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Canadian Forces Base (CFB) Halifax is Canada's east coast naval base and home port to the Royal Canadian Navy Atlantic fleet, known as Canadian Fleet Atlantic (CANFLTLANT), that forms part of the formation (military), formation Maritime Forces Atlantic, Maritime Forces Atlantic (MARLANT). It is the largest Canadian Forces Base in terms of the number of posted personnel and is formed from an amalgamation of military properties situated around the strategic Halifax Harbour in Nova Scotia.


Majesty's Canadian Dockyard (HMC Dockyard Halifax)


History

HMC Dockyard Halifax was acquired by the Canadian government from the Royal Navy following the withdrawal of British military forces from Canada in 1906. Prior to 1906, it was known as Royal Naval Dockyard, Halifax and is one of the oldest defence establishments in Canada, having been established by the Royal Navy during the 18th century as Royal Naval Dockyard, Halifax, HM Dockyard. While awaiting transfer to Canada, the dockyard fell into disrepair. The dockyard was formally taken over from the British government by Canada in 1910, with no changes to the layout. The dockyard in 1910 comprised a Naval Hospital, a blacksmith shop, workshops, three slipways, five jetties, residences, coal and victualling stores and 75 other miscellaneous buildings. During World War I, the dockyard underwent significant expansion, acting as headquarters for the Royal Canadian Navy and as the North American headquarters for the Royal Navy. During the 1917 Halifax Explosion, the dockyard was severely damaged, with many of its buildings demolished. New ones were swiftly erected for the war effort. However, following the end of the war in 1918, the number of dockyard staff was reduced significantly. In 1939, the dockyard's were extended to the north and south. With the onset of World War II, this was still not large enough and the lands of the French Cable Company in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia were acquired and integrated into the base. In 1942, the Royal Canadian Navy acquired the Army Ordnance Depot in Dartmouth and an area on the east side of Bedford Basin was turned into an ammunition depot. During the war, new construction replaced nearly every building that had existed prior to the war. HMC Dockyard encompassed 1,255 acres after all the acquisitions. In 1943, the dockyard's lands were augmented with property in Renous-Quarryville, Renous, New Brunswick and another ammunition depot at Newcastle, New Brunswick. The Army Gun Wharf in Halifax became the victualling depot and two communications stations were established, one at Albro Lake, Nova Scotia, Albro and one at Newport Corner, Nova Scotia, Newport Corners. The barracks building that became was erected during the war. In 1948, the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic was established on the premises of the dockyard. In the 1950s, an Underwater Training Unit, the School of ABCD Warfare and the Damage Control School were under the administration of HMCS Stadacona, HMCS ''Stadacona'' and operated out of dockyard facilities. The dockyard maintained a 35-ton lift crane on Jetty 3, a 45-ton lift crane on Jetty 4 and a 50-ton lift crane on the Gun Wharf. In 1953, a seaward defence base was constructed between Pier "B" and the yacht anchorage in the south end of Halifax.


Current status

HMC Dockyard Halifax is located on the western side of Halifax Harbour at the southern end of The Narrows. It hosts the headquarters of Maritime Forces Atlantic (MARLANT), the formal name for the Atlantic Fleet. HMC Dockyard Halifax contains berths for Canadian and foreign warships, Formation Supply Facility, Fleet Maintenance Facility Cape Scott, shore-based training facilities as well as operations buildings for MARLANT and other organizations such as Joint Rescue Coordination Centre Halifax (JRCC Halifax). HMC Dockyard Halifax also has an adjunct facility directly across the harbour on the Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Dartmouth shoreline with jetties and various buildings, including Defence Research and Development Canada#Centres, Defence Research and Development Canada – Atlantic. HMC Dockyard Halifax maintains exclusive control of several anchorage areas within the limits of Halifax Harbour and prevents civilian vessels from sailing in the vicinity of military facilities; a floating force protection boom system was constructed to prevent small vessels from unauthorized passage near warships and pierside facilities. The original Naval Yard clock has been restored and moved to the Halifax Ferry Terminal entrance while the original Naval Yard bell is preserved at the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic in Halifax, a museum which also features a large diorama depicting the Naval Yard in 1813 at its height in the Age of Sail. The dockyard was designated a National Historic Sites of Canada, National Historic Site of Canada in 1923, while Admiralty House was designated a National Historic Site in 1978.


