Amherstburg Town Councillor Diane Pouget, February 3, 2014. (Photo by Mike Vlasveld)Amherstburg Town Councillor Diane Pouget, February 3, 2014. (Photo by Mike Vlasveld)
Windsor

Plaque Proposed To Mark Historic Cold War Meeting

Amherstburg town councillor Diane Pouget wants to erect a plaque to commemorate a meeting that is said to have started the conversation to end the Cold War.

The so-called "walk that changed the world" took place in the orchards on former Senator Eugene Whelan's farm in Amherstburg at the height of the Cold War on May 19, 1983. Whelan hosted a delegation of Soviet officials, which included then Agriculture Minister Mikhail Gorbachev. Gorbachev later became the president of the Soviet Union. During that conversation, the two are said to have laid bare their concerns about tensions between the Soviet Union and the West, laying the framework for the end of the U.S.S.R.

The dissolution of the Soviet Union came in December 1991.

"I have received permission from the Whalen family to proceed with it," says Pouget about the project which she proposed to town council Monday night. "I did talk to the Heritage Committee, but it wasn't within their mandate."

Pouget hopes to erect the plaque along the sidewalk in front of the Whelan property.

Read More Local Stories

New military crosswalk rendering. (Image courtesy of the Sarnia Legion Branch 62)

New military crosswalk in Sarnia to be unveiled

As part of a partnership between the Sarnia Legion Branch 62 and City of Sarnia, an unveiling ceremony will be held at the corner of Christina Street and Wellington Street on Sunday, June 7, at 2 p.m.

Members of the Sarnia Police Service entering a Tashmoo Avenue residence on June 4, 2026. (Photo courtesy of the Sarnia Police Service)

Two men arrested in Tashmoo Ave. standoff

Sarnia police said the investigation began on May 29 after the victim was allegedly attacked by acquaintances at a residence near Tashmoo Avenue and Christopher Drive at Aamjiwnaang First Nation.