- CCGS Labrador
CCGS "Labrador" was a "Wind"-class
icebreaker . First commissioned onJuly 8 1954 as HMCS "Labrador" (pennant number AW 50) under the auspices of theRoyal Canadian Navy , she was transferred to the Department of Transport onNovember 22 1957 . She was among the DOT fleet assigned to the nascentCanadian Coast Guard when that organization was formed in 1962 and "Labrador"' s illustrious career marked the beginning of the CCG's icebreaker operations which continue to this day. She extensively charted and documented the then-poorly-knownCanadian Arctic , and was the first ship tocircumnavigate North America in a single voyage.Early history
Throughout the first half of the twentieth century, the Canadian government had made limited contact with the vast Arctic coast it laid claim to, largely because it lacked the capacity to make forays into much of this remote terrain. "Labrador" was conceived as Canada's first modern, powerful icebreaking vessel, which could help meet national defence needs in the high Arctic but also explore the vast area and its rich resources.
"Labrador" was built in the
Marine Industries yards inSorel, Quebec between 1949 and 1954, using modified plans from the just-completed "Wind"-class Arctic patrol ships of theUnited States Coast Guard . She was modified to include then state-of-the-art scientific equipment changing her from a purely military patrol vessel to a self-sufficient explorer—an elaborately equipped floating laboratory, hospital, transport, rescue ship and school. At the time of her commissioning, she was the RCN's first fullydiesel-electric vessel.Northwest Passage voyage"Labrador" set sail on her maiden voyage on
July 23 1954 from Halifax, Nova Scotia, bound for theLabrador Sea . Over the next summer she worked her way through Canada's Arctic archipelago from east to west, conductinghydrographic soundings, resupplying RCMP outposts and deploying assorted scientific and geological teams. Her rendezvous with her American sister-ships "Northwind" and "Burton Island" off the coast of Melville Island onAugust 25 1954 marked the first time naval vessels had met in the Arctic from the east and west. The three ships surveyed theBeaufort Sea together until the end of September, at which point "Labrador" headed for the base of Canada's Pacific fleet atEsquimalt, British Columbia . Upon sailing down the west coast of the United States, through thePanama Canal and back to Halifax, "Labrador" also became the first ship to circumnavigate North America in a single voyage.Career
The remainder of "Labrador"'s early career involved considerable work on the
Distant Early Warning Line project. From June to September 1955, she led a task group of 14 Canadian and American ships delivering thousands of tons of supplies for DEW Line sites under construction in theFoxe Basin area of the eastern Arctic, and in following years continued to provide icebreaking and operational support."Labrador" was transferred to civilian control in 1957, and operated under the auspices of the Department of Transport during the four years before the
Canadian Coast Guard was formally established. She continued to serve the CCG for 29 years, before being sold for scrap in 1987.hip's History
*1951 - Laid down
*1952 -
*1953 -
*1954 - Completed and Commissioned to RCN and based at Halifax.
*1955 -
*1956 -
*1957 -
*1958 - Paid off for refit, but transferred to DOT. Commissioned as CGS Labrador, based in Dartmouth, NS.
*1959 -
*1960 -
*1961 -
*1962 - Renamed CCGS Labrador in the Canadian Coast Guard
*1963 -
*1964 - Captain N.V. Clarke took the Labrador up Kennedy Channel, between Ellesmere Island and Greenland, to reach the most northerly position ever attained by any Canadian ship at the time. This position, in 81 deg. 45 min. North latitude, is only convert|60|nmi|km|0 from Alert.
*1965 -
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*1987 - Decommissioned from service and scrapped. Replaced by CCGS Henry Larsen. The "Larsen" was later transferred to Newfoundland.References
External links
* [http://www.readyayeready.com/cgi-bin/query/display.pl?index=1209 HMCS Labrador page at ReadyAyeReady]
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