September 11, 2025
Education News Canada

VANCOUVER ISLAND UNIVERSITY
VIU and community partners remember local fallen soldiers through video memorial

October 31, 2022

VIU video project acknowledges Nanaimo soldiers' contributions to the First and Second World Wars.

Private Reginald Edgar Emblem, a farmer and resident of South Wellington, served in the 72nd Battalion during the First World War. He died at age 20 of influenza and pneumonia in October 1918 and was buried at Seaford Cemetery in Sussex, United Kingdom.

Private William Armstrong Syer, a miner and resident of Franklyn Street, served in the 143rd Battalion. He was 34 when he died from wounds received in battle in August 1918 and is buried in the Crouy British Cemetery in Somme, France.

A Vancouver Island University (VIU) video memorial project that tells the story of these two men and other Nanaimo soldiers who made the ultimate sacrifice during the First and Second World Wars will be displayed across the city November 1 -11, 2022.

For the 11 days leading up to Remembrance Day, the Nanaimo Remembers project will display the names of more than 200 soldiers in prominent locations across the city. The names have been obtained from the Dallas Square Cenotaph in downtown Nanaimo and a special section highlights the contributions of local Indigenous soldiers, thanks to research conducted by VIU Elder-in-Residence Geraldine Manson.

The project, which launched in 2018, was spearheaded by VIU's Communications and External Affairs and Brand and Marketing teams in collaboration with the University's Canadian Letters and Images Project (CLIP) and Nanaimo Community Archives. Nanaimo Remembers grew out of a desire to localize a project VIU participated in for many years - The World Remembers, a display tribute to soldiers across the world who lost their lives in the Great War.

"The importance of Nanaimo Remembers is that it represents more than simply the names on a cenotaph," said Dr. Stephen Davies, Director of the Canadian Letters and Images Project. "It is a means to poignantly remind this community of those individuals who lived and worked here, and who sacrificed their lives for our freedom."

Information shared about each soldier, where available, includes their name, rank and battalion, when they died and at what age, where they were buried, their occupation, and their connection to Nanaimo.

The video presentation will run continuously from November 1 - 11, 2020, on the large screen in the Welcome Centre (Building 300 at VIU's Nanaimo campus). It will also be played on screens at several locations in the community on varying dates: 

  • City of Nanaimo: Beban Park and Oliver Woods Community Centre
  • Port Theatre
  • Nanaimo Museum
  • Vancouver Island Regional Library: Nanaimo Wellington Library (Country Club Mall) and Nanaimo North Library
  • School District 68
  • Shaw TV Spotlight

Check out the project at one of the participating locations above or visit VIU's YouTube channel.

For more information

Vancouver Island University
900 Fifth Street
Nanaimo British Columbia
Canada V9R 5S5
www.viu.ca


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