Maritime History of the Great Lakes

Fifty-Six Minesweepers and the Toronto Shipbuilding Company during the Second World War

Publication
The Northern Mariner / Le marin du nord (St. John's, NL), Oct 2006, p. 29-48
Comments (0)
Be the first to comment on this record.
Add your own comment.
Is it OK to make your name public?
Is it OK to make your comment public?
Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy




My favourites lets you save items you like, tag them and group them into collections for your own personal use. Viewing "My favourites" will open in a new tab. Login here or start a My favourites account.

thumbnail








Fifty-Six Minesweepers and the Toronto Shipbuilding Company during the Second World War


The shipbuilding industry in Toronto produced over one-third of the naval vessels built on Canada's Great Lakes during the Second World War. At its zenith, the shipbuilding industry of the city employed nearly five thousand workers. This wartime industry was unique in many respects. Only the minesweepers were built in Toronto, more than sixty per cent of them for the British Royal Navy. Toronto Shipbuilding Company was created during the war as a national corporation by the government of the Dominion. But it remains debatable if this form of business organization was suitable for the manufacture of ships.