From Arsenal to Anchor
The Royal Canadian Navy’s Great Postwar Unravelling, 1945–1947 In the dying months of the Second…
The Royal Canadian Navy’s Great Postwar Unravelling, 1945–1947 In the dying months of the Second World War, as victory loomed on distant horizons and the smoke of battle thinned across the seas, Canada emerged as something it had never been before: a naval power. With a fleet of over 400 warships and nearly 100,000 personnel,…
The 29th and 65th Canadian Motor Torpedo Boat Squadrons in the English Channel, 1944–1945 The war came to the English Channel not with fleets of dreadnoughts, but in moonless nights and spray-slick decks — a shadowy struggle fought in silence and speed. Among the craft that haunted those waters were the Motor Torpedo Boats (MTBs)…
Laurier, Borden, and the Battle for a Canadian Navy At the dawn of the 20th century, Canada’s oceans were watched by other eyes. The great British fleet kept guard over the Dominion’s sprawling coasts, while Canada — with its expansive geography and growing self-confidence — remained a nation without a navy of its own. That…
The Allied Shipyard Expansion of the Second World War By the end of 1939, war had once again swept across Europe like a firestorm, and the oceans became its dark corridors. While the Wehrmacht blitzed its way across borders and the Luftwaffe blackened skies over London, another, quieter battle began to take shape in the…
WelcSteel, Storm, and Sovereignty: A History of the Royal Canadian Navy Nations, like men, are often forged in war. But navies are forged in uncertainty — in the long shadow between sovereignty and sacrifice, between coastlines and commitment. For Canada, a country bounded by three oceans yet long tethered to British imperial policy, the birth…