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SIDNEY GARTH HAMPSON He joined the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) in 1955 and, following recruitment training, was posted to St. Paul, Alberta, and then on to detachments at Yellowknife, Fort Providence and Fort Reliance in the Northwest Territories. He was one of the last members of the RCMP to use a dog team in police patrols to remote communities. |
In 1961, he returned to Alberta for police duties in Vegreville. In all the communities in which he was stationed, there was an involvement with youth and seniors — organizing badminton, horseback riding, entertainment programs, Canada Day celebrations with native peoples, and bringing natives and whites together for fellowship and music. Because of an urgent need for funding for the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO) in Ottawa in 1983, Garth undertook an RCMP extravaganza incorporating the RCMP Band, the Musical Ride, Police Service dogs and a cast of 200 Ottawa area youngsters in a five- performance run called “Sounds and Saddles”. This was repeated again in 1986, and realized many thousands of dollars for the hospital. As a result, Garth was made an honorary trustee of that institution. In 1984, Garth organized the first-ever RCMP Charity Ball resulting in many thousands of dollars being raised for such charities as Operation Go Home, the Robin Easey Trust Fund, the Multiple Sclerosis Society, and the Duke of Edinburgh Awards Program. The latter Ball was attended by H.R.H. The Prince Edward and raised sufficient funds to cover costs of the Ontario Provincial Syllabus for the Awards program. Garth hosted a gala at the National Arts Centre in honour of their Royal Highnesses, the Duke and Duchess of York in 1989, and throughout his thirty-four years with the RCMP, performed on numerous occasions for members of the Royal Family. Garth’s farewell concert in the Fall of 1989 took the form of three programs at Nepean Centrepointe Theatre before sold-out audiences and succeeded in raising several thousand dollars for burn victim equipment at the Children’s Hospita of Eastern Ontario (CHEO). In addition to his activities with the RCMP, Garth helped form an English cabaret group “Plus Six in Song” which raised close to $200,000 in its thirteen years of operation. He has been baritone soloist at Christ Church Cathedral for the past thirty-five years and continues with annual visits to hospitals and seniors homes in Ottawa and the Valley, and assists in organizing fund raisers for youth, seniors and heritage programs. Garth has sung lead roles in the Savoy Society’s Gilbert and Sullivan annual productions, the Orpheus Society, and, of late, has taken on operatic roles with Studio Opera Guild. He has also sung the national anthem on thousands of occasions — two Grey Cup Games, major league baseball, and is presently performing the anthem for medal presentations at Rideau Hall. Garth is the recipient of:
An ongoing sale of tapes “thanks a Million’, recorded by Garth in 1990 has realized a profit of $15,000 for the extension of facilities at Glebe Centre in Ottawa. In addition to his continued interest in the Children’s Hospital (CHEO), Garth is an honorary member of the Upper Canada Playhouse Board of Trustees and the Glebe Centre Auxiliary and responsible for the Ottawa Region Crime Stoppers Safe School program. Garth and Eleanor Hampson have been married 44 years and have a son Brad and a daughter Diana, both of whom serve on Police Detachments in Eastern Ontario . |
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