Tag Archives: Legion Magazine

Battle of the Atlantic video narrated by Alan Doyle nominated for 2019 Canadian Online Publishing Award

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Alan Doyle Narrates Military Moments | Battle of the Atlantic

Battle of the Atlantic video narrated by Alan Doyle nominated for 2019 Canadian Online Publishing Award

Canvet Publications Ltd. has been named a finalist in the 2019 Canadian Online Publishing Awards for Best Video Content for the Military Moments video Battle of the Atlantic narrated by Alan Doyle.

The video—narrated by Canadian musician and artist Alan Doyle of Great Big Sea—takes us back to Sept. 3, 1939, when a German U-boat torpedoed the ocean liner SS Athenia just hours after Britain had declared war on Germany. The Battle of the Atlantic was Canada’s longest campaign of the Second World War.

Other finalists in this category include Huffington Post Canada, Huffington Post Quebec, Canada’s History Magazine and Hakai Magazine. The 2019 Canadian Online Publishing Awards take place in Toronto in November.


WATCH VIDEO

Legion Magazine

HMCS Iroquois damaged in Korea

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Military Milestones
HMCS Iroquois damaged in Korea

HMCS Iroquois damaged in Korea

Story by Sharon Adams

HMCS Iroquois was on its first tour of duty in Korea, under frequent fire as it patrolled the east coast, itself frequently firing on North Korean rail lines.

A tunnel near Songjin on the main rail line carrying war supplies from Russia to North Korea was frequently shelled and under constant repair. It was the target for about two hours on Oct. 2, 1952, as Iroquois worked to keep repair crews from bringing the line back into operation.

READ MORE

Yes I am from Canada Calendar and Notepad
Front Lines
Hitler, Raeder, and the demise of the Kriegsmarine

Hitler, Raeder, and the
demise of the Kriegsmarine

Story by Stephen J. Thorne

Given his obsessive, hands-on leadership, intolerance of failure, and penchant for brutal punishment, it had to be more than a little disconcerting when an infuriated Adolf Hitler learned details of a major sea battle from a British news agency hours before his own admirals told him about it.

Der Führer was so angry that he scrapped the German high-seas fleet in the midst of the Second World War. Grand Admiral Erich Raeder, who had commanded the Kriegsmarine for 14 years, would surrender his post to Admiral Karl Dönitz, head of Germany’s vaunted U-boat fleet.

READ MORE

Liberation of the Netherlands Poster
This week in history
This week in history

October 2-3, 1944

First Canadian Army begins its hard slog to clear the
Scheldt Estuary in an effort to open the port of Antwerp.

READ MORE

Carlson Wagonlit Travel
Legion Magazine

The costs of war (Part 2): Military greenhouse gas emissions

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
The costs of war (Part 2): Military greenhouse gas emissions

The costs of war (Part 2):
Military greenhouse gas emissions

Story by Stephen J. Thorne

A series of reports produced by the Costs of War Project says the American military is contributing significantly to climate change, emitting more greenhouse gases than some developed countries and compromising national security in the process.

The United States Department of Defense is “the world’s largest institutional user of petroleum and correspondingly, the single largest producer of greenhouse gases in the world,” according to Pentagon Fuel Use, Climate Change and the Costs of War, a report by Neta C. Crawford, a co-director of the project, based at Brown University’s Watson Institute.

READ MORE

Celebrating Canada Series - O Canada Journal
Military Milestones
BOMARC missiles come to Canada

BOMARC missiles come to Canada

Story by Sharon Adams

In 1957, the United States and Canada signed the North American Air Defence Agreement to place their air forces under joint command to facilitate defence of the entire continent from Soviet nuclear bombers.

On Sept. 23, 1958, Prime Minister John Diefenbaker announced that under that agreement, two Royal Canadian Air Force squadrons were to be equipped with surface-to-air guided BOMARC anti-aircraft missiles.

But the prime minister failed to inform Canadians that the BOMARC missiles would have nuclear warheads. When the news broke in 1960, the country was plunged into a contentious military and moral debate.

READ MORE

This week in history
This week in history

September 25, 1942

An RCAF aircraft flown by Squadron Leader K.A. Boomer destroys
a Japanese seaplane over Kiska in the Aleutian Islands.

READ MORE

Medipac Travel Insurance
Legion Magazine