Canadian Veterans Forum
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.

Merchant Navy

3 posters

Go down

Merchant Navy  Empty Merchant Navy

Post by Spider Thu 29 Aug 2019, 7:36 am



Tribute to the Merchant Navy set for Sept. 3 in Sydney

Cape Breton Post
Published: Aug 29. 2019



SYDNEY, N.S. — The Cape Breton Naval Veterans Association will hold a ceremony on Tuesday, Sept. 3, as part of Merchant Navy Veterans Day to remember the mariners who, along with the Royal Canadian Navy, protected the Atlantic supply lines for the Allied forces during the Second World War.
Ceremonies will begin at 8:30 a.m. with the fall-in at the Mariner’s Memorial Park, adjacent to the entrance of the Joan Harriss Cruise Pavillion in Sydney.

Members will fall in on the jetty and march to Mariner’s Park.

Wreaths will be laid, including the Naval Wreath, which is in the form of a ship’s anchor. The Naval Hymn, Eternal Father Song to Save, will also be sung, and the Naval Prayer will be read.

Shipmate Walter Stewart will be parade commander, while Dave Keeping is set to be the master-at-arms.

Merchant Navy Veterans Day was officially proclaimed by the federal government to be commemorated annually on the third day of September to honour the contribution, courage and sacrifice of the men and women who served in Canada’s merchant navy

The merchant navy was made up of crews on the cargo ships and also ship’s tankers and they served during the Battle of the Atlantic, the longest continuous military campaign of the war.

Records show that more than 25,000 merchant ship voyages were made from North America to Britain during the war and 72 merchant ships were lost to enemy action during that time.

Locally, the naval veterans meet on the second Tuesday of each month at 2 p.m. at the Royal Canadian Legion branch 12 on Dorchester Street, Sydney.















Spider
Spider
CF Coordinator

Posts : 382
Join date : 2017-10-08

Back to top Go down

Merchant Navy  Empty Re: Merchant Navy

Post by Gridlock Tue 03 Sep 2019, 5:48 pm

Merchant Navy Veterans Day Ceremony commemorated in N.S.

Tuesday, Sep. 3, 2019



Gridlock
Gridlock
Registered User

Posts : 242
Join date : 2018-12-30

Back to top Go down

Merchant Navy  Empty Re: Merchant Navy

Post by Accer Sat 06 May 2023, 2:15 pm



N.S. veteran, 99, set to mark anniversary of the Battle of the Atlantic

Heidi Petracek CTV News Atlantic Reporter

Published May 6, 2023


When the annual Battle of the Atlantic ceremony takes place Sunday in Halifax’s Point Pleasant Park, retired Merchant Navy Captain Earle Wagner will be there, the ten medals awarded to him for his service in the Second World War pinned to his blazer.

From an early age, Wagner says he knew he wanted a life at sea, just like his uncle before him.

“In grade six, I wrote an essay, and I wanted to be a captain in the merchant navy,” he recalls.

So when he was 17, Wagner went aboard his a fuel tanker as a merchant sailor, and found himself travelling the route from Nova Scotia down the American seaboard to Venezuela and back.


When war broke out, the Canadian government took jurisdiction over many merchant ships, including the one Wagner worked on, as part of the war effort to carry fuel, food, and much needed supplies to the Allied forces.

That’s how Wagner found himself at sea during a deadly period in the Battle of the Atlantic.

“On the coast of the United States was probably the most dangerous place in 1942,” he says.

“The Nazi submariners were sinking ships. In the first six months, somewhere's around 400 Allied ships were torpedoed off the American coast,” Wagner recalls.

Wagner says the German U-boats – often referred to as “the Wolf Pack” -- would seem to attack out of nowhere.

That year, the Allies lost an average of one 10,000-tonne ship every 10 hours for a month straight.

Wagner remembers passing through the horrific aftermath of such an attack at the break of day.

“I counted 14 ships, Allied ships, mostly tankers, that was torpedoed, and part of the superstructure was above the water,” he says, “I never forgot that.”

“There was only one ship that wasn't sunk, it was a cargo passenger ship, and it was burning and it was listing badly, and the lifeboat falls were empty where they had launched the lifeboats,” he adds.

Some 12,000 men and women faced the dangers of war serving in the Merchant Navy, and 1,500 did not survive.

“What most people don't realize was, casualty rates were highest in the Merchant Navy,” says Ted Barris, author of “Battle of the Atlantic: Gauntlet to Victory."

Barris has written extensively on the Second World War, and came to meet Wagner during a speaking trip to Halifax.

He says not only did merchant sailors brave the perilous waters of the Atlantic during the war, but those who managed to survive faced another battle back at home.

“Because at the end of the war, they were not recognized as veterans, and had to fight for 49 years to get veterans' status,” he says.

Wagner was among those who pushed Ottawa to provide Merchant Navy veterans the same recognition and benefits as their counterparts in the Canadian Armed Forces.

They won that fight in 1992, although it wasn’t until 2000 that retroactive benefits were paid out back to the end of the Second World War to the veterans who remained.

Wagner also ensured those who died in service were remembered with a special monument on the Halifax waterfront.

“War is hell,” he says. “Nobody wins in a war, we're all losers, really.”

The Battle of the Atlantic ceremony will be held with members of Maritime Forces Atlantic on Sunday starting at 10:30 a.m. at Sailor’s Memorial in Point Pleasant Park.







Accer
Accer
CF Coordinator

Posts : 461
Join date : 2017-10-07

Back to top Go down

Merchant Navy  Empty Re: Merchant Navy

Post by Sponsored content


Sponsored content


Back to top Go down

Back to top


 
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum