A new monument in Peterborough honours the two dozen people who died in a fire at the Quaker Oats factory in the city more than a century ago.
On the weekend, the new monument was unveiled bearing the names of the 24 victims who perished following an explosion and fire at the plant on Dec. 11, 1916.
A statue and replica of a burnt wall stands at the north end of Millennium Park. The backdrop is the iconic Peterborough Quaker Oats factory.
READ MORE: Remembering the Whittaker Mills Fire
Unifor paid for the monument that was locally designed and installed.
- Osoyoos Band seeks return of sacred sites in discussions with B.C. government
- Record turnout expected for Penticton Peach Classic Triathlon, boosting local economy
- Mom and 1-month-old baby missing in northern B.C., not seen since July 9
- Hoekstra says Trump serious about tariff threat over wildfire smoke
Get daily National news
“We do have a National Day of Mourning each year … it’s unfortunate but even with today’s technologies and all of the advances we have, we are still seeing industrial accidents and disease,” said Bob Orr, Unifor’s secretary-treasurer.
“That’s what people really have to understand. This is people who died in an industrial accident.”
The event was organized by the Descendants of the Quaker Fire Organizing committee.
Comments
Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.