The Panther is neat but it's a shame the restoration is somewhat tacky.
Here's a photo of how it originally looked:
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And now:
![]()
But, at least it's indoors.
The two significant collections in the United States (Aberdeen and the Patton collection) have suffered from base realignment and closures, essentially the U.S Army spent the funds elsewhere (War on terror) and these collections have been split up and sit outdoors rotting away. I've heard a lot of tank historians say it's a national scandal how badly they've taken care of these artifacts down there. At least the CWM is keeping the tanks indoors but the museum still leaves a lot to be desired.
Regards,
-Steve
The Panther is neat but it's a shame the restoration is somewhat tacky.
Here's a photo of how it originally looked:
![]()
And now:
![]()
But, at least it's indoors.
The two significant collections in the United States (Aberdeen and the Patton collection) have suffered from base realignment and closures, essentially the U.S Army spent the funds elsewhere (War on terror) and these collections have been split up and sit outdoors rotting away. I've heard a lot of tank historians say it's a national scandal how badly they've taken care of these artifacts down there. At least the CWM is keeping the tanks indoors but the museum still leaves a lot to be desired.
Regards,
-Steve
That's not the tiger, it's the panther the little brother to the big tiger.
The first watchword I learned to identify tanks was, WHAT. Wheels, Hull, Armament, Turret.
As for loans or donations, the artifact has to be appropriate for the mandate of the museum. There is no sense showing up at the doors of the local agriculture museum with armloads of Japanese Arisakas hoping to see them lovingly displayed next week. The artifact must be something they don't already have, something which is in desirable condition, and relevant to the museum.
Thanks... i'm doing well recognizing it as a tank! Tracks on either side and long guns are my principal identifiers ... after that it's pretty much...."jeezus!"
I guess I have been out of touch but didn't know that Tiger had been moved from Worthington Park
Borden 'lost' the tank a few years ago.
Wow that took me back a few years (WHAT) I taught HATS (Hull, Armament, Turret, Suspension) for armour and WEFT (Wings, Engine, Fuselage, Tail) for AC. Personally I think the CWM is failing in its mission due to bureaucratic malaise, shortsightedness and narrow vision, and reluctant to go much further then the day to day operations of showing up, unlocking the doors and turning the lights on. Of all the military museums I have been to in N.America and Europe I find the Canadian War Museum the most disappointing, I had hoped at its grand opening ten years ago it would be "world class" but a decade in its stalled in neutral and seems to have lost its way/mandate and vision.The first watchword I learned to identify tanks was, WHAT. Wheels, Hull, Armament, Turret.
As for loans or donations, the artifact has to be appropriate for the mandate of the museum. There is no sense showing up at the doors of the local agriculture museum with armloads of Japanese Arisakas hoping to see them lovingly displayed next week. The artifact must be something they don't already have, something which is in desirable condition, and relevant to the museum.
I know of a few local older collectors, veterans and their families who have tried to donate what we here would consider to be very collectable and valuable wartime gear and weapons to the CWM only to be fobbed off that they don't want it or told there is no guarantee that they would keep it, or sell, trade it off for something they wanted.
Wow that took me back a few years (WHAT) I taught HATS (Hull, Armament, Turret, Suspension) for armour and WEFT (Wings, Engine, Fuselage, Tail) for AC. Personally I think the CWM is failing in its mission due to bureaucratic malaise, shortsightedness and narrow vision, and reluctant to go much further then the day to day operations of showing up, unlocking the doors and turning the lights on. Of all the military museums I have been to in N.America and Europe I find the Canadian War Museum the most disappointing, I had hoped at its grand opening ten years ago it would be "world class" but a decade in its stalled in neutral and seems to have lost its way/mandate and vision.