Stadacona

Stadacona, referred to as HMCS ''Stadacona'' before 1968 and frequently referred to as "Stad", is an adjunct to HMC Dockyard located west of the waterfront in the North End, Halifax, North End of the Halifax Peninsula, Halifax peninsula. Prior to the arrival of the French, the location that would become Quebec was the home of a small Iroquois village called "Stadacona", after which the base is named. Stadacona contains the Canadian Forces Naval Engineering School (with facilities at Herring Cove, Nova Scotia, Herring Cove/York Redoubt, south of Halifax), the Canadian Forces Naval Operations School, the base hospital, the Canadian Forces Maritime Warfare Centre, and various messes. Stadacona is also home to the headquarters of Land Force Atlantic Area, 5th Canadian Division and the Maritime Command Museum. Stadacona was built as the British Army's Wellington Barracks (Halifax, Nova Scotia), Wellington Barracks, later known as the Nelson Barracks, as part of the Halifax Defence Complex. The British military forces departed from Canada in 1906. During the World War II, Second World War, the Royal Canadian Navy appropriated the site from the army and it was transformed into HMCS ''Stadacona''. File:CFB Halifax.jpg, Stadacona Entrance. Building demolished in March 2013. File:Wellington Barracks Stadacona.jpg, Wellington Barracks File:Murray Building CFB Halifax.jpg, Leonard W. Murray (Naval Fleet School (Atlantic)) Building, CFB Halifax File:ShannonStadaconaHalifaxNovaScotiaCanada2.JPG, Gravestones for casualties of HMS ''Shannon''s Capture of USS Chesapeake, Capture of USS ''Chesapeake'', Royal Navy Burying Ground (Halifax, Nova Scotia), Royal Navy Burying Ground File:Battle Of Trafalgar By William Lionel Wyllie, Juno Tower, CFB Halifax Nova Scotia.jpg, Battle of Trafalgar mural by William Lionel Wyllie, Juno Tower File:LlandoveryCastlePlaqueCFBHalifax.jpg, (210 dead, 24 survivors, June 1918) plaque, Stadacona Health Centre File:LadyNelsonCommemorationStadaconaHospitalCFBHalifax.jpg, - returned 25,000 wounded from battlefront in Second World War, Commemoration Display, Stadacona Health Centre File:Queens Steps, 1 Aug. 1959,Stadacona, CFB Halifax, Nova Scotia copy.jpg, "Queen's Steps", staircase used by Royal tours of Canada by the Canadian Royal Family, the Queen on the day she departed Canada, 1 August 1959, CFB Halifax, Nova Scotia


Historic structures


Admiralty's Residence

Almost all the original Royal Navy 18th and 19th century buildings were demolished in the Second World War to make way for machine shops, stores buildings and drill halls needed to man and maintain the hundreds of corvettes being commissioned during the crash expansion of the Royal Canadian Navy during the Battle of the Atlantic. Only one residence from 1814 and the Admiral's Residence from 1819 survived. The Admiral's residence (Admiralty House) is now the Naval Museum of Halifax.


Wellington Barracks

Historic Places: Wellington Barracks


Wellington Gate

Wellington Gate was created in 1850 and named after Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington. The gate is lined on either side with two columns listing the battle honours of the Royal Canadian Regiment, which was stationed at Wellington Barracks for several years. The two columns read from left to right: North-West Rebellion * Battle of Batoche, Saskatchewan/North-West Rebellion, Northwest Canada, 1885 Second Boer War * Paardeberg/Second Boer War, South Africa, 1899–1900 First World War * First Battle of Ypres, Ypres, 1915-1917/Mount Sorrel * Battle of the Somme, Somme, 1916/Ancre Heights * Battle of Vimy Ridge, Vimy, 1917/Hill 70 * Battle of Passchendaele, Passchendale/Battle of Amiens (1918), Amiens * Hindenburg Line/Pursuit to Mons Second World War * Landing in Sicily/Motta Montecorvino * San Leonardo, Friuli, San Leonardo/Battle of Ortona, Ortona * Hitler Line/Gothic Line * Lamone (river), Lamone Crossing/Battle of Rimini (1944), Rimini Line * Italian Campaign (World War II), Italy, 1943-1945/Northwest Europe, 1945 Korean War * "Korean War, Korea, 1951–1953" (plaque posted on the door).


