Museum Foyer
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
Images
The RCR Museum foyer
Jail cell inside Wolseley Barracks
Flanders Cross
The Foyer was once an open archway
Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
There are two major historical features in the museum reception area: The Flanders Cross and the Jail Cells.
The Flanders Cross
The RCR was formally presented with a Flanders Cross from the Battle of Mount Sorrel in July 1930. It was brought from Europe and hung outside in the open brick archway. After the renovations in 2013, it now hangs in the museum’s reception area under protective glass. It is a composite cross bearing the names of twenty different soldiers of The RCR who were killed while serving overseas during the First World War. Eighteen of the twenty names have no known graves and are commemorated at the Menin Gate Memorial in Belgium. With the exception of one soldier, they were all killed in action between 2-5 June, 1916 at the Battle of Mount Sorrel.
Mount Sorrel was the first battle honour awarded to The RCR during the First World War. It was the first major action for the regiment after arriving in Europe in late-1915. The Regimental War Diary describes the first day of the battle:
“Night of 31st/1st very suspiciously quiet: At about 8.45am, 2nd June, enemy started violent bombardment which lasted five hours. This was a concentrated bombardment principally directed on SANCTUARY WOODS and MAPLE COPSE. At about 3p.m. the enemy attacked and drove our front line back which had been leveled to the ground.”
The touch screen adjacent to the cross allows visitors to explore the battle and the individuals listed on the cross.
Jail Cells
There is a total of six jail cells located inside Wolseley Barracks. Three are located just off the museum reception area, and three more are located directly below in the basement. They were in active use until the 1950s, when new cells were built elsewhere on the base.
The small, narrow rooms had no amenities beyond a metal bedframe and mattress. There was no heating or air conditioning in the cells. The upper-level cells had only a wooden door standing between them and the weather outside. The lower-level cells are located in a dark, concrete basement.
Confinement in these cells was used for the short-term punishment of soldiers. If they needed to be held longer than two weeks, they would be sent to a service detention barracks. Soldiers would not be idle, spending their time waxing and polishing their equipment and the interior of the cell until everything shined. They would also spend time drilling on the parade square, cleaning the base, painting rocks, shining buildings and equipment (vehicles etc.), physical training (PT) and other duties as assigned.
Sources
Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Ypres (Menin Gate) Memorial, Accessed July 20th 2020. https://www.cwgc.org/find/find-cemeteries-and-memorials/91800/ypres-memorial.
Greenhaus, Bereton and Jon Tattrie. The Battle of Mount Sorrel, The Canadian Encyclopedia . December 9th 2014. Accessed July 20th 2020. https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/mont-sorrel.
Parks Canada. Wolseley Barracks, A Block, Directory of Federal Heritage Designations. Accessed July 20th 2020. https://www.pc.gc.ca/apps/dfhd/page_fhbro_eng.aspx?id=3693.
War Diaries - Royal Canadian Regiment (Item ID 1883200), Library and Archives Canada . Accessed July 20th 2020. https://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/CollectionSearch/Pages/record.aspx?app=fonandcol&IdNumber=1883200.
The RCR Museum Photograph
The RCR Museum Photograph
The RCR Museum Photograph
The RCR Museum Collection