Trenton, Ont. community rallies together to maintain Air Force monument
Global News
Community members in Trenton, Ont. are stepping up to ensure the Ad Astra stones are maintained at the National Air Force Museum of Canada.
Community members in Trenton are stepping up to ensure the Ad Astra stones that honour members of the Royal Canadian Air Force are maintained at the National Air Force Museum of Canada.
“I come here to visit it — my aunt comes up here and the kids come out here to look around, as do my grandkids,” says Duncan Armstrong, a volunteer in the cleanup efforts.
Armstrong, a Trenton resident, has visited his father’s Ad Astra stone at the museum many times over the years, and is now spearheading a community effort to maintain the grounds.
“Last Monday, a friend of mine who’s getting transferred to British Columbia came out to pay their respects to their dad and their grandfather’s stone, and didn’t realize that the place had been overgrown,” Armstrong says.
Like many in the area, Armstrong has family ties to the air force, and he wanted to rally a group of volunteers to ensure the Ad Astra stones look their best.
“You just talk to the people that are doing this, and they each have their own little story why they’re here,” he says.
“Some are just here purely volunteering and that’s really great, but others, again, have a relative, father, mother, whatever. That’s why they’re here.”
“My wife’s father’s stone is here, and we had cleaned it up a couple of weeks before,” adds Quinte West Coun. David O’Neil.