Orange City Council is beginning a conversation with the community to assess views on a suggestion to create a statue to remember those who have lost family members in war.
While most war memorials focus on the courage and sacrifice of men and women who served in the armed forces, this proposal is aimed at exploring the impact of war on their families.
Cr Jeff Whitton, who proposed the original motion to Council, is looking forward to hearing back from the community.
“Both internationally and in Australia there are number of memorials which explore this unconventional approach,” Cr Whitton said.
PARK: Could Newman Park in East Orange be the location for a new memorial to remember the families of victims of war?
“There’s a traditional bronze in Ballarat’s ‘Avenue of Honour’ precinct which depicts a mother clutching an image of her fallen son.”
“It’s a way of remembering the mothers and families who experienced the grief and deep anxiety of war.”
Orange has a number of war memorials in local parks, including Robertson Park and Newman Park.
“The suggestion of the statue of a mother is one way forward. In Orange there’s an important story around the response of the East Orange Public School community to the impact of the First World War on the neighbourhood community, which might become the subject of a statue,” Cr Whitton said.
Responding to the deaths of sixteen former students, in 1919 the East Orange school principal organised for former students of the school who were also returned servicemen to plant two rows of trees in Newman Park across the road from the school. A hundred years later, that planting created a beautiful park setting.
An online community consultation.
It’s expected the initial online consultation would assess community interest and support for options. Council would then consider the community response and decide whether to begin to source grant funding for the project.