lk 41~ ~ &~ - rf}~ so Pt.. ~7 by AI Kirk Dutton's Town Clock Lorraine Bolgar wanted to do Mayor Campbell opened the Dutton a favour. And she has. But she meeting by pointing out that since a has also changed history. A few person could be heard as well in the months ago, Ms. Bolgar purchased a dark as in the light, the Council clock for Dutton's Town Hall. Before Chambers light bulb should be moving out of the community that she turned off to save the expense. A has called home for years, she wanted short discussion was held to deal with to do something for all the friends she the concerns of wear and tear on the was leaving behind. But it is what Ms. light switch. A counter motion was Bolgar and many other people don't made that the bulb should just be know that is the reason for this story. unscrewed a bit until the light went off. Built in 1927, Dutton's Town Hall Deputy Mayor Campbell stated has always had a space for a clock but that a clock was a wasteful thing. ~it one was never put in. That may seem was not being watched, it was like an oversight or a very bad case of running for no purpose and the procrastination but, in thought of the gears and hands fact, the missing clock turning all day just so a passerby was part of the village's could, on occasion, glance up at it heritage. was a foolish, wasteful expense. For the last three Alderman McKinnon suggested months I have been that when the clock was not being doing extensive watched, it could be turned off just research on why like the light bulb. This triggered a most of them. Dutton's Town Hall has long discussion from the other always been clockless. · My research has led me to the members of Council, some saying After extensive REAL reason why a clock was never that turning the clock on and off historical research, installed on the Town Hall. would surely cause more wear on searching newspaper On Aprillst, 1929 a special session its parts. It is a well-known fact that the now clippings, going over yellowed of Dutton Town Council was called to Murucipality of Dutton Dunwich was Mayor Campbell pointed out that documents in the Town Hall's musty decide on the matter of purchasing a settled by Scots. It is also well known a town clock lacked any real basement and interviewing local clock. In attendance were Mayor that these same Scots were, well­ functional purpose to the community. history buffs, a fascinating story has William Campbell, Deputy Mayor Bill thrifty. Okay, that's .not quite right. After all, if it was light out, people emerged that needs to be told. And Campbell, Alderman Willy McKinnon They were cheap. Really cheap. And I should be working and if it was dark here it is. and Alderman Billy McKinnon. can say that because I'm related to Continued On Page 6 • Dutton's Town aock Continued From Page 3 out, they would be home sleeping or sitting quietly. Alderman Campbell stated that a calendar would be much more practical than a clock as the only exceptions to working, sleeping and sitting quietly were drinking at the Macintyre Tavern on Friday night and the Saturday night bath. All were in agreement that a calendar was a much wiser investment but this did not solve the problem of what to do with the hole in the Town Hall where the clock was supposed to go. Alderman McKinnons~ggested that perhaps the sensible solution would be to simply buy the clock's face without buying the inner workings. Under his proposal, the clock would show the correct time twice a day- quite an acceptable solution given the saving that could be had. Yet that would still require the purchase of a clock face and hands causing Deputy Mayor Campbell to state that if Council was going to waste all that money why not just board up the hole instead. So, from then till now, 81 years, the Town Hall has been without a clock. Tbe new donated clock by Ms. Bolgar will run on electricity arid presumably the Municipality will have to pay for it. So, \-.rill this extra expense cause our ancestors to turn over in their graves? Probably not. AU of that movement would cause too 1nuch wear and tear on their coffms. (Al Kirk is a freelance writer and · columnist. He resides in the Hamlet of Jona Station just east of Dutton.) The London Free Press ~ Saturday, March 3·1, 2007 .