National Post (National Edition)

Plaque honouring MP, WWI veteran to be unveiled

- Lee Berthiaume

OTTAWA • Lt.-col. Samuel Sharpe is poised to finally return to the foyer outside the House of Commons, more than a century after the former member of Parliament and First World War veteran returned traumatize­d from the killing fields of Europe and took his own life.

A bronze plaque bearing Sharpe’s likeness is to be unveiled during a ceremony on Parliament Hill Wednesday, the latest sign of the country’s changing attitude toward the psychologi­cal harm that Canadian soldiers have suffered from war for generation­s.

The Royal Canadian Legion last week took the unpreceden­ted step of naming the mother of the first soldier to die by suicide after serving in Afghanista­n, Pte. Thomas Welch, as this year’s Silver Cross Mother.

“This is a seminal year for recognizin­g mental illnesses as a casualty of war,” Veterans Affairs Minister Seamus O’regan said in an interview. “And so many Canadians, frankly, are already there. They want this. So I’m happy we’re kind of catching up.”

Sharpe was a sitting member of Parliament when he helped raise the Canadian Expedition­ary Force’s 116th battalion and then headed overseas to command the unit during the First World War.

Not only was Sharpe involved in some of the biggest and bloodiest Canadian battles of the First World War, he was re-elected in absentia only a few weeks after the end of the Battle of Passchenda­ele, in which he received an award for gallantry.

But the strain and trauma of Passchenda­ele, where more than 16,000 Canadians were killed or wounded in months of fighting in 1917, including one of his closest friends, would be too much.

Sharpe was hospitaliz­ed for “nervous shock” a few months later and returned to Canada. On May 25, 1918, he jumped from a window at the Royal Victoria Hospital in Montreal.

There is already a sculpture in Centre Block’s foyer dedicated to the only serving MP to have died in combat; Lt.-col. George Baker was killed during the Battle of Mount Sorrel in Belgium in June 1916 and his statue was erected in 1924.

One of the most vocal advocates for recognizin­g Sharpe’s legacy has been Conservati­ve MP Erin O’toole, who was veterans affairs minister during the final years of the Harper government.

O’toole, who represents part of Sharpe’s old Ontario riding, said, “The whole point was before the 100th anniversar­y of the Great War, we were going to make right an omission from almost a century ago where George Baker was recognized and Sam Sharpe was totally forgotten.

“It was always about showing that as a society, we’re mature enough to recognize that attitudes 100 years ago were quite abysmal when it came to mental health, suicide, nervous shock or shell shock, and that we’ve learned and we can talk about it.”

A landmark study by Veterans Affairs Canada last year found that the risk of suicide among male veterans was 36 per cent higher than among men who had never served in the Canadian military.

Even more worrying was that men under the age of 25 were 242 per cent more likely to kill themselves than non-veterans of the same age, while the risk among female veterans of all ages was 81 per cent greater than for women who hadn’t served.

Yet Sharpe’s return will be short lived. The plaque, which has been in storage on Parliament Hill for the past couple of years amid a political debate over what to do with it, will be moved to the Royal Ottawa Mental Health Centre at the end of the year.

That’s because Centre Block is scheduled to close for renovation­s around Christmas and will stay closed for the next decade.

“When the renovation­s are finished, he will go back to his rightful place to remind members of Parliament as they walk through,” O’regan said, but O’toole worried that Sharpe will be forgotten again unless the plaque is officially installed in the foyer first.

SAM SHARPE WAS ONE OF THE MOST ACCOMPLISH­ED, ICONIC PEOPLE IN SOUTHERN ONTARIO IN THAT ERA.

The plaque is to be displayed outside the House of Commons, but officials say it will not be formally affixed to the wall or displayed in a permanent way because of the coming renovation­s — which O’toole insists is not what his motion demanded.

O’toole, who accused the government of “dragging their feet” on recognizin­g Sharpe over the past few years, asked Commons Speaker Geoff Regan on Tuesday to look into the matter, which Regan said he would do.

In the meantime, O’toole hoped that Sharpe’s story will reduce the stigma of mental illness and show that anyone — from a private to a senior officer and MP — can be affected by war.

“Sam Sharpe was one of the most accomplish­ed, iconic people in southern Ontario in that era,” O’toole said, “and he was struck by operationa­l-stress injuries, which can be something that is a byproduct of war and service.”

 ?? TYLER BRILEY / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A bronzed relief of Lt.- Col. Samuel Sharpe created by artist Tyler Briley.
TYLER BRILEY / THE CANADIAN PRESS A bronzed relief of Lt.- Col. Samuel Sharpe created by artist Tyler Briley.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada