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Section of Galway cemetery dedicated as new Field of Honour for military veterans

A new Field of Honour is open in Galway as a final resting place for military veterans.

With Mount Pleasant Cemetery's Field of Honour getting full, more space was needed, says organizer

A cross with military wreaths laid beneath it shows the Field of Honour memorial.
A memorial marks the new Field of Honour at Memorial Gardens Cemetery in the St. John's neighbourhood of Galway. (Jeremy Eaton/CBC)

St. John's has a new Field of Honour as a final resting place for military veterans.

About 100 people attended a dedication ceremony Thursday to mark the occasion, including veterans and current enlisted service members, and their families.

"Our old Field of Honour in Mount Pleasant Cemetery is pretty well full so we took it upon ourselves to come up with a new Field of Honour," said Leo O'Brien, N.L.'s branch president of the Last Post Fund, on Thursday.

The Last Post Fund is an organization, founded in 1909, that provides funding for the funerals of fallen veterans.

The new Field of Honour is at Memorial Gardens Cemetery, in the St. John's neighbourhood of Galway.

About 500 plots were given to the Last Post Fund but it took more than a decade to raise the money for the field, said O'Brien.

Leo O'Brien stands in a field of grass dressed in a ceremonial military uniform with medals.
Leo O'Brien, the Newfoundland and Labrador branch president of the Last Post Fund, says the Field of Honour in Mount Pleasant Cemetery is just about full. (Jeremy Eaton/CBC)

"Veteran Affairs has been very helpful but we've been fundraising. Donations make up a big part of it," he said.

"The land itself was about another $5,000. We're not quite finished with it yet. We have other plans in the works. We hope to maybe gets some benches to go around here and dress it up a bit."

Some Second World War veterans attended the dedication and wreath-laying ceremony on Thursday. 

O'Brien said it's gratifying and extremely important to have them there. 

"Some of them are getting well up in age. Some of them are getting quite feeble. But we're very fortunate and very appreciative of that fact that they could make their way here from the Caribou Pavilion today," he said.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Jeremy Eaton