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The Early Cold War
Anti-Submarine Warfare

The Canadian navy's main Cold War mission was anti-submarine warfare against the naval forces of the Soviet Union and its allies. Canada's navy operated within a framework of alliances, especially the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), created in 1949.

Practice Depth Charge
Practice Depth Charge

Grumman Tracker anti-submarine aircraft of the Royal Canadian Navy used practice depth charges like this one to help detect Soviet submarines.

Trackers carried several small practice depth charges in the two wing-mounted nacelles that housed the aircraft's engines. When detonated in the ocean, their explosive fillings created noise that travelled through the water. Reflecting from the hull of a submarine, these sound waves could be picked up by sensitive microphones called sonobuoys that were also dropped into the water. Equipment on board the aircraft would use the echoes to calculate the submarine's likely position.

Practice Depth Charge, Mk 15 Mod 12
CWM 20020045-2840





Soviet Submarine Crew
HMCS Swansea, July 1959
Limbo Anti-Submarine Mortar, HMCS Kootenay
HMCS Margaree
Homing Torpedo Model
Homing Torpedo Mk 43 Mod 3
Sikorsky H04S Helicopter
Model, HMCS Gatineau
Model, HMCS Assiniboine
Plotting Room, Halifax
Grumman Tracker Launch
Practice Depth Charge
Uniform, Rear-Admiral Kenneth L. Dyer