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"Mae West" Life Belts, HMCS St. Laurent
"Mae West" Life Belts, HMCS St. Laurent

Wearing a life belt, Chief Ordnance Artificer Les Gill (foreground) stands near the torpedo tubes of the destroyer HMCS St. Laurent.

In the background, another sailor (centre) wears an inflated life belt. These life belts, often nicknamed "Mae Wests" after the American film-star, replaced bulky vests of canvas-covered pads, and enabled crew working in confined spaces to go about their duties. The wearer needed to inflate the life belt, however, which did not automatically keep the wearer's head out of the water. This weakness meant that it often could not save the wounded or unconscious wearers.

George Metcalf Archival Collection
CWM 20060010-16_p7b



The Sinking of the SS Winnipeg II
Torpedo Damage to HMCS Chebogue
HMCS Trillium Crowded with Survivors
Depth Charge Explosion
U-744 Being Boarded
Survivors from U-569
"Squid Explosion", HMCS Copper Cliff
"Mae West" Life Belts, HMCS St. Laurent
U-210, Seen from HMCS Assiniboine
Fire-fighting, HMCS Assiniboine
Ramming U-210
U-210 Survivors
Burial at Sea, HMCS Assiniboine
HMCS Assiniboine Arriving at St. John's
Damage to HMCS Assiniboine
Ramming damage to HMCS Assiniboine
HMCS St. Croix
HMCS St. Croix in Halifax Harbour, December 1940
Lieutenant Charles Alexander Ross, HMCS St Croix
"Honeymooners"
"Our Bicycle Trip"
"Canadian Destroyer Sunk", HMCS St. Croix
Surgeon Lieutenant William Lyon Mackenzie King, HMCS St. Croix
Mona Ross, Women's Royal Canadian Naval Service