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New monument honours victims of 1916 Quaker Oats plant explosion in Peterborough

A memorial was unveiled to commemorate those the 24 people who died in deadly fire at Quaker plant in Peterborough on Dec. 11, 1916 – Sep 5, 2017

A new monument in Peterborough honours the two dozen people who died in a fire at the Quaker Oats factory in the city more than a century ago.

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On the weekend, the new monument was unveiled bearing the names of the 24 victims who perished following an explosion and fire at the plant on Dec. 11, 1916.

A statue and replica of a burnt wall stands at the north end of Millennium Park. The backdrop is the iconic Peterborough Quaker Oats factory.

Unifor paid for the monument that was locally designed and installed.

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“We do have a National Day of Mourning each year … it’s unfortunate but even with today’s technologies and all of the advances we have, we are still seeing industrial accidents and disease,” said Bob Orr, Unifor’s secretary-treasurer.

“That’s what people really have to understand. This is people who died in an industrial accident.”

The event was organized by the Descendants of the Quaker Fire Organizing committee.

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