Institute for Public Affairs of Montreal |
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A Question of Need The Necessity of a Canadian Navy |
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John F. Angus | |
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"On all the oceans where whitecaps flow, I have chosen to begin, with an image of a darkened ship steaming through the cold waters of the The original HMCS Athabaskan G07, her sister ship HMCS Haida and others, were searching for the enemy in the pre-dawn darkness north of Ile de Bas off the coast of At 4:27 AM the first of two torpedoes from the T-24, a German Ebling class destroyer, slammed into the ship just behind her aft funnel and less than two minutes later, the second struck her portside Gearing Room which was situated right beside her 4.7” shell storage compartment. In the very few minutes it took for her to sink, her Captain managed to send off a couple of short messages, the last one being; “It looks quite serious settling aft.” The largest Canadian warship to sink in WW2 was gone and she took her Captain, John Stubbs and 128 men with her. Part One A short time ago I received an email message from “The Atlantic Fleet will be conducting a large-scale exercise off This will present repeated opportunities to observe ships, aircraft and submarine(s) conducting the full range of naval operations, ranging from coastal patrols in support of Invitations to visit a warship at sea are rare due to onboard space limitations, but an invitation to be part of a “large scale NATO exercise...” was so compelling that my reply was immediate and positive. I was off to To get somewhat prepared for the trip, the Athatbaskan’s own web site provided a brief description of the ship and some of her recent postings.
The balance of this article will be posted shortly.
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