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The Second World War
The Merchant Navy  - The Merchant Navy

Between 1939 and 1945, Canadian and Allied merchant ships and their crews transported personnel, munitions, weapons, and food across the world's oceans as part of the Allied war effort. Enemy action sank some 70 Canadian and Newfoundland merchant vessels. Over 1,600 Canadians and Newfoundlanders, including eight women, were killed.

Convoy at Sea
Convoy at Sea

In this photograph taken from the Canadian corvette HMCS Midland, Allied merchant ships travel in a convoy from St. John's Newfoundland, to New York.

Merchant ships, seeking to transport safely food, supplies, weapons and personnel, often travelled in groups called convoys, particularly in the Atlantic Ocean. Despite protective efforts by Allied forces, German and Axis submarines and other forces sank thousands of Allied merchant ships. Canadian sailor John Peterson, who took the photograph, noted that this was a "fast" convoy, travelling at 9.5 knots (17.5 km/hour). Many merchant ships could not maintain this speed, and travelled in even slower convoys.

George Metcalf Archival Collection
CWM 20000224-027_2





SS Maisonneuve Park Model
Oil Tanker in Convoy
Airing Out Tanks
Convoy at Sea
St. John's Harbour, Newfoundland, March 1945
Hospital Ship - Lady Nelson
An Explosive Cargo
Merchant Ship Leaving at Night
SS Victoria Park under Construction
The Dry Dock at Saint John, N.B.
The Merchant Service Is Silent Too!
I was a victim of Careless Talk
Examination Officer Boarding Merchant Ship
Merchant Navy Anti-Aircraft Gunnery Certificate
Defensively Equipped Merchant Ship Service Dress Jumper
Lewis Machine-Gun
Holman Projector Canister and Grenade
Canadian Pacific Cap Badge and Cap Band
Merchant Navy Sweetheart Brooch
SS Lake Pennask