Admiralty Garden

The Admiralty Garden was created c. 1814 and has plaques and monuments displayed to honour persons and mark events, significant to Halifax's naval history. In 1972 the "Wall of Valour" was created to recognize the bravery decorations awarded to regular and reserve members of the Royal Canadian Navy. They are listed as follows: Cross of Valour (Canada) * Vaino Olavi Partanen ( disaster) * Lewis John Stringer, CV CD, Dartmouth, Nova Scotia (HMCS ''Kootenay'' disaster) *Amédéo Garrammone Star of Courage (Canada) * Sub-Lieutenant David Peter Finch, S.C., Halifax, Nova Scotia * Chief Warrant Officer John Lorne McIntosh, M.M.M., S.C., C.D., Dartmouth, Nova Scotia * Petty Officer Patrick Garfield Marsh, S.C., Middle Sackville, Nova Scotia * Petty Officer 2nd Class James Anthony Leith, S.C., M.S.M., C.D., Shearwater, Nova Scotia Medal of Bravery (Canada) * Lieutenant(N) Rodney Kenneth Druggett, M.B., C.D., Lawrencetown, Halifax County, Nova Scotia, Lawrencetown, Nova Scotia * Petty Officer 2nd Class John George Yurcak, M.B., C.D., Ellershouse, Nova Scotia * Acting Sub-Lieutenant Allan Herbert Brannen, M.B., Barrington, Nova Scotia (community), Barrington, Nova Scotia * Ordinary Seaman Joseph Jean-Pierre Patrick Breton, M.B., Shelburne, Nova Scotia There are plaques of Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada to commemorate the following: File:GeorgeAugustusWestphal.JPG, George Augustus Westphal - Battle of Trafalgar File:Provo Wallis.jpg, Provo Wallis - War of 1812 File:Sir Edward Belcher by Stephen Pearce.jpg, Edward Belcher - Franklin's lost expedition File:C E Kingsmill.jpg, Charles Kingsmill *George Edward Watts – War of 1812 *Philip Westphal – War of 1812


Faith Centre

The Faith Centre has numerous plaques and stainglass windows that are dedicated to naval personnel who died from German U-boats torpedoing ships in the Battle of the Atlantic (1939–1945) unless otherwise indicated.


= Windows

= File:HMCS Shawinigan window CFB Halifax.jpg, Window for - 85 dead, 0 survivors (torpedoed off Cape Breton, November 1944) File:HMCS Cloyoquot window, CFB Halifax.jpg, Window for - 8 dead (torpedoed off Halifax Harbour, December 1944) File:HMCS Kootenay window CFB Halifax.jpg, Window for (1969) - 9 dead * – 9 dead * – 38 dead, 47 survivors * – 125 dead, 38 survivors


= Exterior plaques

= File:HMS Good Hope plaque CFB Halifax.jpg, - first four casualties of the RCN (Battle of Coronel, 1914) File:HMCS Esquimalt memorial plaque CFB Halifax.jpg, memorial plaque - 44 dead (torpedoed off Halifax Harbour, April 1945) First World War * – Engineer Lieutenant Stanley Nelson De Quetteville (Battle of Jutland, 1916) * (submarine) – Lieutenant (RCN) William McKinstry Heriot-Maitland-Dougall (friendly fire, 1918) Second World War * – 45 dead, 100 survivors (accident, June 1940) * – 30 dead, 0 survivors (lost in storm, October 1940) * -142 died, 34 survivors (accident, October 1940) * – 19 dead, 22 survivors (accident, March 1941) * (September 1941) * – 23 dead, 62 survivors (December 1941) * 77 dead, 8 survivors (February 1942) * – 9 dead (September 1942) * – 37 dead, 0 survivors (September 1942) * (September 1942) * (hit a mine, February 1943) * – 38 dead, 47 survivors (February 1943) * – 65 dead, 82 survivors (September 1943) * – 1 dead (accident, October 1943) * – 128 dead, 83 taken prisoner and 44 rescued (April 1944) * – 125 dead, 38 survivors (May 1944) * (August 1944) * – (August 1944) * – 85 dead, 0 survivors (November 1944) * – 8 dead (December 1944) * – 6 dead (February 1945) * – 51 dead (March 1945) * – 15 dead, 164 survivors (lost in storm, October 1945) Korea * – 3 naval Korean War casualties (1952)


Royal Navy Burying Ground

The Royal Navy Burying Ground (Halifax, Nova Scotia), Royal Navy Burying Ground at Halifax has monuments to those served and lost in the medical facility as a result of capture of USS ''Chesapeake'' by HMS ''Shannon''. There are 84 grave markers, but as many as 500 people buried.