~00,000 fought • 3,598 died • Anation was born ~ ( '11) -'lTJIIY A. I•t' Elgin MUttary Museum Collectlor In Elgin County, Ellis Slfton was a . member of his church choir and the local gun dub. In France, by age 25, he was a veteran of battle and a leader of men. "I ~ope that the courage will be mine at the right moment if I am called upon to stare death.in the face," he wrote to his sisters less than a year before he was killed. Veterans Affairs Canada the mass grave wHere Ellis Sitton's remains are burte~ near the·battlegroufld, In llchfleld Crater. The_crater was created by an exploding' mine. Less than a year before he .fought his final battle- at Vimy Ridge on April 9, 1917 -Ellis Wellwood.Sifton, a farmer from Elgin County,.wondered i(4e was up to fighting to the death. He needn't have worried. When his momeqt. gun~, he.single-handedly took out a G~rman machine-gun nest with grenades~ his rifle and, . finally, his bayonet, before being shot dead by a dying German. Sifton was awarded the Victoria Cross, one of only four Canadians at Vimy Ridge·so honoured. Free Press Reporter Debora Van Brenk visited Sifton' s old haunts in and around Wallacetown and combed books, newspapers and museums for this report. WALLACETOWN have promoted me to reached hlm yet. barbed wire. Keillor says Sifton confided Tyrconnell, at St. Pete AprilS, 1917 Sergeant." Be careful, they say, answer­ He surprises the German just before the attack he bad a church where the young m This is Holy Week and the ing his lament that so many crew in their nest, kills them hunch he wouldn't live sang in the choir. Elgin County countryside is *** married fathers fall in battle. all and silences their big gun. through the battle. He asked Up the road, in Dutton, fi waking, and waiting. As the Slfton sisters and German reinforceptents only that Keillor let his people flat memorial stones reco~ Red-winged blackbirds, WALLACETOWN father leave the church thIs rush down the trench to take know. the family plot. They mark home from their migration, AprilS, 1917 cool Easter morning, the mes­ their comrades' places. Sifton's remains are buried last of the John Sifton line. alight on rushes that line a ·It is Easter morning, and the sage of Christ's death on the For Sifton, training and with 56 others near the battle­ Two cedar trees stand dirt road beside the neat farm Siftons and Bobiers and cross and the promise of resur­ adrenaline take over. field at Lichfield Crater. It is a sentinels over them. owned by John James Sitton. Pearces and Backuses and rection rings in their ears. He gives an underhand hole in the ground, crudely There is a drizzle in the air. Ellises - all stalwarts of the thrust with his bayonet. carved by an exploded mine. Debora Van Brenk Is a Free Horses itch to put their strong community - crowd to wor­ *** Thrust. twist, withdraw. Reporter. limbs to wotl{, but the fields ship at St. Peter's Anglican And again. Thrust. twist * .-. d{)Qnbrenl.:@{/iJress.com are too heavy with mud to put Church in nearby Tyrconnell. VZMYRIDGE withdraw. Sou.ras i11clude: E. W. Sifton harness to the plow. The church gazes out over April9, 1917 Again. And again. Back home in Wallacetown, letters, 1915- 1917,· St. Thomas Fruit trees in the front yard the pioneer cemetery, where Less than a year ago, Ellis It is chaos. events unfold quickly. Daily Tirrws. 1917,· Elgln Mllita are poised to bloom. trees whistle as a northwest Sifton had wondered if he was His platoon charges through A terse telegram arrives: Museum documents and Ian A rocking chair on the wind blows down to Lake Erle. up to his task: "I hope that the the hole Sifton has created and ''Deeply regret inform you Ralien, musewn executive broad front porch watches for Sons of the pioneers have courage will be mine at the arrives to find this skirmish 5370 Corporal Ellis Wellwood director; Vi my and More. by Ellis Well wood Sifton. gone away to war and left gaps right moment if I am called all but over. Sifton· infantry officially Arthur Bishop tn Legion Soon, it seems to say, the in pews that would normally upon to stat·e death in the A cheer rises in their reported killed in action April Magazine, Nouember-~ son a.nd eventual heir to this be full. face," he wrote his sisters. throats. ninth nineteen seventeen. 2004; historian Jeff Be;.. homestead will return. Ellis Sifton would ordinarily But those moments of doubt And then a dying German (signed) Officer in ChargE!; Veterans 1\ffairs Canada, uariO take his place with the choir. have long since vanished. plucks his rifle from t.he mud Records." documents; Mary 0/d.e, arc!llvts ....
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