About Us
The Last Post Fund’s mission is to ensure that no Veteran is denied a dignified funeral and burial, as well as a military gravestone, due to insufficient funds at the time of death. Its primary mandate is to deliver the Veterans Affairs Canada Funeral and Burial Program which provides funeral, burial and grave marking benefits for eligible Canadian and Allied Veterans. The Unmarked Grave Program provides military markers for unmarked Veterans’ graves. In March 2019, the Indigenous Veterans Initiative was launched in an effort to commemorate and honour the memory of over 18,000 Indigenous Veterans, many of whom are thought to lie in unmarked graves.
The Last Post Fund owns and manages its own military cemetery, the Last Post Fund National Field of Honour, as well as supporting and promoting other initiatives designed to honour the memory of Canadian and Allied Veterans. A national non-profit organization, the Last Post Fund’s National office is located in Montreal, supporting the Provincial Boards across the country. The Last Post Fund is supported financially by Veterans Affairs Canada and by private donations.
"To honour and protect in death seems but a small return to those who have protected their country in life." Arthur Hair, Founder
A Brief History
December 1908. Two policemen find a homeless man huddled in a doorway of downtown Montreal. Unconscious, the man is taken to the nearby General Hospital where he is quickly diagnosed as being a drunk and taken to a room where he could sleep it off. When the head orderly Arthur Hair looks on the so-called drunk, he notices a blue envelope sticking out of the man’s pocket. Being a Veteran of the South African War, Hair is familiar with that type of envelope. Issued by Britain’s War Office, it contains the honourable discharge of one Trooper James Daly, who has served the Empire for more than 20 years. This blue envelope represents his sole possession. However, Trooper Daly was not drunk. Instead, he was suffering from hypothermia and malnutrition. He died 2 days later, still unconscious, at age 53. Since his body was unclaimed, his remains would be turned over to science for medical research, as was customary in those days. Hair was utterly shocked by the Empire’s disregard for its Veteran. So he raised money from friends and colleagues to give the soldier a decent and dignified funeral. Daly was then buried at the Notre-Dame-des-Neiges cemetery on Mount-Royal. This was the catalyst for the creation of the Last Post Fund in Montreal, in April 1909. Trooper Daly was the first of nearly 150,000 servicemen and women for whom the Last Post Fund has provided financial benefits over the past century.
Our main objective is to ensure that no Veteran will ever experience the same fate as Trooper Daly.
The First Interments
The first formal interments took place there on 7 May 1910. Then, the First World War came and went... A total of 619,636 men and women served in the Canadian Forces in the First World War, and of these 66,655 gave their lives and another 172,950 were wounded. Soon enough, the two plots on Mount-Royal were filled to capacity, so the Last Post Fund decided to buy its own piece of land. In April 1929, the Québec Branch of the Fund purchased six acres of land adjacent to the Lakeview Cemetery in Pointe-Claire. This piece of land would become the National Field of Honour, owned and managed by the Last Post Fund. Officially consecrated in September 1930, the National Field of Honour’s inauguration was widely covered by the media. For instance, a Montreal paper wrote that it must be “one of the Empire’s most beautiful cemeteries”. It is now the final resting place for more than 22,000 Veterans and their close ones. They are both Canadian and Allied Veterans, the latter from the U.S., France, Belgium, Italy, Britain, Australia, Greece, and so on… Dr. Serge M. Durflinger has written a history of the first 90 years of the Last Post Fund. Entitled "Lest We Forget" in English and "Je me souviens" in French, his book has been described as a “readable and profusely-illustrated account which sensitively places the Last Post Fund within the context of Canada’s unfolding social and military history”.