U.S. museum returns remains of 12 Canadian soldiers from the First World War
OTTAWA — After more than 100 years, an American medical museum has returned the partial human remains of 12 Canadian soldiers from the First World War.
The Department of National Defence would not say what exactly the remains consist of — only that American medical personnel collected them after the war at a military hospital in Le Tréport, France.
The remains ended up at the Mutter Museum and Historical Medical Library in Philadelphia after being sent there in 1919 for a study.
National Defence said the collected remains will be interred in the individual soldiers’ graves, most of which are in a cemetery in Le Tréport, a port town in Normandy. The department said the museum is now dismantling the collection the Canadians were part of after a broader review.


