PEI

P.E.I. soldier's war medals bought in online auction now at P.E.I. Regiment Museum

The World War I medals awarded to a Charlottetown man killed in action in March 1918 are now at the P.E.I. Regiment Museum after being snagged in an online auction by a resident of Scotland.

Donation includes museum's first early 1914-15 Star

A Scottish man bought Cpl. Thomas Warburton Hooper's First World War medals at an auction in Britain. (Laura Chapin/CBC)

The World War I medals awarded to a Charlottetown man killed in action in March 1918 are now at the P.E.I. Regiment Museum after being scooped up in an online auction by a resident of Scotland.

The medals of Cpl. Thomas Warburton Hooper were donated by John Cunningham, who saw them for sale at an auction in Britain. Cunningham's grandfather and Hooper both served in the Lord Strathcona Canadian cavalry regiment.

Cunningham agreed to donate the medals to the museum if no direct relatives of Hooper could be found.

Museum curator Capt. Greg Gallant said the donation includes the museum's first 1914-15 Star, awarded to those who fought early in the war.

Gallant said he knows of only three Islanders who earned the honour, making it an even more significant gift. 

"I think it's just nice that this gentleman in Scotland who really didn't know us from a hole in the ground entrusted us with these medals," said Gallant.

"He purchased them at an auction and paid way over $1,000 for them, and then, you know, put them in the mail to us. So I think it was a very kind gesture on his behalf." 

Museum curator Capt. Greg Gallant says the new medals will be part of the permanent collection soon. (Laura Chapin/CBC)

Medals to be included in special exhibit

Gallant said the medals should be part of the museum's permanent collection soon. 

The museum is hoping to find a picture of Hooper to include with the display, but so far Gallant has not been able to locate one. He said no living next of kin have been found and no pictures of Hooper are included in his war records in Ottawa. 

Research has revealed Hooper was 25 and working out West when war broke out in 1914. He enlisted in Waverley, Sask.  

"Any time that we can tell another piece of the story from an era, whether it be First World War, Second [World] War, I think we should be doing it," said Gallant.

The museum plans to highlight Hooper's medals in an upcoming World War I exhibit tracing the involvement of Islanders from 1914 to 1918, including nurses who served overseas. That display is expected to open in April around the anniversary of Vimy Ridge. 

Cpl. Hooper's medals include a rare 1914-15 Star, awarded to people who fought early in the First World War. (Laura Chapin/CBC)