Skip to content

Local students to compete in National Youth Remembrance Contests

Robin George profile image
by Robin George
Local students to compete in National Youth Remembrance Contests
Past poster winner – Palmerston Public School student Grayson Dann won first place for the 2021 Junior Colour Poster in the annual Legion Poster and Literacy Competition at the local branch level. He also placed first at the zone level and finished fourth at district level. He received a certificate and cash prize at each level. Palmerston Legion Branch 409 youth and education chair Gayle Blackwell and branch president Allan Toner presented Grayson with a certificate for his accomplishments. Community News file photo

NORTH WELLINGTON – Each year, the Royal Canadian Legion and the Legion National Foundation work with schools and home-school families across Canada for a National Youth Remembrance Contest.

Canadian students are invited to create a piece of visual art, writing or video that honours Canada’s veterans and fosters the tradition of remembrance.

Submissions are judged and winners selected from local Legions. Those winning submissions are sent on to regional, then provincial and then national judges for successive rounds.

National winners receive cash prizes and the first place senior winners are eligible for a trip to Ottawa to represent Canada’s youth at the National Remembrance Day Ceremony.

To view national winning submissions from previous years visit  lnfcanada.ca/our-work/national-youth-remembrance-contests.

The posters are black and white, Drayton Legion president Mary Miller told the Community News, and local students in kindergarten to high school participate.

Miller said she’s often particularly impressed by the submissions from Grade 7 and 8 students, and from Grade 12, as the artwork often looks as realistic as a photograph.

“Some of them are just unbelievable – they must take hours,” she said.

Winning submissions are published in the Legion catalogue and military service book, Miller said.

The theme is Remembrance, she noted, so submissions with drawings of “guys shooting at each other” aren’t the ones selected as winners.

Judges are looking for submissions that focus on remembering those who served as well as what they fought for, she said.

Miller said Dippel’s Family Garage in Drayton has envelopes with more information about the competition, and submissions can be dropped off at the garage until Nov. 10 for Miller to pick up.

She especially encouraged home-school families to participate, as students in school will have found out about the competition from their teachers.

Further information about the contest can be found at remembrancecontests.ca or by contacting a local Legion.

Robin George profile image
by Robin George

The Inside Scoop on Wellington County

Subscribe to our free weekly newsletter and be the first to know about what's happening in your neighbourhood.

Success! Now Check Your Email

To complete Subscribe, click the confirmation link in your inbox. If it doesn’t arrive within 3 minutes, check your spam folder.

Ok, Thanks

This Just Posted