Honouring Victorian veterans

The Veterans Capital Works 2024-25 grant program is providing $780,000 to upgrade or develop facilities for veterans and their families.

The State Government is honouring the service and sacrifice of veterans by investing in projects that preserve their legacy and strengthen their communities.

Minister for Veterans Natalie Suleyman today announced the successful recipients of two grant programs funding local government, ex-service organisations and community groups to upgrade their facilities and create welcoming, accessible places to commemorate and support Victoria’s veterans.

“These projects are a powerful way we’re preserving the unforgettable legacy of our veterans by improving the places where their stories are honoured and remembered,” Ms Suleyman said.

The Veterans Capital Works 2024-25 grant program is providing 26 recipients with a share in more than $780,000 to upgrade or develop facilities for veterans and their families.

The Restoring Community War Memorials and Avenues of Honour 2024-25 grant program is delivering 16 grants of up to $30,000, providing more than $320,000 to restore, preserve, and update war memorials, honour rolls, and avenues of honour.

The heritage-listed Malmsbury War Memorial Gates will be restored with a grant to conserve the memorial built in 1922 in tribute to the “brave men who enlisted in the Great War 1914-1918”.

The Macedon Ranges memorial will have soldier names re-guilded, old paint and rust removed and works on the memorial railings and gate.

The Victorian College of the Arts will restore its Honour Board along St Kilda Road which commemorates students who dedicated and lost their lives during World War I.

The board, featured in the Australian National Veterans Art Museum’s Veterans Public Arts Trail, is part of the world’s only walking trail dedicated to veteran-created art.