
Building
merchant ships in Vancouver, 17
December 1941. |
| Photo
by Nicolas Morant. National Film
Board / National Archives of Canada,
PA-116084. |
|
Historians have often highlighted the essential
and dangerous role played by the officers
and sailors of Canada's Merchant Navy during
the Battle of the Atlantic. These men sailed
across the ocean on defenceless, sometimes
slow ships, stalked by enemy submarines.
When a freighter or a tanker found her cut
off from the convoy, she became an easy
prey. The men aboard ships that carried
dangerous cargoes, such as gas or explosives,
knew that, if attacked, their chances of
survival were slim.
The extremely high casualties due to U-boat
attacks during the first months of the war,
made it urgent for the Allies to expand
their merchant navies, not only to replace
lost ships but also to speed up the delivery
of equipment and food that Great Britain
needed. Canada did her part as well and
started building freighters as rapidly as
possible. In six years of war, Canadian
shipyards built 354 ships of 10,000 tonnes
and 43 of 4,700 tonnes for the Allies.

At
anchor, unloaded SS Elk Island
Park awaits loading orders. Delivered
6 June 1943 by Montreal-based
United Shipyards, she is equipped
with torpedo nests secured to
booms stowed vertically against
the mainmast. |
| Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-147981. |
|
Ships destined to sail under Canadian
flag became the property of a Crown corporation,
the Park Steamship Company Limited, established
on April 8th, 1942. The company did not
operate the ships but commissioned existing
shipping companies to do so. Between 1942
and 1945, the Park Steamship Company took
over 127, 10,000-tonne Park class ships,
including 13 tankers, as well as 43, 4,700-tonne
Gray class freighters and 6 tankers of 3,600
tonnes. All those vessels, except for two
of them, were named after federal, provincial
or municipal parks; some carried light defensive
armament, a gun at the bow and nets against
torpedoes. The Royal Canadian Navy (RCN)
supplied crews of eight to ten men for the
maintenance and operation of that armament.
Finding crews for those merchantmen was
a real challenge, as the RCN had already
enlisted all men with some sailing experience.
As for able-bodied men without navy experience,
the Army and Air force were trying to attract
them. The Merchant Navy recruited as many
men as possible from shipping companies
that operated on inland waterways or along
the Atlantic or Pacific coasts. It also
had to accept
| 

Identification
certificate of seaman Arthur
B. Barrie of the Merchant Navy
of Canada.
|
| Canadian
War Museum, 19820188-033 |
|
men who had been turned down by the RCN
for being under- or above-age. Retired navy
officers, some in their seventies, re-enlisted
to command Park class ships. The fact that
men in the U.S. Merchant Navy got good pay
and benefits gave birth to the myth that
all merchant navy sailors received extravagant
salaries. The reality of Canadian sailors
was quite different! Actually, although
they were paid less than their U.S. counterparts,
Canadian merchant navy sailors earned slightly
more than RCN sailors. With the war bonus,
an able seaman received $119.12 per month,
compared to $90 for a sailor on board a
corvette. Officers on the other hand were
better paid in the RCN and their income
was tax-free.
Some 12,000 sailors served in the Merchant
Navy of Canada during WWII. Of that number,
1,451 lost their lives on Canadian-flagged
ships. Veterans of the Merchant Navy were
granted a status equivalent to that of RCN
veterans in 1992.
In order to encourage
the captains of the merchant ships of
all counties which carry the lifeblood
of the U.K., I made it a point to attend
the briefing conference of all captains
and chief engineers before their departure.
During the winter of '42-'43, when sinkings
were at their worst, I could see when
I told them of the measures by escort
and air cover that were being taken for
their protection and safety; I could see
that they knew very well and that they
knew I knew in spite of my brave words,
that anything up to 25 per cent of them
would probably not arrive in the U.K.
in their own ships, and that probably
half of that number would not arrive in
the U.K. at all. But there was never a
waver in their resolve.
- Admiral Leonard
Murray, RCN
|