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Reproduced
with permission from The Beacon Supplement
July, 1987
Contributed by Carol (Mercer) Walsh - Class 1954
Jim Dempsey and his world
of radio communications
Still vigorous, chatty and intensely
alert for his 72 years, retired Transport Canada radio operation and
Brochen Street resident James Dempsey is a familiar figure as he strolls
around town with his half-century of memories. And, to know his
background is to know how Gander emerged, for he was one of a small
contingent of communications pioneers who were there from the very
beginning.
Particularly, he has fond memories of
the old townsite which, despite modern day Gander, he has missed
greatly. “It was much smaller and closer,” he recalled of this airport
fringe community that was a forerunner to the Gander that is seen today.
His roots, naturally, are with the
past and besides his lifelong dedication to aviation and marine
communications, he also cut out a niche in history as an early community
liquor-licenced club associate, as well as in sports. For these
outstanding endeavors he has been officially recognized.
A native of St. John’s, his mere
surname suggests his Irish extraction, but his lively and witty
personality confirms it the more. “It was the smartest move I ever made
to get out of there,” he smiles, in relation to St. John’s but his
remark, of course, is in retrospect and more than a criticism, it speaks
for the satisfaction he has gotten out of his life at Gander.
His initial interest in communications
came when he apprenticed, free of pay, as a radio wireless operator with
Canadian Marconi at Signal Hill, under Superintendent Jim Collins,
father of the present Minister of Finance. It took six months following
which he wrote exams at the post office and passed under examining
Officer Jack Crocker.
This was 1935 and his first job was
with Crosbie and Co. on a deep sea trawler named Imperialist, which
handled salt bulk fish only since refrigeration had not then come into
its own. The 60 man crew was half Newfoundlanders and half French.
Later, he would take other jobs to
carry him through the year. One was on the S.S. Dasey, a vessel
chartered to take the Anglican Bishop around the coasts of Newfoundland
on his annual summer confirmation tour. Following this he joined the
Marie Yvonne under Capt. Jim Bragg, which was engaged to search for the
John Henry Madill, a newsprint carrier owned by a publishing company in
Chicago. Enroute from England, the all welded ship was never located.
This took him into 1936 and over that
year he would be radio operator on the seal S.S. Thetis and after that
be involved in copying wireless press for the Daily News and St. John’s
Evening Telegram under contract C.B. Scott.
In 1937, too, he turned to the
sealfishery for work, this time on the S.S. Neptune, a well known
vessel.
It was his association with Mr.
Collins of Marconi that would eventually bring him in contact with
Gander but, first, he was hired for operations at Botwood, which
precluded construction of an airport in an area that was becoming known
as the Newfoundland Airport, then Gander.
Being in the field of communications,
Squadron Leader H.A.L. Pattison, who headed up operations at Botwood,
knew Mr. Collins and inquired of the later whether there were wireless
operators available, for there was employment for them at Botwood, where
the first flying boats across the North Atlantic were to make their
debut.
One such position was offered to Mr.
Dempsey, which he gladly accepted but not until he had visited Signal
Hill to say goodbye. It just happened that a service was needed so he
chipped in, again free of charge, and gave a bearing to a German ship -
The Hindenburg.
“That’s the last thing I ever done
free gratis,” he recalled lightly of his work on Signal Hill.
He arrived at Botwood May 6, 1937 to
find five English radio operators putting a station together.
Newfoundlanders were being taken on in pairs and the first two to be
hired were Vincent Myrick and Art Pittman, following which Mr. Dempsey
and William Heath, an Englishman already established in Newfoundland,
were hired. Then, there were Fred Lewis and Bill Lahey; Jim Strong and
Charlie Blackie, in that order. Once the core was in place, men were
hired in singles.
Among Mr. Dempsey’s first assignments
was flying as a radio operator with Capt. Doug Fraser who would become,
in time, the first pilot to land at Gander airport. They were
calibrating radio direction finders for landing on Gander Lake.
Among his first duties as a
ground-to-air radio officer at Botwood was to direct the first
commercial flights across the North Atlantic on July 6, 1937.
There were two flights, one a short
Sunderland flying boat of the Imperial Airways, which left Foynes,
Ireland for Botwood at 5 p.m. The first contact was made 15 minutes
after being airborne and it was maintained right through to Botwood. It
was flying at a height of 2000 feet and speed was reduced to 90knots at
times because of headwinds.
“I directed it into Botwood,” he said,
“there were four bearings a minute on the final approach to Botwood.
There was no instrument landing system or radar in use in those days.”
On the same day he directed a Pan
American Clipper which left Botwood enroute to Foynes, the opposite
flight, taking 16 to 17 hours. Mr. Myrick did Botwood, Ireland and New
York, with point to point conversation
The second Atlantic commercial flight
landed at Gander Lake. For this, Mr. Dempsey was posted to Glen Eagles,
a position at the lake. He was located in a camp with a radio
transmitter and receiver. He remembered that Hugh Lacey was the weather
observer. Mr. Dempsey didn’t think there were any flights in
1938 but flights did resume in 1939.
