- CFS Lac St. Denis
Canadian Forces Station Lac St. Denis (also CFS Lac St. Denis) is a former
Canadian Forces Station that was located by the side of a lake, 60 miles north ofMontreal in theLaurentian Mountains .Construction
Originally designated Lac St. Joseph, the new name only stuck during the construction phase. The operations site at 1674 feet above sea level was 315 feet higher in elevation than the domestic site one mile away. Further, Lac St. Denis was midway between Morin Heights and St. Adolphe d'Howard on highway 329.
The radar station (Site C-2, callsign Crystal) was one of the oldest of the
Pinetree Line sites. Construction had begun in 1949. During this time, there was a veil of secrecy imposed by theRCAF as to the real reason for the site. This sparked rumors and speculation among the local inhabitants, including one that the RCAF was building air defence weapons in a huge underground hangar.RCAF Lac St. Joseph
An advance party arrived to open up No. 202 RCAF Radio Station, as it was known in March 1952. It officially opened the following month, and was fully operational by July of the same year. On September 15, 1952, 1 AC&W Squadron transferred its headquarters from RCAF Station St. Hubert to Lac St. Denis. In October 1952, the site became RCAF Station Lac St. Denis while 202 RCAF Radio Station became 11 AC&W Squadron. At the same time, 1 AC&W Squadron was re-designated 1 Air Defence Control Centre and remained as such until its disbandment, as the Montreal
NORAD Sector, on 15 September 1962.The station terminated manual operations on 15 September 1962 when it was SAGE capable, and began to report to the Bangor Sector at Topsham AFB, Maine. In September 1963, 11 AC&W began reporting to the Ottawa Sector at
CFB North Bay . At one time a detachment of 1 Radar and Communications School RCAF Station Clinton Ontario were training enlisted personnel as Fighter Control Operators (more commonly referred to as Fighter Cops at the time) at the station. In September 1965, a new basic trade school to train Air Defence Technicians (previously known as Fighter Cops) was formed to meet the forecast trade shortage. By 1973, over 25 courses had been run with almost 500 graduates.One little known aspect of 11 AC&W's operations was that they were responsible for the control of all test flights of the CF-104 Starfighters being built at
Canadair in Montreal. The aircraft would leave theCartierville Airport and proceed to the testing area, all the while, under positive control of Lac St. Denis.CFS Lac St. Joseph
The station, operating as 11 Radar Squadron, changed its name on 10 August 1967 to CFS Lac St. Denis as a result of unification. In March 1972, CFS Lac St. Denis became a detachment of the North Bay based Air Weapons Control and Countermeasures School (AWC&CS). Eventually Lac St. Denis acquired the Air Weapons Control & Countermeasures School and they carried on training Air Defence Technicians for two more years. The school was later moved to
CFB Falconbridge and then to its current location at North Bay, Ontario.The Canadian NORAD Region's ROCCs, both Canada East and Canada West, commenced operations in August 1984, with Lac St. Denis answering to Canada East.
Closure
The station carried on with its assigned duties until it finally ceased operations in December 1985. CFS Lac St. Denis was finally closed on 1 August 1986.
External links
* [http://www.pinetreeline.org/ Pinetree line website]
* [http://lacstdenis.googlepages.com/home Lac St.Denis website]
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