Hundreds turn out for N.B. Mountie's funeral
Last Updated: Thursday, January 28, 2010 | 10:59 PM AT
CBC News
Related
Haiti earthquake
- SPECIAL REPORT | Haiti earthquake: A look back, 2 years after disaster crippled Caribbean country
- INTERACTIVE | Haiti earthquake: Two years later
- Q&A | Michaëlle Jean: 'You cannot build a sustainable economy on charity'
- Haiti's struggle to build better homes after quake
- POV | Are you satisfied with the government's response to the crisis in Haiti?
- Evaluating Haiti's 'fresh start' | David Common reports two years after the devastating quake
- Haiti quake camps still home to 500,000
- Haiti faces mix of problems 2 years after quake
- Haiti still recovering from deadly 2010 earthquake
- PHOTOS | Haiti since the earthquake
- Canadians in Haiti: Stories of loss and remembrance
- Michel Martelly | Deciphering Haiti's president-elect
- PROFILE | Haiti's Jean-Bertrand Aristide
- Haiti's Jean-Claude Duvalier
- Helping Haiti manage disaster
- TIMELINE | Haiti's recent history - From the Duvalier dictatorship to the return of 'Baby Doc'
- Donations to Haiti 1 year after quake
- Battling cholera in Haiti's frontier
- Paul Farmer: Rebuilding Haiti, but 'building back better'
- Rebuilding effort in Haiti 'at standstill'
- Haiti news archive (up to Jan. 18, 2011)
- PHOTOS | Six months later
- PHOTOS | Haiti's tent cities
The funeral service for Sgt. Mark Gallagher, who died in the earthquake in Haiti on Jan. 12, was held at St. Gertrude's Roman Catholic Church in Woodstock, N.B. (CBC) Hundreds of people lined Woodstock, N.B., streets on Thursday afternoon to observe the regimental parade for RCMP Sgt. Mark Gallagher, who was working with local police in Haiti when he died in the Jan. 12 earthquake.
An estimated 500 officers and members of the military from across the province and as far away as Maine surrounded the hearse as it proceeded from the Woodstock community college toward St. Gertrude's Roman Catholic Church for Gallagher's funeral, with bagpipes playing in the background.
The small church in the western New Brunswick town filled quickly to its 400-person capacity with mourners including Premier Shawn Graham, but organizers set up a video broadcast at the Carleton Civic Centre for the overflow of an estimated 1,200 people looking to pay their respects. Buses were available to transport them.
The RCMP and Moncton Wesleyan Church also joined forces to offer a simulcast of the funeral on three large screens, which attracted about 1,000 others.
'It's really important that, as a community … we rally around Mark and his family and show the support for all the things that he's done for the greater Moncton area.' —Robert Kennie, Moncton Wesleyan Church
Before the service, Sgt. Gary Cameron, a colleague and friend of Gallagher's, described him as the type of person who would do anything for anyone. They used to sail together, he said.
A photograph of Gallagher on the water was on the cover of the funeral program.
Mark Gallagher's widow, Lisa, and her two children, Heather and Shane, share a lighthearted moment during the service. (CBC) His wife of 30 years, Lisa Gallagher, who shared several light-hearted stories about their life together, said he loved to sail.
She said she is sure he is at the helm of a 40-foot vessel with all the sails up, with one hand on the wheel and the other holding a bag of potato chips, which he regularly kept stashed under the nightstand in their bedroom.
When he's not sailing, "he is with each of us, encouraging us to dig deeper for patience … for strength … for the determination to make a difference," she said.
"His gentle spirit will always guide us to do the right thing."
She described her husband as the kindest, most patient man she had ever met. He had called the mission in Haiti one of the most important experiences in his life, but she said his commitment to building safe communities left him conflicted during his last visit home at Christmas.
"He had tremendous trouble reconciling our lifestyle to the misery he saw in Haiti. He wanted to return to Haiti, but he didn't want to leave me in Northampton alone during the winter months."
Humanitarian and world-changer
RCMP chaplain Rev. Karl Ingersoll also gave a remembrance, describing his friend Gallagher as a humanitarian at heart and a world-changer.
"Mark turned me into a name dropper. I don't know how many times over the 20-plus years I've known him that I'd say to someone, 'I know Mark Gallagher, he's one of my best friends.' But you know what? That's the only kind of friend Mark had," Ingersoll said.
"There is this beautiful legacy he leaves, challenging everyone of us to look beyond ourselves, to aspire to serve a greater cause, one that causes us inconvenience sometimes, one that requires a degree of sacrifice sometimes, one that lives beyond every one of us and continues to impact others."