On November 30, 1938, the weather
forecasting office at Botwood ceased to be, for Gander by now, was
showing its potential as an airport so the weather operation was moved
to Gander. That meant that radio operations, being closely related,
moved as well. In all, there were about 40 people working in operations
at Botwood.
The day on which was transferred to
Gander there was a foot and a half of snow. His wife, Vera, the former
Vera Greene of Bishop’s Falls, arrived at Gander in February of 1940.
(They have three children, Patricia, Helen and Jane).
He was working for the British Air
Ministry and the young family (they had only Patricia at the time),
obtained an apartment, as part of the location of the radio receiving
station. The area is now referred to as the Old Navy Site. For
transportation, operators used an enclosed shed, eight feet by six and
six high, which contained a stove and a lantern and was drawn by a
tractor.
His work, needless to add, was
war-oriented and mainly, the task was to keep bearings on any German
submarine and report bearings to the Canadian Navy. Mr. Dempsey kept a
diary, a notebook of daily details of his work, but destroyed the
information because it was privileged.
He remembers 1942 quite well. He
would keep bearings on German submarines, which had entered the Strait
of Belle Island were operating between there and the Gaspe coast, then
report the information to the Canadian Navy which, at first, did not
believe such activity existed.
The sinking of Allied ships, however,
soon confirmed as much, there was a period between September and October
that year, when war was very threatening in the Newfoundland and
Canadian waters and it was impossible to know what would happen next.
It was the time when three ore carriers were sunk at the pier at Bell
Island.
There was considerable German
submarine activity in the area of Anticosti Island. This was no sooner
passed on the Canadian Navy when, two nights later, the Caribou, a
Newfoundland passenger boat, was sunk in the Gulf with a big loss of
life. “I certainly felt awfully bad when I heard the Caribou was gone,”
he said.
Saying how important the war effort at
Gander must have been, he recalled that radio operators also monitored
activities of the famous German battleship
Bismarck, which was eventually sunk by the British.
During the last year of the war, Mr.
Dempsey and his family took up new residence. They moved to an
apartment in a building known as the Mars Building. It was close to
where the vacated EPA premises are now.
The advent of post-war meant winding
down of wartime activities and there were many changes in administration
relative to this change, with the ultimate change coming at
confederation in 1949, when the Canadian government took over the
airport, but, in the interim, the more gradual change meant the
disappearance of the military, in favour of civilians taking over.
Former buildings for military use became available for civilian use, at
which time an establishment with a community look began spring up around
the airport.
There was already a popular night
club, for its idea was spawned at Botwood, although the club was never
started there. Formation of such a club came to mind as a means of
socializing, so by the time, personnel had moved to Gander from Botwood
the idea was ready to take root. Known as the Newfoundland Airport
Club, it was officially opened November 30, 1938 and it was the first
liquor licenced bar ever in Newfoundland. There were pubs in St.
John’s, for instance, but these didn’t have bars.
Money was not used directly in
purchases, however, at the Airport Club. The practice was to buy books
of stamps, at five dollars each and these stamps were received in
exchange for liquor or beer. Something else that was peculiar. A
customer could not patronize another by buying that customer a drink.
“He could only treat himself and that was the law,” was the way Mr.
Dempsey put it.
The Club had about 50 members and was
located in rooms on the first floor of the old administration building;
the Club moved downstairs, adding pool tables and a movie projector. A
closed Club, members had to be nominated, and then approved formally to
be accepted.
In 1945 the Club took up new quarters
at the lower end of Chestnut Avenue down from Hangar 13 and in a
building vacated by a construction company. Later the Club relocated to
a vacant Sergeants Mess near a bridge to the army site. The final move
for the Club in the old town was to the vacated RCAF Officers Mess just
west of Hangar 13.
The latest location of the
time-honored Club is off the Trans Canada Highway in the new town of
Gander, where it was officially opened in 1960. One function of the
Club was to hold a monthly dance with an orchestra for teenagers.
Mr. Dempsey was vice-president of the
Airport Club from 1951-1954 and president from 1954-1962. He selected
the land where the Club is now located and is honored as a life member
of the Club.
In 1957 Mr. Dempsey introduced curling
to Gander using the old hockey rink, and then in 1952 two sheets were
provided for curling at the Airport Club. For his contribution to
curling he has been honored by the province, being elected to the
Newfoundland Curling Hall of Fame, Builders’ category.
He also help organize broomball,
playing it first on natural ice in the old hockey rink, where the
stadium is at present. At times, the game was played with water on the
ice, he recalled lightly, which hardly made it a non-splash exercise.
Mr. Dempsey, who had been a radio
supervisor from 1948 to 1953, retired in 1973, after spending the final
20 years as a radio technician.
When construction of the new town
commenced he moved to a home on Brochen St. where has resided ever
since.
Compared with the closeness of
community at the old town, he finds the new and much larger Gander
somewhat lonely. Reflecting on 50 years of his life at Gander, he said
about 75 percent of the people he had known have passed away.
Not only that but old-time Gander,
being closely knit, “was better, was more social, not the same now as it
was then
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