The Northwest Passage during WW2

Discussion in 'Canada' started by Ramiles, Oct 11, 2022.

  1. Ramiles

    Ramiles Researching 9th Lancers, 24th L and SRY

    Henry Larsen (explorer) - Wikipedia

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    Northwest Passage trailblazer

    With : "Henry Larsen made his first voyage through the Northwest Passage in two years starting in June 1940; he completed the route in 86 days the second time around. (Map: Chris Brackley/Canadian Geographic)
    Growing up on the small Norwegian island of Herføl, approximately 120 kilometres south of Oslo, Henry Larsen developed his taste for adventure early in life — although not quite in the way you might expect.
    “He used to sail at a very young age,” says Doreen Larsen Riedel, recalling her father’s youthful exploits. “There are stories of his going out to sea in a barrel when he was about eight. He would sail anything that would float.”
    And sail he did. Larsen, who immigrated to Canada in 1923, would go on to patrol frigid Arctic waters as a member of the RCMP and, most famously, become the first Canadian to navigate the treacherous Northwest Passage, a feat accomplished 70 years ago this year. The Royal Canadian Geographical Society acknowledged his landmark journey in 1959, awarding him the first-ever Massey Medal for outstanding career achievement in exploration, development or description of the geography of Canada.
    As a boy in Norway, Larsen had been captivated by the deeds of fellow countryman and polar explorer Roald Amundsen, who had become the first person ever to successfully navigate the Northwest Passage (1903-1906), and he aspired to follow in his footsteps. “Amundsen was always his big hero,” notes Larsen Riedel. “My father had a photograph of him hanging in his cabin and office at home.”
    Soon after joining the RCMP in 1928, Larsen became the master commander of the St. Roch, a 31.8-metre wooden schooner with a reinforced hull that became a floating detachment of sorts, supplying RCMP posts in the western Arctic, carrying out regular police duties and responding to emergencies. It wasn’t until 12 years later, in 1940, that Larsen finally got the chance to emulate Amundsen and navigate through the Northwest Passage, albeit on a west-to-east course — the first person to do so. Apart from the route and the more modern equipment, the biggest difference between the two men’s journeys was the reason for going. Larsen’s voyage was as much about following orders as Amundsen’s was straight-ahead exploration. With the Second World War in full swing, Larsen had been tasked with protecting Canada’s sovereignty at a time when foreign interests posed a serious threat.
    The voyage took just over two years to complete, from June 1940 to October 1942, and the crew had to spend the winter of 1940 on the coast of Victoria Island. But that didn’t mark the end of Larsen’s relationship with the passage. Two years later, when the Canadian government ordered Larsen to reconfirm the nation’s Arctic sovereignty, he set off again, this time from Halifax, navigating the St. Roch through the northern Northwest Passage via the Prince of Wales Strait. Larsen completed the voyage in just 86 days, making him not only the first to navigate this more northerly east-to-west route but also the first to complete the passage in one season.
    “It was a sovereignty question. There was no two ways about it,” says Larsen Riedel, echoing present-day concerns some have over Canada’s Arctic policy. “You have to be there. You can’t just claim that something is yours without being there.”
    Apart from his Northwest Passage trips, Larsen did much to further our understanding of Canada’s North, conducting the earliest salinity readings of the western Arctic Ocean, collecting marine invertebrates and pre-Inuit artifacts and making the first colour-film record of Arctic life."

    The Most Northerly Route – Looking Back 70 Years

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    Last edited: Oct 11, 2022
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  2. Ramiles

    Ramiles Researching 9th Lancers, 24th L and SRY

    Incidentally...

    Hans Island - Wikipedia

    "The conflict over the island, known as the Whisky War, has been alternately described as "one of the most passive-aggressive boundary disputes in history" and "the friendliest war."

    "The agreement was likely brought into existence due to the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine to show that border disagreements can be resolved peacefully. On ratification, the island will contain the third shortest land border between countries, and will create a second land neighbour for Canada and for the Danish Realm, each of which had only one, with the United States and Germany respectively. It will also create the most northerly international land border in the world, as well as the fourth land border between European and American countries, the previous three being between French Guiana belonging to France and the South American countries Brazil and Suriname, and the border belonging to France and the Dutch Caribbean constituent country of Sint Maarten."

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    Whisky War - Wikipedia

    Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail reported on June 10, 2022, that the Canadian and Danish governments had settled on a border across the island, dividing it between the Canadian territory of Nunavut and the Danish autonomous territory of Greenland. This happened as the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine was taking place, as the end of the territorial dispute was meant to represent a signal for other countries (Russia in particular) that disputes can be resolved peacefully.
     

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