Memorial arch marks departure of soldiers who fought in the Great War
HALIFAX — Dozens of boot prints are burned into a boardwalk, vivid black scars that form part of a new memorial honouring tens of thousands of soldiers who left from the port of Halifax to fight in the First World War.
The trail of prints traces the path of the long-gone fighters to a wooden arch on the waterfront bearing the words “The Last Steps,” immortalizing the place where many of those soldiers last stood on Canadian soil.
“Halifax is where our nation went to war,” Ken Hynes, curator of the Army Museum Halifax Citadel, said Friday at an unveiling ceremony.
“They were real people, just like you and me, who did extraordinary things at an important and formative juncture in the history of Canada.”


