Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Military Communications and Electronics Museum

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Established
  
1961 (1961)

Director
  
Karen Young

Phone
  
+1 613-541-4675

Founded
  
1961

Type
  
military museum

Province
  
Ontario

Owner
  
CFB Kingston

Military Communications and Electronics Museum

Location
  
Hwy 2 at Craftsman Blvd, Kingston, Ontario

Collection size
  
5000 items, 10000 square feet

Curator
  
Annette Elizabeth Gillis VA3VAI

Address
  
95 Craftsman Blvd, Kingston, ON K7K 7B4, Canada

Hours
  
Open today · 11AM–5PMWednesday11AM–5PMThursday11AM–5PMFriday11AM–5PMSaturdayClosedSundayClosedMonday11AM–5PMTuesday11AM–5PMSuggest an edit

Similar
  
Murney Tower, Marine Museum of the Great, Correctional Service of Canada, Kingston Mills, Lake Ontario Park

The military communications and electronics museum kingston canada


The Military Communications and Electronics Museum (Musée de l'électronique et des communications militaires) is a military signals museum on Ontario Highway 2 at CFB Kingston in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. A member organisation of the Organization of Military Museums of Canada, the communications museum was established at the base in 1961 and moved to its current purpose-built building in 1996.

Contents

Described by Lonely Planet as "a comprehensive and well-designed museum offering chronological displays on communications technology and sundry military gadgets", the museum traces the development of military communications from 1903 onward, through World War I and II, the Korean War and various NATO and United Nations peacekeeping missions to the modern era of communications satellites.

Exhibits

Canadian soldiers are represented by mannequins in military uniform of the appropriate eras manning fixed communications posts, heavily-sandbagged underground dugouts and military vehicles while operating military communications equipment. The history of Canadian electronic military signals dates from 1903, when the militia-based Canadian Signal Corps was established as the first of its kind in the Commonwealth. Exhibits are arranged chronologically from the World War I era to the recent International Security Assistance Force mission in Afghanistan.

Artefacts of the Great War include a cable wagon restored by local signallers, a switchboard from the first deployments of telephone communications in directing artillery, Morse code equipment and gas masks which signallers would have had to keep at the ready in the event of chemical attack.

The use of encryption, signals intelligence and counterintelligence is also documented, particularly in the World War II era where a break in the Enigma machine cipher by Allied forces would prove to be of decisive strategic value.

Two of the radar antennas from CFS Ramore were donated to the Military Communications and Electronics Museum in Kingston upon Ramore’s closure. The museum also displays a complete, working radioamateur station as a gateway in the Canadian Forces Affiliate Radio System (CFARS); the station's callsigns are CIW64 (CFARS), CIW964 (CFARS gateway) and VE3RCS (radioamateur service).

A war memorial "Canada mourning her fallen sons" is part of the museum and incorporates three plaster models created by sculptor Walter Allward during the design of the Vimy Memorial in France.

A book "Semaphore to Satellite" covering the history of the Canadian Forces Communications and Electronics Branch and its founding elements (Canadian Signalling Corps, Canada Naval Supplementary Radio System and Royal Canadian Air Force Telecommunication Branch) was published in 2013.

References

Military Communications and Electronics Museum Wikipedia