U.S. museum returns remains of 12 Canadian soldiers
The Mütter Museum returned 12 Canadian WWI soldiers' partial remains collected for medical research, now reburied mainly at Mont Huon Military Cemetery in France, officials said.
- On March 10, 2026, the Mütter Museum returned the partial human remains of 12 Canadian soldiers from the First World War to the recovery unit in Northern France, where most will be interred in Le Tréport cemetery.
- Collected after the war, the remains ended up at the Mutter Museum in 1919, and grant-funded audits reconciled nearly 175 years of records, the college said.
- Canada's Department of National Defence said the Canadian Armed Forces joined an international effort to reclaim soldiers' remains and is contacting family members of eight privates, two corporals and two sergeants identified by the U.S. museum.
- The war graves commission said the remains are being managed in line with policy, with specialist technical staff handling interments with dignity and respect, and declined further comment on privacy details.
- The Mütter Museum is famous for medical curiosities, including fragments of Einstein's brain and a wall of human skulls, and Burtch said repatriation of Canadian remains is rare and possibly unprecedented.
22 Articles
22 Articles
U.S. museum returns remains of 12 Canadian soldiers from the First World War
After more than 100 years, an American medical museum has returned the partial human remains of 12 Canadian soldiers from the First World War. The Department of National Defence would not say what exactly the remains consist of - only that American medical personnel collected them after the war at a...
An American medical museum restored the partial human remains of 12 Canadian soldiers from the First World War.
A US museum returns partial remains of 12 Canadian soldiers of the First World War - The Canadian Media
Ottawa/CMEDIA: Partial human remains reportedly of 12 Canadian soldiers -- whose medical specimens were collected during the First World War – have been returned by a museum in Philadelphia. These partial human remains will be interred in the graves of the individual soldiers from whom the specimens were taken. Having collected the specimens during the
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