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Naval Fire Fighting Training
Naval Fire Fighting Training

Three naval officer cadets in protective suits practice fighting fires during training in the late 1940s or early 1950s.

Accidents, malfunctions, or enemy action can cause fires on board vessels or in shore establishments. Because fires, and especially fires at sea, pose grave dangers to life and property, fire fighting is an essential part of training for naval personnel. This photograph is from the collection of Robert Stevens, who joined the University Naval Training Division, a program which trained university students to become naval officers.

George Metcalf Archival Collection
CWM 20050109-004



Master-at-Arms Ron Crawford, HMCS Cornwallis, 1953
HMCS Malahat Crew, 1957
Naval Fire Fighting Training
Cadets in Summer Training
Radio Room, HMCS Margaree
Brooke Claxton Laying Cornerstone, October 1953
HMCS Labrador
Canadian Sailors Rescue a Horse
Soviet Submarine Crew
HMCS Swansea, July 1959
Limbo Anti-Submarine Mortar, HMCS Kootenay
HMCS Margaree
Sikorsky H04S Helicopter
Plotting Room, Halifax
Grumman Tracker Launch
United Nations Warships off Korea, 1950-1953
HMCS Cayuga at Sea
HMCS Cayuga Firing on Enemy Shore Battery
RCN Tribal B Gun, Korea
North Korean Caves
Track of HMCS Crusader, 1952-1953
HMCS Warrior
HMCS Magnificent
HMCS Bonaventure