The Cumberland Wire

‘There are so many happy memories in the park’

Picnic shelter in Springhill to honour a young man lost to cancer

- DARRELL COLE

As a child, Curtis McCormick spent countless hours at Springhill’s Lions Park pretending he and his brother, Connor, were pirates and the playground equipment was their pirate ship.

Curtis lost his battle to cancer in April 2021 at age 21. He is being memorializ­ed in a new shelter that was built with the assistance of the carpentry class at the Nova Scotia Community College’s Cumberland campus. The shelter was unveiled recently during a ceremony at the Dr. Carson & Marion Murray Community Centre in Springhill.

“Both boys were fascinated by pirates,” Curtis’ mother, Linda McCormick, said following the unveiling. “There are so many happy memories in the park. The playground was so important to our family and having a place with shade and where families can picnic would really help. I really hope it provides a lot of good memories for people.”

Since he died, Curtis’ family has worked hard to continue his legacy. His mother said his friends and community meant so much to Curtis. It made sense to continue his legacy by doing things to make the community a better place.

“When he was 21, we knew Curtis was not going to beat cancer. It became very important to me that he be remembered in some way in the town where he grew up,” she said.

In Christmas of 2021, Linda and a group of a volunteers created the Christmas Wishes campaign to make sure adults in the community had a gift on Christmas morning, while the Food for Thought campaign was created to help feed students at Springhill schools.

The family also launched a major fundraisin­g campaign in support of the new Ronald McDonald House in Halifax.

She credits her husband, Craig, for the work he did in co-ordinating the project.

Baxter Engineerin­g donated its services while Ray McCormick & Sons built the foundation and Home Hardware in Springhill donated a lot of supplies.

She is thankful to NSCC for its work. Curtis was in his first year of the carpentry program at NSCC in Pictou County when he fell ill. A year later, in the fall of 2020, he restarted the carpentry program at the Cumberland campus but wasn’t able to complete the first year.

“It’s so meaningful to have the shelter built by the carpentry students in Springhill. Even though our boys weren’t born here, Curtis and Connor were raised in Springhill. I used to bring them to the park and they loved it,” she said.

NSCC Cumberland principal Don McCormick said it wasn’t a tough decision for the college to participat­e in the project.

“We were delighted to be part of this project and working work with Curtis’ mother and father in order to make this a reality so his legacy can live on,” he said.

He credited instructor­s Tyler Rushton and Gordon Parlee and the carpentry students for focusing their energies on building the shelter that will serve the community for many years.

“Community is in our name, we are the Nova Scotia Community College and if there’s one thing we hope separates us from other postsecond­ary institutio­ns is we work with community,” the principal said.

Municipali­ty of Cumberland Mayor Murray Scott said the McCormick family has done so much for Springhill. He said the shelter will be a lasting memorial to a young man who was loved and respected by many people.

“Curtis was so respected in so many people and what always struck me was how he interacted with others,” the mayor said. “It was really amazing the way he faced the challenge of the illness he had. He faced it with such strength and courage. He was taken away too young in life and we’re so thankful as a municipali­ty that you are sharing his memory and this will live on forever in our community. He meant so much to all of us.”

 ?? DARRELL COLE ?? Craig and Linda McCormick unveil the sign for Curtis Cove, a picnic shelter located in the Lions Park in Springhill. It honours the memory of Curtis McCormick, who lost his battle to cancer at age 21 two years ago.
DARRELL COLE Craig and Linda McCormick unveil the sign for Curtis Cove, a picnic shelter located in the Lions Park in Springhill. It honours the memory of Curtis McCormick, who lost his battle to cancer at age 21 two years ago.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? The shelter, Curtis Cove, was built by carpentry students at NSCC’s Cumberland campus in Springhill.
CONTRIBUTE­D The shelter, Curtis Cove, was built by carpentry students at NSCC’s Cumberland campus in Springhill.

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