Shearwater Heliport

CFB Shearwater, Shearwater Heliport is an airfield located on the eastern shore of Halifax Harbour in the community of Eastern Passage, Nova Scotia, Eastern Passage that supports Sikorsky CH-148 Cyclone, CH-148 Cyclone helicopters used on the RCN's warships based at CFB Halifax. Formerly a separate base known as CFB Shearwater, the airfield was realigned as part of CFB Halifax during the mid-1990s. 12 Wing, a Royal Canadian Air Force unit that reports to 1 Canadian Air Division, is the primary user of Shearwater Heliport and is headquartered there. DND properties that were formerly aligned to CFB Shearwater, such as the Hartlen Point Golf Course and the Shearwater Jetty, are now part of CFB Halifax. 12 Wing operates from two locations with four squadrons: * Shearwater Heliport **406 Maritime Operational Training Squadron is an operational training squadron for training all maritime helicopter aircrew in the Canadian Forces. **423 Maritime Helicopter Squadron is an operational squadron at Shearwater Heliport which provides CH-148 Cyclone helicopters for Maritime Forces Atlantic warships. **12 Air Maintenance Squadron provides aircraft maintenance and engineering support to 12 Wing's operational squadrons. **Helicopter Operational Evaluation and Test Facility (HOTEF) is responsible for researching and testing state-of-the-art equipment for the CH-148 Cyclone to enable crews to operate efficiently, ashore or while deployed. * Victoria International Airport, Patricia Bay Heliport ** 443 Maritime Helicopter Squadron is an operational squadron which provides CH-148 Cyclone helicopters for Maritime Forces Pacific warships.


Royal Artillery Park

Royal Artillery Park (Halifax), Royal Artillery Park is a military park, which is part of CFB Halifax. In the far corner of the Royal Artillery Park, is a diminutive red brick building, the Cambridge Military Library. This building was the social and literary centre of military Halifax. The Library opened in 1817 at Grafton Street, as an alternative to the more notorious choices of city entertainment. It moved to its present location in Royal Artillery Park in 1886 and was renamed Cambridge Military Library in 1902. The library was funded in part from Customs receipts collected by the British Army during its occupation of the port of Castine, Maine, during the War of 1812.


CFAD Bedford

The Canadian Forces Ammunition Depot Bedford, informally referred to as the "Bedford Magazine", is a major Canadian Forces property occupying the entire northern shore of Bedford Basin. It houses all of the ordnance for MARLANT vessels and has a loading jetty and several nearby anchorages.


HMCS ''Trinity''

HMCS ''Trinity'' is the organization housed at Stadacona which is tasked with maintaining MARLANT communications with vessels and other Canadian Forces and allied units, as well as developing strategic and tactical operational intelligence for unit commanders. HMCS ''Trinity'' operates two remote radio transmitter/receiver stations near Halifax: * Naval Radio Station Newport Corner * Naval Radio Station Mill Cove


Windsor Park

Windsor Park contains the Military Police Unit (Halifax), Health Promotion Services (PSP), Integrated Personnel Service Centre (IPSC),the Military Family Resource Centre, CFB Halifax Curling Club, 3 Intelligence Company Headquarters as well as the Canex.


Housing

Housing for CFB Halifax is provided to Canadian Forces personnel and their dependants at Windsor Park, a housing area built by the Department of National Defence (Canada), Department of National Defence in the West End, Halifax, West End of Halifax. Stadacona is home to Tribute Tower, a barracks for JR Ranks members. Base housing also used to be provided at Shannon Park, Nova Scotia, Shannon Park and Wallis Heights, Nova Scotia, Wallis Heights in the North End of Dartmouth, however with defence cutbacks in the 1990s, this area has been sold for civilian use. Housing is available at the 12 Wing Shearwater site, which is part of CFB Halifax. A large number of service personnel own or rent civilian property in the area.


CFB Halifax Emergency Services

The base is equipped with their own fire and rescue service with mostly land based vehicles. Royal Canadian Navy ships are also equipped to fight fires including tugs with the auxiliary branch. The City of Halifax's Halifax Regional Fire and Emergency can provide additional marine fire support if needed.


Commemorations and monuments

* Wallis Heights, Nova Scotia, and Provo Wallis St. is named after Nova Scotian Provo Wallis * Stadacona is the indigenous name for Quebec City * Monuments in the graveyard to and USS ''Chesapeake'' * Wellington Barracks named after Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, renamed Nelson Barracks named after Horatio Nelson * Shannon Park is named after HMS ''Shannon'' * the Murray Building (Naval Fleet School(Atlantic)) is named after Admiral Leonard W. Murray * the Carroll Building (Naval Fleet School(Atlantic)) is named after Lieutenant-Commander George Alvin Carroll (1921– 1963), born Stockton, Manitoba, Distinguished Service Medal (United Kingdom), Distinguished Service Medal * Lady Nelson Road is named after that was hit by


See also

* Royal Naval Dockyard, Halifax *Military history of Nova Scotia *History of the Royal Canadian Navy


References


External links


MARLANT – Maritime Forces Atlantic, CFB Halifax
{{DEFAULTSORT:Halifax, CFB Canadian Forces bases in Nova Scotia Buildings and structures in Halifax, Nova Scotia, CFB Canadian Forces Navy bases in Canada