Rev. Bill Brennan, who presided over the service, described Gallagher as having "acquired a deep wisdom," and living a "rich and fruitful professional life," with "exceptional compassion, courage and professionalism."
He said he hoped others would be inspired by Gallagher and listen to God's invitation to us and respond "Here I am Lord," as he did.
Prayers were offered for Gallagher's wife and his grown children, Heather and Shane, that they find "continued support, comfort and peace."
A moment of silence was also observed for RCMP Chief Supt. Doug Coates, also killed during the quake. Coates, who lived in Gatineau, Que., and was based at the RCMP headquarters in Ottawa, had devoted much of his career to making Haiti a more peaceful and stable place.
Sgt. Mark Gallagher, who spent many years in Moncton as a police officer, coach and mentor to young people, had been training police as part of a UN mission in Haiti. (RCMP) An open reception followed at the gymnasium of Woodstock High School.
Gallagher, 50, spent many years in Moncton as a police officer, coach and mentor to young people.
Robert Kennie, events co-ordinator at Moncton Wesleyan Church, said the church is honoured to open its doors for this event.
"It's really important that, as a community … we rally around Mark and his family and show the support for all the things that he's done for the greater Moncton area," Kennie said.
With another avenue to pay their respects, RCMP Const. Chantal Farrah said, people can feel closer to Gallagher and his family.
"The funeral in Woodstock, the church is small, so it's really only family and close friends that can attend the funeral over there," Farrah said.
"So having the service here at the Wesleyan Church is the next best thing. So you can take part in everything that's going to be happening in Woodstock, here in greater Moncton, without travelling."
The Moncton church can hold 1,800 people.
Brother a police sergeant
Among the mourners in Woodstock were a group of 25 officers and dispatchers from the Bathurst police force, for whom Gallagher's brother, Eugene, serves as a sergeant.
The Bathurst contingent was among those who participated in the ceremonial march to the church.
Gallagher's body was uncovered Jan. 14 in the rubble left by the quake in Port-au-Prince. He had been training police in Haiti's capital as part of a United Nations mission called Project Co-ordination.
Twenty-one Canadians are confirmed to have died in the quake.
Gallagher worked as an RCMP spokesman in New Brunswick and, more recently, in Halifax before heading to Haiti in July 2009.
He came home for Christmas and had just returned to Haiti when the 7.0-magnitude quake struck.
Share Tools
Latest New Brunswick News Headlines
- Suspicious death was female patient
- Saint John police say the person found dead at the Saint John Regional Hospital early Wednesday morning was a female patient. more »
- Kijiji sting snares Fredericton man
- A Kijiji sting led to the arrest this week of a 28-year-old Fredericton man accused of selling stolen items online. more »
- Saint John slashes 32 positions
- Saint John council has approved cutting 32 positions at City Hall, which is expected to save nearly $2 million annually. more »
- Fredericton company lands $13.9M bridge contract
- A Fredericton-based company has been awarded a $13.9-million contract to build a replacement bridge linking New Brunswick and Maine. more »
Top News Headlines
- Former Expos catcher Gary Carter succumbs to brain cancer
- Hall of Fame catcher Gary Carter, who left an indelible mark on baseball in Canada during his 12 years with the Montreal Expos, died on Thursday. The man nicknamed "Kid" or "Kid Carter" for his ever-smiling face and cheerfulness is free from the inoperable brain cancer that sapped his energy and took his life at age 57. more »
- UN backs resolution condemning Syrian regime
- The UN General Assembly has backed a non-binding Arab League-sponsored resolution calling on Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to step down and end his regime's violent crackdown on dissidents. more »
- 7 MPs and their fiery quotes
- The election of a majority government was seen by some as a chance for less acrimonious politics on Parliament Hill. But the past week has seen its fair share of inflammatory rhetoric on both sides of the House. more »
- Dog kills newborn in Alberta community
- Officials in Airdrie are revealing few details about the fatal mauling of an infant by a family dog in the southern Alberta city. more »
- Bully victim's mother tells of 'suicide box'
- Bodyguard hired for bully victim in Fredericton
- N.B. sharing personal driver data with charity
- Suspicious death was female patient
- Police tight-lipped on suspicious hospital death
- Town seeks shale gas exploration ban near water sources
- Arson trial resumes for ex-firefighters
- Kijiji sting snares Fredericton man
- Gas prices jump 2.5 cents

