First World War touched everyday lives in Halifax, Atlantic Canada

By Keith Doucette, The Canadian Press

HALIFAX – While Canadian soldiers were fighting in Europe during the First World War, the effects of the conflict were increasingly felt on the home front — nowhere more so than in parts of Atlantic Canada.

From misfired artillery shells to the first U-boat attacks off the coast, the war came home in real ways for a population that was otherwise an ocean away from battles raging in countries such as France and Belgium.

Halifax in particular would be marked in defining ways, as the old military garrison with its massive harbour became a key cog in Canada’s war effort.

“Halifax was far and away the most affected by the war,” says naval historian Roger Sarty of Wilfrid Laurier University.

While no event rivals the Halifax Explosion in December 1917, Sarty said Haligonians were by then well aware of the dangers posed by living in a working military port.

One of the lesser-known reminders occurred in March 1915 when one of two warning shells fired from one of the harbour’s coastal defence guns skipped off the water and into the city’s south end.

The 12-pound shell fired from an army battery at Ives Point on McNabs Island was meant to stop a small steamer, the Brandt, from entering the inner harbour without proper authorization.

The shell crashed into the roof of a double home at 10 and 12 Lucknow St.

Sarty, a Halifax native, said he first came across files about the incident while conducting research at the national archives in Ottawa in the late 1970s.

While no one was hurt, Sarty said the military realized there needed to be better co-ordination between the army and the navy, which had cleared the Brandt to sail into the harbour under different rules of engagement.

As the war continued into 1918, Sarty said the Atlantic region began to feel the wrath of Germany’s U-boat fleet.

The first attack off Halifax was launched by U-156 in early August, when it chased, torpedoed and sank a tanker about 60 kilometres off Chebucto Head.

“These were remarkable incidents right off shore and for this reason some blackouts were instituted and there were greatly tightened security measures.”

Sarty said hundreds of fishermen from Saint John, N.B., to Cape Breton were forced ashore from their schooners after brushes with U-boats. He said in many instances the German sailors observed international law and helped the schooner crews into small boats before attacking their targets.

“There were also some reports in the Ottawa files of fishermen finding floating mines and bringing them in and claiming their $25 reward, so the war came very close indeed,” Sarty said.

Newfoundland’s schooner fleet was devastated by U-boats as their crews tried to keep the British colony’s economy going by exporting salt cod to European markets.

Annette Hurley of the Railway Coastal Museum in St. John’s has researched an exhibit that pays tribute to the men who were lost on the high seas.

Hurley said 35 vessels were sunk by U-boats and another 36 by weather and other mishaps during the voyages across the Atlantic. She was able to verify the names of 128 men killed, but spotty records mean the actual total of fatalities is unknown.

“If that (economic) link was broken then it would have been devastation for outport Newfoundland,” said Hurley. “They had to be brave men, men of steel.”

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