Monuments


 
Monuments

To view the monuments of a particular park please click on the links below:

Alexander Park Alton C. Parker Park Ambassador / Assumption & Centennial Parks
Bert Weeks Memorial Gardens Blue Heron Lake City Hall Square
Civic Esplanade C.N.R. Park Coventry Gardens/Reaume Park
Derwent Park Devonshire Court Park Dieppe Gardens
Drouillard Park Herb Gray Nature Reserve Jackson Park
Lakeview Park Marina Lanspeary Park Little River Corridor
Mackenzie Hall Park Malden Park Matthew Rodzik Park
Mic Mac Park Mill Street Heritage Park Optimist Memorial Park
Realtor Park Sandpoint Beach Shaughnessy Cohen Woods
Willistead Park    



City Hall Square

The Essex County War Memorial
Location: University Avenue, north of City Hall

picture of Essex Country War Memorial

The Essex County War Memorial Cenotaph was erected as a fitting tribute to those men of Essex County who laid down their lives in the Great War of 1914-1918. It was constructed of Canadian Pink Granite based on a design of George F. Masson, a local architect. Rising to a height of 20 feet, the central shaft bears on its eastern face an incised panel forming a cross, which frames a gilded sword decoration, symbolizing the supreme sacrifice and its reward.

 
picture of plaque on the Essex Country War Memorial

On the front faces of the ramp are narrow panels of carved maple leaf sprays, symbolic of Canada. The cenotaph was unveiled on Armistice Day, November 11, 1924, by Major-General later Lieutenant General Sir Archibald Cameron MacDonell (1864-1941), a Windsor native and one of the highest ranking and most decorated Canadian soldiers of World War I. The cost of the monument was approximately $25,000, the nucleus of $5000 raised by the Ladies Auxiliary of the G.W.V.A. with the assistance of various local organizations, including donations from private individuals. The cenotaph was originally located at the intersection of Giles and Ouellette facing Ouellette. The 106-ton structure was dismantled in 1965, stone by stone, some weighing 4300 pounds and reassembled at its present City Hall location like a huge jig-saw puzzle. It was rededicated on November 11, 1965 by the Royal Canadian Legion. Tribute references to World War II 1939-1945 and the Korean War 1950-1953 have been appropriately added to the original design.

 
City Hall Square Fountains
Location: Between City Hall Square, Goyeau Street, Park Street and University Avenue

picture of French Farms Fountain picture of Windsor Barracks Square Fountain picture of Central School Square Fountain picture of City Hall Square Fountain
 

The four fountains in this Heritage Garden commemorate four phases in the development of Windsor Civic Square:

French Farms c1750

While aboriginal peoples inhabited this area for thousands of years, French families started to settle here in the mid 1700s, clearing the land for farms and constructing homes.

Windsor Barracks Square - 1840

The Upper Canada Rebellion of 1837-38 and the Fenian Raids of 1866 led to improved defences all along the American border including the construction of military barracks on this site in 1840 and 1866.

Central School Square - 1871

In 1871 the Windsor High School moved temporarily into the military barracks while construction commenced on a fine new school on this site that later housed both elementary and high school classes.

City Hall Square - 1903

The school building on this site was used as City Hall from 1903 until 1956 when it was torn down to make room for the 1958 building now standing

 
 
City Crests
Location: North of City Hall

The coat of arms of Canada, with those of France and England to the left and right