Tuesday, March 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

U.S. museum returns remains of 12 Canadian soldiers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Mar, 2026 09:17 AM
  • U.S. museum returns remains of 12 Canadian soldiers

An American medical museum has returned the partial human remains of 12 Canadian soldiers from the First World War.

The Department of National Defence says the remains were collected originally for medical study after the war but ended up on display at the Mutter Museum in Philadelphia after being sent there in 1919.

The department says the Canadian Armed Forces has been taking part in an international effort led by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission to reclaim soldiers' remains.

The collected remains will be interred in the individual soldiers' graves, most of which are in a cemetery in Le Tréport, France.

The museum, which features a prominent wall of human skulls, has attracted controversy over its displays of the remains of Indigenous people and of soldiers from other countries.

The museum returned the skull of a First World War soldier to Australia in 2017.

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Mingson Lau

MORE National ARTICLES

Federal officials express 'disappointment' after OpenAI meeting over B.C. shooting

Federal officials express 'disappointment' after OpenAI meeting over B.C. shooting
Artificial Intelligence Minister Evan Solomon says federal officials expressed "disappointment" to representatives of OpenAI after a meeting in Ottawa about the company's failure to warn law enforcement about Tumbler Ridge shooter Jesse Van Rootselaar. 

Federal officials express 'disappointment' after OpenAI meeting over B.C. shooting

Almost half of Toronto-area immigrant settlement services expect program closures

Almost half of Toronto-area immigrant settlement services expect program closures
Nearly half the immigrant service organizations in the Greater Toronto Area are braced for program closures in the near future due to federal funding cuts that began in 2024.

Almost half of Toronto-area immigrant settlement services expect program closures

Doctors, health groups call for action as Canada lags on cervical cancer prevention

Doctors, health groups call for action as Canada lags on cervical cancer prevention
Cervical cancer is both the fastest-growing type of cancer in Canada and one that is almost completely preventable — and advocates are gathering in Ottawa on Wednesday to call on the federal government to step up screening, prevention and vaccination.

Doctors, health groups call for action as Canada lags on cervical cancer prevention

Canada pledges $8 million in food aid for Cuba as U.S. fuel blockade continues

Canada pledges $8 million in food aid for Cuba as U.S. fuel blockade continues
Canada is sending $8 million in food aid to Cuba, where a U.S. oil blockade has triggered a humanitarian crisis.

Canada pledges $8 million in food aid for Cuba as U.S. fuel blockade continues

Heavy snow forecast for B.C. Interior, with Coquihalla Highway expecting up to 60cm

Heavy snow forecast for B.C. Interior, with Coquihalla Highway expecting up to 60cm
Motorists planning to travel between British Columbia's Lower Mainland and the province's Interior are being warned to brace for a "long duration" of heavy snowfall that's likely to disrupt travel on the Coquihalla Highway.

Heavy snow forecast for B.C. Interior, with Coquihalla Highway expecting up to 60cm

Trump's trade czar says Canada must accept tariffs, help reshore American jobs

Trump's trade czar says Canada must accept tariffs, help reshore American jobs
U.S. President Donald Trump's top trade czar says if Canada wants a trade deal with Washington, it will have to accept "some level of higher tariff" and help to reshore American industries.

Trump's trade czar says Canada must accept tariffs, help reshore American jobs