Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-8bhkd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T14:05:44.333Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Mikula: a Canadian icebreaker repatriated

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 October 2009

Extract

On the afternoon of 13 March 1931 a massively-built icebreaker could be seen smashing her way through the ice in the shipping channel off Pointe-aux-Trembles at the east end of Montreal Island. The name on her bows was Mikula (Montreal Gazette, 1931a, p 23). The following afternoon, accompanied by the smaller icebreaker Saurel, she pulled alongside at the Imperial Oil Company's wharf in Montreal East, to be met by a large crowd, led by the Minister of Marine and Fisheries, the Honourable Albert Duranleau (Montreal Gazette, 1931b, p 21). Captain John Hearn welcomed the minister on board, then took him and his party out among the river ice to show off Mikula's paces. The cause of all the excitement was that Mikula had reached Montreal 15 days earlier than the previous record, set by the icebreaker Lady Grey in 1921. Hence Montreal had come a significant step closer to her present situation of being a year-round port.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1982

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Appleton, T. E. and Barr, W. 1976. Breaking the ice with the Russians. Canadian Shipping and Marine Engineering, Vol 47, No 11, p 2227.Google Scholar
Barr, W. 1977. The role of Canadian and Newfoundland ships in the development of the Soviet Arctic, Part 1. Aspects, Vol 19, No 1, p 1926.Google Scholar
Canada. Department of Marine. 1936. Annual report of the Department of Marine, fiscal year 1935–36. Ottawa, King's Printer.Google Scholar
Charlottetown Guardian. 1917. Charlottetovm Guardian (Prince Edward Island), 23 April 1917.Google Scholar
Island Patriot. 1917a. Island Patriot (Charlottetown), 14 April 1917.Google Scholar
Island Patriot. 1917b. Island Patriot (Charlottetown), 16 April 1917.Google Scholar
Montreal Gazette. 1916. Montreal Gazette, 16 May 1916.Google Scholar
Montreal Gazette. 1931a. Montreal Gazette, 14 March 1931.Google Scholar
Montreal Gazette. 1931b. Montreal Gazette, 16 March 1931.Google Scholar
Strakhovsky, L. I. 1971. Intervention at Archangel. The story of Allied intervention and Russian counter-revolution in north Russia, 1918–20, [2nd ed.]. New York, Howard Fertig.Google Scholar
Zalesskiy, N. A. 1972. Flot russkogo severa v gody pervoy mirovoy i grazhdanskoy voyn [The fleet of the Russian north during the First World War and Civil War]. Letopis' Severa, No 6, p 130–61.Google Scholar