Bathurst high school unveils 'Boys in Red' memorial
Last Updated: Friday, June 6, 2008 | 2:37 PM AT
CBC News
Related
Internal Links
- Schools across Canada remember the Boys in Red
- 'Just imagine in your minds what they could have done:' Bathurst mayor
- 'I just told him that I loved him': crash survivor
- Bathurst holds public wake for 7 teens
- 'They're probably still playing someplace': dad of fatal crash victim
- Small N.B. city in disbelief after 8 killed in crash
- PHOTO GALLERY: 7 teens, teacher die in Bathurst tragedy
A memorial for seven basketball players killed in a January highway crash was to be unveiled Friday during a private ceremony at a high school in Bathurst, N.B.
Staff and students at Bathurst High School were scheduled to get their first look at the memorial area, in a courtyard behind the school, around noon. An archway, complete with basketball net, leads into a quiet nook filled with benches and plants.
The names of Nathan Cleland, Justin Cormier, Daniel Hains, Javier Acevedo and Codey Brach, who were all 17, Nick Quinn, 16, and Nicholas Kelly, 15, and their jersey numbers are engraved on brass plates near the entrance. The students, all members of the Bathurst Phantoms basketball team, are known as the Boys in Red after the school's colours, black and red.
School principal Coleen Ramsay told the Northern Light newspaper earlier this week that the nook is a place where "students can sit and reflect for a while."
"It's basically for the students in an area that was created by the students and it's in honour of the students, " she said.
The memorial was a school initiative funded by the Boys in Red Fund, which was set up to support the families shortly after the crash.
The teens were killed on Jan. 12 when the 15-seat van in which they were travelling fishtailed and hit a tractor-trailer while returning from a game in Moncton. Their coach's wife, teacher Elizabeth Lord, was also killed. Coach Wayne Lord, his daughter, and two other players survived the crash.
Share Tools
Latest New Brunswick News Headlines
- Cataractes advance to Memorial Cup final by beating Sea Dogs
- Yannick Veilleux broke a tie at 13:14 of the third period as the host Shawinigan Cataractes upset the defending champion Saint John Sea Dogs 7-4 in the semifinal of the Mastercard Memorial Cup on Friday night. more »
- 4 arrests in Elsipogtog drug trafficking case
- Four people are facing charges in connection with a two-month long investigation into prescription drug trafficking on Elsipogtog First Nation. more »
- David Alward worried about EI changes
- Premier David Alward says he's worried proposed changes to employment insurance will hurt seasonal industries in the province, such as fishing, forestry and tourism. more »
- Pharmacists get generic drug pricing 'transition period'
- New Brunswick pharmacists will be allowed a 10-day transition period to help them adjust to the province's new generic drug pricing policy, Health Minister Madeleine Dube announced Friday. more »
Top News Headlines
- Teen struck by lightning in Ottawa dies
- The victim of a Friday lightning strike during a storm in east Ottawa has died, CBC News has learned. more »
- Everest team unable to bring down Toronto woman's body
- Bad weather has hampered the recovery team that is attempting to bring down the body of a Toronto woman who died trying to climb Mt. Everest. more »
- 32 Syrian children die in artillery attack, says UN
- More than 90 people have been killed by regime forces in a district of central Syria, with the head of the UN team in the country confirming at least 32 children and 60 adults were killed the attack. more »
- Woman's remains found in hockey bag on Cape Breton river
- Police in Nova Scotia are investigating after a woman's remains were found in a hockey bag floating on a Cape Breton river Friday night. more »
- 4 arrests in Elsipogtog drug trafficking case
- Armed robbery at Saint John gas bar
- David Alward worried about EI changes
- Woman robs store in Tracadie-Sheila
- Loose dog prevents mail delivery to area residents
- Pension snafu may erode public trust, says Norton
- Main Street reopened to traffic
- Pharmacists get generic drug pricing 'transition period'
- Bathurst teen charged with attempted murder

