Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

Remembering His Roots: Family Wants Gordie Howe Interred In Saskatoon Statue

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Aug, 2016 01:42 PM
    SASKATOON — The family of hockey great Gordie Howe wants to return Mr. Hockey to his home.
     
    A city official says the family has requested that the cremated remains of Howe and his wife Colleen be interred at the base of a statue that honours him in Saskatoon.
     
    Catherine Gryba says the city will have to apply to the province to have the statue at SaskTel Centre and a small portion of adjacent area declared a cemetery.
     
    Gryba says it would be a fitting tribute to someone who always remembered his roots.
     
    Howe was born in Floral, Sask., but his family moved nine days later to Saskatoon, where he grew up before embarking on a record-setting hockey career in the United States.
     
     
    He died on June 10 at the age of 88.
     
    "It's only appropriate that we do what we can to remember this great athlete, Saskatonian and Canadian," Gryba said in a release Thursday.
     
    "We've been speaking with the Howe family and will take the appropriate steps to safeguard and respect Gordie and Colleen's ashes," she said. "They will be encased in a special concrete vessel with a commemorative plaque on top to protect them."
     
    SaskTel Centre has offered to cover up to $6,000 of the cost. The Western Hockey League Saskatoon Blades, who play at the arena, would handle the rest.
     
    Numerous facilities and a street in Saskatoon have been named in Howe's honour and a proposal after his death to name one of the city's bridges after him is also going ahead.
     
     
    The Blades, along with SaskTel Centre, are planning activities for Sept. 25 on what they have dubbed "Thank you, Mr. Hockey, Day."
     
    Howe spent 26 seasons in the National Hockey League and six in the World Hockey Association.
     
    He is still No. 2 on the NHL's all-time goals list behind Wayne Gretzky.
     
    Colleen Howe died in March 2009.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Home Prices Up Two Per Cent In July, With Victoria And Toronto Leading

    Home Prices Up Two Per Cent In July, With Victoria And Toronto Leading
    The index, which measures the price changes on repeat single-family home sales, showed the second-highest July jump in its 17-year history.

    Home Prices Up Two Per Cent In July, With Victoria And Toronto Leading

    Dad Says Suspected Terrorist Became Troubled At Seven When His Mother Died

    Dad Says Suspected Terrorist Became Troubled At Seven When His Mother Died
    COLD LAKE, Alta. — The father of a terrorist sympathizer who died in a confrontation with RCMP Wednesday says Aaron Driver was a troubled child, but appeared to have turned his life around after converting to Islam.

    Dad Says Suspected Terrorist Became Troubled At Seven When His Mother Died

    RCMP Describe 'Race Against Time' In Effort To Thwart Would-Be Bomber Driver

    RCMP Describe 'Race Against Time' In Effort To Thwart Would-Be Bomber Driver
    Within three hours, they believed they had found their man: Aaron Driver, 24, a known terrorist sympathizer who was living in the southwestern Ontario town of Strathroy, under court-imposed conditions.

    RCMP Describe 'Race Against Time' In Effort To Thwart Would-Be Bomber Driver

    Wandering Moose Inspires 400-Mile Cross-border Trail

    Wandering Moose Inspires 400-Mile Cross-border Trail
    NEWCOMB, N.Y. — The 400-mile trek of a radio-collared moose named Alice is the inspiration for a proposed hiking trail from Ontario's forested Algonquin Park to the heart of New York's Adirondack Mountains.

    Wandering Moose Inspires 400-Mile Cross-border Trail

    Cleaning Victoria Homeless Camp Could Cost $350,000: Housing Minister

    Cleaning Victoria Homeless Camp Could Cost $350,000: Housing Minister
     Fences are up and debris is being hauled away from the now-vacant homeless camp outside Victoria's courthouse, but British Columbia's housing minister says the cleanup will be long and costly.

    Cleaning Victoria Homeless Camp Could Cost $350,000: Housing Minister

    Legal Start-Ups Showcase Innovative Ideas At Canadian Bar Association Contest

    Legal Start-Ups Showcase Innovative Ideas At Canadian Bar Association Contest
    A willingness to embrace technology might not be the first attribute that comes to mind when one thinks of the legal world. The Canadian Bar Association is trying to change that.

    Legal Start-Ups Showcase Innovative Ideas At Canadian Bar Association Contest