home
Objects and Photographs

Artworks and Posters

The Naval Chapel
The Naval Chapel

This chapel forms part of the naval cemetery at Esquimalt, the final resting place of naval personnel ranging from ordinary seamen to senior officers.

Acquired by Britain's Royal Navy in 1868, "God's acre" had previously been a turnip field. The cemetery accepted burials of sailors and, later, soldiers. The small chapel, built of woods from various parts of the British Empire, was left unconsecrated so it could be used by all faiths. Ships' crews gradually adorned its interior with simple memorials and lanterns from their vessels.

The Naval Chapel
Painted by Tony Law in 1945
Beaverbrook Collection of War Art
CWM 19710261-4109



St. Lawrence Convoy
Bridge of Motor Launch
Burial at Sea
"Remember the Caribou and Her Gallant Crew"
Iced Up
15 U-Boats Surrender, Loch Eriboll
German Prisoners Leaving Their U-Boat, Bay Bulls, Newfoundland
Bangor Entering Esquimalt
HMCS Armentičres, Esquimalt
Firefighting Practice at Esquimalt
HMCS Vancouver Alongside, Esquimalt
HMCS St. Catharines entering Esquimalt Harbour
The Naval Chapel
Fishermen's Reserve Vessel Z-126 Under Way in Heavy Weather
HMCS Prince Robert Alongside Pier # 1
Finale
HMCS Uganda in Drydock, Esquimalt
Canadian Tribal Destroyers in Action
Action Aboard HMCS Iroquois
Always the Same Enemy! 1673-1943, Fight Together with Us!
Amateur Strategists in the Channel
Lieut. Charles Anthony Law, R.C.N.V.R.
Motor Torpedo Boats in Dover Pens
Picking up Motor Torpedo Boat Survivors