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  #1  
Old 01-10-11, 03:13
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Jon Skagfeld Jon Skagfeld is offline
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Default Oshawa museum in peril!

Toronto Sun, 30 Sep 11, p8:

"Cash-strapped Ontario Regiment Museum fighting for its life...".

If someone knows how to link this article, I think its content would be of interest to MLU members.

This is not good news especially since the Canadian Air and Space Museum just recently got evicted from its site on the former CFB Downsview grounds.
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Old 01-10-11, 04:41
Bob Carriere Bob Carriere is offline
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Default Bloody shame.....

TORONTO - Members of the Ontario Regiment Museum say they may have to sell some of their historic military vehicles to keep their doors open to the public.

Quote:
TORONTO - Members of the Ontario Regiment Museum say they may have to sell some of their historic military vehicles to keep their doors open to the public.

The museum is fighting to survive and its volunteers are working hard to prevent it from being the second military history centre to close in the Greater Toronto Area in recent weeks. The locks were changed and the doors were closed to the public at the Canadian Air and Space Museum at Downsview Park last weekend.

The Ontario Regiment Museum, located in Oshawa, is a link to history dating back to the 1850s and has about 70 operational vehicles, including the Sherman, M60 Patton and M551 Sheridan tanks, as well as a variety of armoured personnel carriers and jeeps.

“It is a constant struggle to keep the doors open,” said museum spokesman

Terry Woods. “We are in danger of having to sell some our vehicles to stay open.”

He said it takes a lot of money to maintain all the tanks and heavy equipment, plus the cost of fuel.

“Nobody wants to sell their collection of items,” Woods said Wednesday. “It will be a great shame to have the collection pieced off.”

The museum is primarily supported through fundraising, including the $100 is costs to become a member and volunteer at the museum.

A fundraising event featuring a 1945 U.S.-made Sherman tank is planned for Saturday at the museum at 1000 Stevenson Rd. N., north of Rossland Rd. and on the south side of the Oshawa airport.

The Ontario Regiment is among the oldest continuously serving reserve regiments in Canada and is one of the senior armoured regiments in the Royal Canadian Armoured Corps.

The Ontario Regiment was officially formed from the nine independent rifle companies on Sept. 14, 1866.
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  #3  
Old 01-10-11, 07:50
rob love rob love is offline
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Default

It is my understanding that if the artifacts were procured through the use of tax receipts, it must be offered to accession to other museums before they could be offered for sale. I admit to not knowing the status of this particular groups assets, but I have seen other museums make this mistake.
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Old 02-10-11, 17:00
Ed Storey Ed Storey is offline
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Default Oshawa Museum

It is certainly sad to hear of any museum that is experiencing problems. I do find it very strange that the newspaper clipping mentioned the M4 Sherman, M60 Patton and the M551 Sheridan; two of the three vehicles of which Canada never used. Perhaps the museum should take a hard and fast look at the 70 odd vehicles that they have in their posession and maybe cull the foreign stuff and focus more on the Canadian. Our friends to the south do a great job of preserving their vehicles, so why not agressively market the Canadian vehicles in the collection as this may save the museum some money.
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Old 03-10-11, 17:05
Brian Gough Brian Gough is offline
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Default good news - a more positive article

link to original article in Toronto Sun on Thursday Sept 29, 2011:

http://www.torontosun.com/2011/09/29...-to-sell-tanks

Better news: link to updated information:

http://www.durhamregion.com/news/art...-history-books

Quote:
"Roaring out of the history books
War-time tanks, trucks come to life at Oshawa museum

OSHAWA -- The twin diesel engines of the decades-old M4 Sherman tank start quickly, a low rumble the only sign that the mammoth machine is ready to roll.

As volunteers with the Ontario Regiment Museum shepherd a few dozen spectators to the sidelines, the 1945 tank slowly lumbers to a nearby ribbon of asphalt, its twin tracks leaving deep imprints in the soft dirt.

Only the heads of James Riddell and John Tryron are visible, popping up through a pair of parallel openings at the front of the tank, as the war machine picks up speed and rumbles pass the gathered crowd.

It's surprisingly fast for a machine that is nearly three dozen tonnes of metal and armour, roaring back and forth along the roadway with only the occasional grinding of gears as onlookers take photos and shoot video on their smartphones.

It's an eye-opening experience for Fred Mitchell, who never knew the museum existed at the northern end of Stevenson Road, next door to the Oshawa airport. "It's sad. I was born and raised here in Oshawa and I've never been here," said Mr. Mitchell, who was joined by his wife Mary Anne.

The couple recently saw an article in a Toronto daily about the museum and decided to check it out for themselves.

"This is our heritage," explained Ms. Mitchell. "We need to do something to keep it going, we've got to remember."

And that's the goal of the Ontario Regiment Museum, whose history dates back to the 1980s when it was first known as the Ferret Club -- a tip of the hat to the nine-car troop of Ferret scout cars procured from the Canadian Forces that unofficially started the collection. The museum was officially formed in the early 1990s and now boasts a roster of more than 70 operational vehicles -- from tanks and armoured personnel carriers to trucks and jeeps -- and more than 50 club members who volunteer their time repairing and refurbishing them.

And it's through efforts like the museum's Tank Saturdays program that the regiment hopes to spur interest in both the club and the vehicles they care for.

"Our goal is to connect with the community and let them see a little bit of the history of the Canadian Forces," explained Leo Morin, the museum's chairman, of the effort that featured a different tank the first Saturday of each month from May to October. Visitors are given an opportunity to get an up-close glimpse at the massive machines and learn a few tidbits before watching the vehicles lumber around the sprawling museum grounds.

"You can only look at something for so long before you get tired of it, but if you see it working and moving then that adds a little something to it," said Mr. Morin.

The majority of the vehicles on display were used at one time or another by the Canadian Forces and are now deemed obsolete. When the war machines become available, the Oshawa museum applies to the government to give them a permanent retirement home. A core group of volunteers spend countless hours keeping the vehicles operational -- from changing tires and adding a fresh coat of paint to replacing engines. The tanks and jeeps and trucks are then put on display, used in parades and, in some cases, even cast in movies.

The volunteers range in age from 16 to 80 and everyone brings a different set of skills to the club, said Dave Mountenay, the club's past president. "You've got to want to get your hands dirty. There's no sense coming out here and standing around and twiddling your thumbs," said Mr. Mountenay, explaining that most volunteers simply "adopt" a vehicle to work on.

Behind the doors of the showroom are workshops lined with tools and batteries and spare parts. Outside, bins hold more parts for another project down the road.

"We have a lot of spare parts, we don't tend to throw much away," said Mr. Morin. "You never know when you might need something." There are plenty of projects to keep the volunteers busy -- from refurbishing vehicles to repairing the roof -- and the historical museum is in no danger of becoming history itself, stressed Mr. Morin.

"We're not in danger of closing our doors," he said, dismissing reports that the museum may be looking to sell some items, such as tanks, in order to keep the lights on.

"Nothing's for sale -- museums don't sell stuff, we're in the business of collecting. That's why we do it, to keep it for our children and the future," he said.


For more information about the museum, visit www.ontrmuseum.ca. "
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