Secrets of Radar Museum (The)
London, Ontario

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Sworn to Secrecy: Canadians on Radar, 1940-1945
Images:

 
RAF ration coupon for Confectionery and Sweets
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Twenty-nine radar stations were built in the Atlantic provinces, Quebec, Newfoundland and Labrador
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RCAF Station at Preston, Nova Scotia
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Maintaining the equipment on the radar towers meant climbing when necessary, even in rain and snow!
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Inside the barracks at RCAF Preston, Nova Scotia -- neat and tidy!
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The Filter Room in St. Johns, Newfoundland kept track of activity on Canada's east coast
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The station magazine in Gander, NL was slightly more professional, and was printed in New Brunswick!
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A hanger fire in Gander, Nfld shook the RCAF base there in 1944
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Trying out the ski hill at Gander, NL, was a welcome adventure on occasional days off
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Isolated stations: the barren landscape from the window of a plane heading to Goose Bay, Labrador
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Eleven stations along the British Columbia coast were vigilant against the threat of attack
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Barracks at RCAF Station Marble Island, B.C.
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Food delivery could be delayed by poor weather at isolated stations, but there were plenty of fish!
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The Alcatrash, RCAF Station Marble Island's station magazine
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"Out of nowhere - going nowhere" - The Isolationist station magazine
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Newpaper clipping about radar veteran John N. Given and his brothers
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F/O Given's notebook showing the crews and shifts for the Cape Scott, B.C. radar station
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F/O Given's handddrawn map of proposed radar station site locations around Cape Scott, B.C.
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