Cape Breton Post

Police actions condemned.

- SHARON MONTGOMERY CAPE BRETON POST sharon.montgomery @cbpost.com @capebreton­post

GLACE BAY — Although Davis Day ceremonies were cancelled due to the COVID19 pandemic, the public is invited to the Cape Breton Miners' Museum today to commemorat­e the day on their own.

Mary Pat Mombourque­tte, executive director of the musuem, said at some point today Cape Breton Regional Municipali­ty Dist. 9 Coun. George MacDonald will lay a wreath at Miners' Memorial Park behind the museum.

“The public is invited to come out and commemorat­e the day in their own way,” she said.

Mombourque­tte said she hopes people visit the site where there's lots of room to social distance, adding businesses in the area will close today as a sign of respect.

“It is Davis Day although we aren't having a ceremony,” she said. “It's important that we honour that day.”

Davis Day is commemorat­ed on June 11 in the former coal mining communitie­s to remember New Waterford miner William Davis who was shot during a confrontat­ion between striking miners and company police. On that day, the miners were protesting the coal company's decision to shut down the town's drinking water supply and electricit­y as part of the 1925 strike.

More than 5,000 people attended Davis' funeral three days later, while a British Empire Steel Corp. policeman was relocated with his family to Massachuse­tts for safety reasons.

The date is also known as William Davis Miners' Memorial Day throughout the municipali­ty, in honour of miners who were killed on the job across the province.

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