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GLASS
GLASS

GLASS

CultureCanadian
Object numberHF.2023.35.1
DescriptionA long stem beverage glass with a circular base from the Canadian Forces Base Summerside. On the exterior of the glass is an image of a military insignia with a green leaved tree with white and blue waves at the center of yellow maple leaves arranged in a circular border with a crown at the top center. At the bottom center of the border is printed "Summerside" with "Fundamenta In Futurum" below this.
Narrative
The RCAF Station Summerside was constructed in the early 1940s by the Royal Canadian Air Force as a flight school which operated under the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan. The station closed in 1946 and reopened in 1947 as an Air Navigation School, a NATO training facility. The station brought an influx of personnel to the area and construction was undertaken to provide accommodations. A housing base was complete by 1949 and called "Slemon Park" after Air Marshal Roy Slemon. By 1st February, 1968, the station was renamed to the Canadian Forces Base (CFB) Summerside after the three service branches of the Canadian Forces were merged. By the late 1970s the base's mission was to provide support to Fisheries and Oceans Canada managing national ocean resources while also monitoring foreign fishing fleets, and assisting with search and rescue.

As a result of federal budget cuts the base was closed in 1991 despite much protest from community.  Groups of delegates and protestors alike traveled to Ottawa to refute the base's closure as 33% of Summerside's population was predicted to be negatively affected. The ownership and assets of CFB Summerside were sold to Don MacDougall before being transferred to the newly created Slemon Park Development Corporation which was proposed by MacDougall as a private, for-profit corporation with the goal of creating 500 jobs for the community within the first 10 years. 
MUG
Canadian
MUG
Canadian
1977
UNIFORM
After 1941
LABEL
Canadian
Postage Stamp
Canadian
1999
TOKEN
c. 1830s
BASKET
Mi'kmaq