Dead Hockey Players

    hockey players

  • (hockey player) an athlete who plays hockey

    dead

  • abruptly: quickly and without warning; “he stopped suddenly”
  • no longer having or seeming to have or expecting to have life; “the nerve is dead”; “a dead pallor”; “he was marked as a dead man by the assassin”
  • No longer alive
  • people who are no longer living; “they buried the dead”
  • (of a part of the body) Having lost sensation; numb
  • Having or displaying no emotion, sympathy, or sensitivity

dead hockey players

Cemetery Rose

Cemetery Rose
Beechwood Cemetery was established in 1873, and is recognized as one of the most beautiful and historic cemeteries in Canada. It is the final resting place for over 75,000 Canadians, including our Canadian Forces Veterans, War Dead, RCMP members, Governors-General and Prime Ministers and our everyday Canadian heroes, our families and our loved ones.

Beechwood is the home of the National Military Cemetery and the RCMP National Memorial Cemetery, and is a National Historic Site. In 2009, it was designated as the National Cemetery of Canada by an Act of Parliament that received all-party support.

Some of the notable individuals buried at Beechwood cemetery are:

Thomas McKay (1792–1855), businessman, a founder of the city of Ottawa
Sir William Johnstone Ritchie (1813–1892), second Chief Justice of Canada
Henry Wentworth Monk (1827–1896), Canadian Christian Zionist
Thomas Fuller (1823–1898), architect, designer of the Parliament Buildings of Canada
Archibald Lampman (1861–1899), poet
Sir John George Bourinot (1837–1902), historian, political scientist, newspaper publisher
Andrew George Blair (1844–1907), statesman, Premier of New Brunswick
Hod Stuart (1879–1907), ice hockey player, member of Hockey Hall of Fame
Sir Sandford Fleming (1827–1915), engineer, inventor
Wilfred Campbell (1858–1918), poet
Sir Cecil Spring-Rice (1859–1918), British Ambassador to the United States
John Macoun (1831–1920), noted naturalist
Arthur L. Sifton (1858–1921), statesman, Premier of Alberta
John Rudolphus Booth (1827–1925), lumber tycoon
James Creighton or J.G.A. Creighton (1850–1930), ‘father’ of organized ice hockey, law clerk of the Senate
Frank Maurice Stinson Jenkins (1859–1930), founder, and the first captain of the Ottawa Hockey Club, orchestra conductor
James Wilson Robertson (1857–1930), businessman, educator
Charles H. Mackintosh (1843–1931), Lieutenant Governor of the Northwest Territories, 1893–1898, Member of Parliament, 13th Mayor of Ottawa, (1879–1881), owner/editor of the Ottawa Citizen (1874–1892)
Sir George Eulas Foster (1847–1931), politician
Marion Osborne (1871–1931), author, poet, dramatist
Sir Robert Borden (1854–1937), 8th Prime Minister of Canada
Eddie Gerard (1890–1937), Hall of Fame ice hockey player
Harvey Pulford (1875–1940), Hall of Fame ice hockey player
Charles Stewart (1868–1946), politician, Premier of Alberta
Duncan Campbell Scott (1862–1947), poet
Percy Algernon Taverner (1875–1947), ornithologist
Henry Crerar (1888–1965), Canadian Army General and diplomat
Andrew McNaughton (1887–1966), Commander-in-Chief Canadian 1st Army in WW II, statesman
Charles Foulkes (1903–1969), Canadian Army General
Harry L. ‘Punch’ Broadbent (1892–1971), Hall of Fame ice hockey player
Clint Benedict (1894–1976), Hall of Fame ice hockey player
Johnny Fauquier (1909–1981), Hall of Fame aviator, WWII hero, DFC, DSO
Tommy Douglas (1904–1986), politician, voted "The Greatest Canadian"
Ray Hnatyshyn (1934–2002), statesman, Governor General of Canada
Nichola Goddard, MSM (1980–2006), CAPT, Royal Canadian Horse Artillery. First Canadian female soldier killed in action
Rev. John Sandford Fleming MacLean (1926–2006), clerk-in-holy-orders, naturalist
John Duncan MacLean (1873–1948), a teacher, physician, politician and the 20th Premier of British Columbia, Canada.

halloween – kev is a dead hockey player

halloween - kev is a dead hockey player
blood supplied by the queen of blood as Kev called me