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THE NEW NAVAL MUSEUM OF ALBERTA

NOW PART OF THE MILITARY MUSEUMS

LOCATED AT 4520 CROWCHILD TRAIL SW


NAVAL MUSEUM SITE AT HMCS TECUMSEH CLOSES ITS DOORS

Effective at 4:00 PM August 6, 2007 the Naval Museum at HMCS Tecumseh on 17 th Avenue SW will officially close its doors to the public for the last time.

Opened in October 1988 by Lieutenant Governor Helen Hunley to accommodate the naval aircraft that had survived the Tecumseh fire of 1984, the Naval Museum of Alberta quickly grew into its present day stature as the largest Canadian Naval Museum in the country. Over the years it has accumulated priceless naval artefacts from around the world.

A dedicated cadre of eager volunteers have worked tirelessly over the years to restore aircraft, guns, ship models and hundreds of artefacts and mementoes that were used during training and war on the high seas dating back two hundred years or more. These same volunteers have over the years manned the front desk at the museum on a daily basis. They have provided group tours, worked at community events, attended school Remembrance Day functions and participated in any number of community activities representing the Naval Museum of Alberta. Their pride of service has been exemplary and obvious to the thousands of visitors they have entertained and enlightened over the past twenty-three years.

In 2005 the Naval Museum of Alberta commissioned an exhibit celebrating the 200 th Anniversary of the Battle of Trafalgar. This exhibit was opened by the Honourable Norman Kwong Lieutenant Governor of Alberta in May of that year and the museum was later honoured by being awarded the Nelson Medal by the Nelson Historical Society of Great Britain for this unique exhibit.

In the fall of this year the Naval Museum of Alberta will move into its new home at The Military Museums of Calgary ( formerly called The Museum of the Regiments) located at 4520 Crowchild Trail SW, and will consist of army, navy, and air force components. It will also contain the University of Calgary Library and Archival collections supporting the Centre for Military and Strategic Studies at the U of C. This new museum will now become the second largest military museum in Canada second only to the National War Museum in Ottawa .

Until August 6 th you can have one last look at this splendid collection at no charge. However, we are always happy to accept donations and all such donations go to the upkeep of Calgary 's excellent naval collection and the proud history of Canada 's navy.

Meanwhile, this fall keep a watchful eye for big guns and naval aircraft being towed south along Crowchild Trail to our new home which will house Canada 's finest collection of naval artefacts.

Click here for June progress pictures from The Military Museum building site.

 

As part of the bicentenary celebrations the Nelson Society has produced a facsimile of the Naval Gold Medal for Trafalgar. It is awarded to the Naval Museum of Alberta in recognition of the Trafalgar Exhibit on display at the Naval Museum during 2005. A formal presentation will be made at the museum early in the New Year and the medal will become part of the NMAS collection.

More information on the Nelson Medal can be accessed by clicking here.

 

The Royal Canadian Navy will be celebrating its centennial year in 2010. Canadians can be proud of their sailors who for the past 100 years have defended our freedoms, many of whom gave up their lives for the preservation of peace. The proud traditions of the Canadian navy are the envy of other navies world wide and these accomplishments will be celebrated during a special exhibition commemorating the opening of the new Military Museums in late 2007

In recognition of the newly established Military Museums in Calgary , the Naval Museum of Alberta Society will present an exhibit that will depict the history of the convoy system and the wartime role played by the Royal Canadian Navy in defence of the Atlantic Convoys. Special recognition will accorded to the merchant seamen who maintained the supply lines to the United Kingdom during her time of crisis.

 

 

The combined efforts of the RCN and the Merchant Seaman ensured that, despite heavy losses, the vital sea-lanes in the North Atlantic remained open as the last lifeline to war torn Europe .

A Heritage Canada grant of $91,000 for the development of the Atlantic Convoys Exhibit has been approved and work has begun.

A Letter of Engagement has been finalised with Phoenix Consultants for the design layout of the exhibit with an expected opening to coincide with the opening of The Military Museums.


Sharing Our Military Heritage Campaign
Museum of the Regiments

 


 

 

 
 
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