The Peterborough Examiner

Parliament to honour MP who was veteran of Great War

- 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 Sharpe would never retake his seat. The trauma of Passchenda­ele, where more than 16,000 Canadians were killed or wounded in 1917 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 hospital window 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.

But there has been a growing sense in recent years, that it was time to honour Sharpe — and send a message of support to those who needed to hear it.

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 sponsored a motion in May — on the eve of the 100th anniversar­y of the former MP’s death — calling for the plaque to be installed in the foyer. The motion passed with unanimous consent.

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