When World War II Came to Bell Island, Newfoundland When World War II Came to Bell Island, Newfoundland Bell Island Heritage Society Inc. & Shipwreck Preservation Society of Newfoundland & Labrador Inc.
The most thorough historical account of the 1942 U-boat attacks and sinkings at Bell Island is contained in this book written by the late Steve Neary and published […]
David Rees shares stories from his grandmother Emma Rees of how survivors from the two German U-boat attacks and sinkings in 1942 were cared for in Emma’s home […]
The 75th anniversary of the U-boat attacks and sinkings at Bell Island took place at Lance Cove, Newfoundland on September 16, 2017. This photo shows members of Branch […]
The Honourable Frank Fagan (on right), Lieutenant-Governor of Newfoundland & Labrador, delivers a speech of remembrance at the commemoration ceremony for the 75th anniversary of the U-boat attacks […]
Video of clearance divers from the Royal Canadian Navy’s Fleet Diving Unit (Atlantic) removing unexploded artillery shells (also called unexploded ordnance or UXO) from two of the Bell […]
Video shows German newsreel of U-boat crews attacking Allied merchant ships with torpedoes. Transcript of narration: On September 4th 1942, U-513 under the command of captain Rolf Ruggeberg […]
The U-boat attacks on the Bell Island ore ships in 1942 were designated as an Event of Provincial Significance by the Government of Newfoundland & Labrador in June […]
Canadian Forces clearance divers from the Fleet Diving Unit – Atlantic lift an unexploded artillery shell recovered from the SS Rose Castle shipwreck. The divers are Leading Seaman […]
A Canadian Forces clearance diver from Fleet Diving Unit – Atlantic shows an unexploded artillery shell (lower right) on the S.S. Rose Castle shipwreck. The Royal Canadian Navy […]
A graph of the numbers of Allied & Neutral merchant ships and German U-boats sunk per month in the North Atlantic Ocean from January 1942 until December 1943. […]