BX February 24, 1945
John Stuart
John (Cockney) Stuart, City, veteran of the First Great War, died in Westminster Hospital, London, Friday evening following a lengthy illness. He was very well known among war veterans of this City. One of the first fifty men from Brantford to enlist for service in the war of 1914-18, he was one of the originals of the 4th (Mad Fourth) Battalion, and was severely wounded in France. Since that time he has spent nearly all his time in hospitals, principally at Christie Street, Toronto, and Wesminster, London. Before the war he was a coremaker at the Cockshutt Plow Company here. Surviving are five brothers, Alfred, William, Thomas and Chester, Brantford, Albert, Detroit, and two sisters, Mrs. Stanley Cramer and Mrs. Joseph Ward, also of Detroit. The deceased is at the Beckett Funeral Home, where service will take place Monday afternoon. Interment will be in the Soldiers’ Plot, Mount Hope Cemetery, with members of the Brantford Legion according military honors to a war veteran, who served his King and Country well.
BX February 27, 1945
John Victor Stuart
The funeral of John Victor Stuart was conducted Monday afternoon from the Beckett Funeral Home to the Soldiers’ Plot in Mount Hope Cemetery. Rev. John Kelman, Padre of the Brantford Branch of the Canadian Legion, officiated. The Last Post and Reveille were sounded at the grave by Bugler F.C. Norrham. The Legion party was in charge of Comrade E.R. Edwards. The pallbearers, all Legionnaires, were G. Gaydon, A. Laing, H. Twidale, B. Leishman, R. Farrow and W. Hammond.