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.
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 […]
Eyewitness account of Gordon Walter Hardy from Ingonish, Nova Scotia, who survived the sinking of SS Rose Castle on November 2, 1942: “I joined the [Canadian] Merchant Navy […]
An electric shovel loading iron ore into an ore car in a Bell Island iron mine in 1949. Ore production increased as heavy equipment was introduced into the […]
A driller and chucker operate a drill in a Bell Island iron mine. Mining was hard and dangerous work. Dozens of miners were killed at Bell Island over […]
Canadian industry switched to war production during World War II. For example, the Montreal Locomotive Works produced tanks for the Canadian Army. Manufacture of trucks, tanks, airplanes, ships, […]
Steel production was crucial to the Allied war effort. Iron ore from Bell Island was used to make steel in the Dominion Steel & Coal Corporation’s steel mills […]
Gordon Walter Hardy of Ingonish, Nova Scotia was a 17-year-old steward on SS Rose Castle in 1942. He survived the sinking on November 2, 1942 and later enlisted […]
Photo from U-boat commander Rolf Rüggeberg’s personal photograph collection. It is an informal portrait of U-513 commander Rüggeberg wearing his working uniform aboard the submarine.
Oberleutnant zur See Friedrich-Wilhelm Wissmannon on the bridge of his U-boat U-518 at sea
Bell Island workmen hold the aft section of German torpedo recovered beside ore-loading pier on Bell Island on November 3, 1942.
U-boat tied up beside a supply ship
Emblem on conning tower is for the 2nd U-boat Flotilla