seafaring community, it is only a matter of time before more will be etched in stone.

In addition to the monument, there will be three display panels, including one at the Cape Forchu Lighthouse and in Tusket near the courthouse and archives.

To view the sources of funding for this legacy project click HERE.

Lost to the Sea in Numbers

Memorial Concept

Lost to the Sea Memorial - conceptual drawing.

Published on Mar. 14, 2013
© The Yarmouth Vanguard
Article by Belle Hatfield

The Lost to the Sea monument project, which was conceived at the board table of Yarmouth's Waterfront Development Corporation, is nearing completion.

To date $484,058.36 has been spent and when the final audit is completed, the total cost of the project, excluding in-kind contributions, is expected to be just under $510,000. Canadian Heritage provided $225,000 and the municipalities of Yarmouth and Argyle made contributions towards interpretive panels. The rest of the project has been funded by the corporation, which receives its funding from the Town of Yarmouth.
Since the call went out for concept drawings in 2006, the project has involved the collective vision of dozens of community members.

It required thousands of hours of research, both paid ($60,000) and volunteer. It was championed by the Town of Yarmouth, through the 250th anniversary committee, and through them was connected with Canadian Heritage. It required the partnership of the Yarmouth County Museum and Archives.

Most of all, the project required commitment to a vision that never waivered. In 2010, the first cost estimates came in at $611,000, beyond original expectations. The town's 250th committee was looking for a legacy project to commemorate the township's anniversary, and the monument project was approved for federal funding. It hit a snag in the fall of 2011 when, during the tender process, estimates pegged costs at nearly double the anticipated figures. The committee had to halt the call for tenders and go back to the drawing board. Out the window went plans to unveil the monument on Dec. 31, 2011.

In the end, the Waterfront Development Corporation had to adapt its plans to meet the reality of its budget. It had to take the time needed to complete the research to participants' satisfaction.

It took longer than expected, and it isn't exactly as originally envisioned, but the monument is now nearly ready to unveil and the Lost to the Sea committee has created a living legacy in the website, (www.losttothesea.ca) which contains the history of the county through the lens of those who have been lost to the sea.

Committee member Dave Warner, in reflecting on the process, said, "We just had to do the right work."

Still Seeking Lost at Sea Names

Paving Stones Being Laid

Work began on the brick walkways at the Lost to the Sea memorial last week under the supervision of Peter Hilton (right). The brick work is expected to be completed this week.

Published on Nov. 18, 2012
© The Yarmouth Vanguard
Article/Photo by Belle Hatfield

The Lost to the Sea committee is urging people in Yarmouth County to contact them with names of family members who have been lost to the sea.

The memorial wall is a project of the Yarmouth Waterfront Development Corporation and will be located at the northwest corner of Water and Glebe streets. It will commemorate county residents who, down through history, have died at sea.

Even though researchers have been combing archives and tramping through graveyards now for a couple of years; even though there has been cooperation from numerous genealogical and historical buffs; even though organizers have had a good response from previous stories; the committee continues to come across names that should be on the monument.

Last month, several new names were uncovered when Wedgeport resident Donnie Jacquard provided the committee with a list.

Yarmouth Waterfront Development Corporation executive director Jim Corning said the committee has decided to delay the cut-off date for another month. The committee now has around 2,400 names.

In the interim, he is urging people to contact the committee with names of anyone they think should be on the monument.

"We don't want to miss anyone," he said.

The monument's completion is now set for early spring. Last week work got underway laying the brick walkways.

The seven panels on which the names will be engraved are ready to be cut and the elements that make up the main monument's design, including a bronze wheel, are being fashioned. In addition to the monument, there will be three display panels including one at the Cape Forchu light station and in Tusket near the courthouse and archives.

Lost to the Sea Memorial Update

Lost to the Sea Committee

Members of the Lost to the Sea Memorial committee - Nancy Hood, Eric Ruff, Byron Boudreau, Jim Corning and David Sollows - with a blueprint of the project that is now under construction on Water Street. Carla Allen photo.

Published on July 31, 2012
© The Yarmouth Vanguard
Article by Carla Allen

Alfred Meuse, 28 years old and unmarried in March 1911, met a terrible fate aboard the J.J. Flaherty while reefing the main sail. Knocked into the sea by the boom, he managed to grasp the log line as it went by but was unable to retain his hold in the heavy sea. When the vessel was brought to, he had disappeared.

Meuse's name will be one of close to 2,400 to be etched on seven stones at the Lost to the Sea Memorial on Water Street. The memorial commemorates all the sons and daughters of Yarmouth County who have died at sea and is a project of the Waterfront Development Committee, headed up by the Lost to the Sea Committee.

The $352,000 project is well underway after being in the planning stages for nearly five years. A $225,000 contribution for Yarmouth's 250th anniversary legacy project from Heritage Canada, administrated by the Yarmouth County Museum, provided a needed boost last year.

Tenders are being sent out for paving and the contract for the memorial stones has been awarded to Demone Monuments & Granite Products Ltd.

The black granite stones measure approximately five feet by three feet. Originally designed lower, they were changed due to concerns about skateboarders.

Committee member Eric Ruff says student researchers were hired last summer, in addition to two other staff members, to research the names of those who drowned.

"They went through all the newspapers and sources that they could think of," he said.

"There will be room for additional names. The dedication is for those not yet known to us as well," added David Sollows.

The names will be listed chronologically from the 1760s to the present.

Dick Stewart suggested the monument nearly five years ago and Jerry Titus was one of the first researchers.

Ivy will be grown on the back wall and there will be planters in the front. A fountain will splash into a five-foot bronze ship's wheel standing in the middle.

The wheel is a replica of one in the Yarmouth County Museum from the vessel North Star, which ran aground on Green Island in 1919.

There will also be "bump outs" in front of the park, with the sidewalk extending into the road.

The project should be completed by the end of the year.

Lost to Sea Tender Under Budget

Memorial Concept

Lost to the Sea Memorial - conceptual drawing.

Published on May 23, 2012
© The Yarmouth Vanguard
Article by Tina Comeau

Another tender has come back for the Lost to Sea memorial monument project and this time the cost has come in under budget.

The latest tender for the work came in at $352,041.

"We do have the money, it is under budget, I think three times we tendered out to get it under budget," said Deputy Mayor Byron Boudreau at Yarmouth town council's May 17 meeting.

A while back the federal government committed $225,000 towards the memorial project, which will see a monument put up remembering those from the Yarmouth area who lost their lives at sea.

Researchers at the Yarmouth County Historical Society have been busy researching the names that will be displayed on the monument. The list of names exceeds 2,000 names.

A site for the memorial - to be located on the northeast corner of Water and Glebe streets - was chosen in 2006.

The intention had been to construct and unveil the Lost to the Sea memorial during Yarmouth's 250th anniversary celebrations last year, but the costs that came in during previous tenders prevented the work from going ahead. Aspects of the project were re-looked at as a result.