News: Welcome to the family site for Bob and Paula Heddle and all our relatives.
  First Name:  Last Name:
Log In
Advanced Search
Surnames
What's New
Most Wanted
  • Photos
  • Documents
  • Headstones
  • Histories
  • Recordings
  • Videos
  • Albums
    All Media
    Cemeteries
    Places
    Notes
    Dates and Anniversaries
    Calendar
    Reports
    Sources
    Repositories
    DNA Tests
    Statistics
    Change Language
    Bookmarks
    Contact Us

    Honouring our fallen officers



    Source Information

    • Title Honouring our fallen officers 
      Short Title Web - Government of Canada, Correctional Service memorial page 
      Publisher http://www.csc-scc.gc.ca/about-us/006-0011-eng.shtml

      Retrieved 27 Apr 2018. 
      Source ID S636 
      Text Honouring our fallen officers

      Since 1835 - and before Canada was a country - thousands of correctional employees dedicated their careers to keeping us safe through their work in federal corrections. In more than 180 years, 34 individuals – two women and 32 men – have given their lives to protect our communities.

      Our fallen colleagues were working either as correctional officers, parole officers, managers, program officers, project officers or instructors when they died while carrying out their duties.

      We honour their memories and their service to public safety.


      Henry Traill
      Guard
      Kingston Penitentiary
      July 7, 1870

      Within a year of joining the staff of Kingston Penitentiary, Guard Henry Traill was attacked and killed during an escape attempt. He had been supervising two inmates on the outer penitentiary reserve. The inmates were keeping the fires burning in the lime kiln during the lunch hour, while the rest of the quarry gang was marched back to the penitentiary for their noon-time meal.

      Reports say that, on this fatal day, Traill was sitting on a wheelbarrow just inside the door of the lime-house with his rifle across his lap. Once the quarry gang was out of sight, inmate John Smith distracted the officer by showing him some small bones that he had carved into ornaments. At that moment, another inmate, Daniel Mann, approached the officer from behind and clubbed him over the head with an ironwood sleigh stake, severing his carotid artery in the process. Not realizing that they had killed the officer, the two inmates bound Traill, placed a rolled up coat under his head, stole his firearm and uniform tunic, and escaped.

      After an 11-day manhunt, they were caught by a group of farmers while hiding in a swampy part of Graham Lake north of Brockville. Smith got an additional 14 years and Mann was hanged on Dec. 14, 1870, at the Frontenac County Gaol in Kingston.

      [... followed by stories of other fallen officers...] 
      Linked to (1) Thomas Henry Strickland ("Harry") Traill