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The Early Cold War
The Korean War

Communist North Korea's invasion of South Korea in June 1950 sparked a devastating three-year war. Eight Canadian destroyers ultimately served in Korean waters as part of Canada's contribution to United Nations forces fighting the invasion.

4.5-Inch Star Shell Packing Case
4.5-Inch Star Shell Packing Case

This distinctively marked container held one round of star shell ammunition, used to provide night-time illumination.

Designed to create light by releasing a flare that would descend under a parachute, star shells could help identify targets. Canadian and other United Nations ships also used star shells to disrupt attempts by Chinese and North Korean forces to carry out night-time naval operations. Fired at random intervals, star shells illuminated inshore waters, or waters around South Korean-held islands, discouraging the enemy from using small craft for transportation, raids, and mine-laying.

Shell Box, 4.5-Inch Star Shell
CWM 19700009-012

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United Nations Warships off Korea, 1950-1953
HMCS Cayuga at Sea
Service Dress Jacket, Chief Petty Officer James Richard Ross
HMCS Cayuga Firing on Enemy Shore Battery
RCN Tribal B Gun, Korea
Denim Working Dress Uniform
4.5-Inch Star Shell Packing Case
North Korean Caves
Trainbusting - HMCS Crusader in Korea
Track of HMCS Crusader, 1952-1953
4-Inch Cartridge Casing, HMCS Iroquois
North Korean Shell Fragment, HMCS Nootka
Soviet Torpedo