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Cold War: From Einstein to the A-bomb: Early Milestones
With superpowers in the east and west testing powerful new weapons, the Canadian race for self-preservation took off in the early 1950s. The rising of the Iron Curtain intensified the threat of mass destruction, as communication between the Americans and Soviets came to a screeching halt. In this volatile new world, Canadians fretted about fallout shelters and the government prepared to go underground.
• A second "Fat Man" bomb was to be dropped over the island of Tinian off the coast of Japan in mid-August. Its delivery was halted following Japanese Emperor Hirohito's declaration of surrender on Aug. 15, 1945.
• In October 1948, Canada's first peacetime civil defence co-ordinator was appointed to supervise planning at the federal, provincial and municipal levels. Evacuation and survival planning were included in this portfolio. Under Prime Minister Diefenbaker, the civil defence operation was expanded and renamed the Emergency Measures Organization in June 1957.
• "You saw what happened at the United Nations — the histrionic bluster of Chairman Khrushchev, his smiles and his sneers even to the accompaniment of pounding shoes. This and the riddle of the Soviet relationship with Communist China in recent months as well as the language of Peking, bellicose and threatening, assail us with fears and potential dangers." — Prime Minister Diefenbaker's address on the nation's business, June 30, 1960.
• The nuclear threat almost became tragic reality in Canada on Nov. 10, 1950. In the late afternoon, the US Air Force accidentally detonated an atomic bomb over the south shore of the St. Lawrence River near Quebec City. Luckily, the bomb didn't cause extensive damage because the plutonium-uranium core was absent. The Pentagon explained the incident away by claiming some small bombs were exploded in the river. Forty years later the truth was revealed.
Program: Close-Up
Broadcast Date: Aug. 8, 1961
Guest(s): Ralph E. Lapp, Carol Sweet, Jim Sweet
Host: J. Frank Willis
Duration: 7:27
Last updated: January 18, 2012
Page consulted on August 22, 2012
All Clips from this Topic
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At 10:50 a.m., Calgary's mayor throws the switch to evacuate the city....
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A Vancouver hospital is evacuated in a nuclear drill test run.
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Canadian teenagers learn the ABCs of survival.
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Max Ferguson pokes fun at the do-it-yourself fallout shelters.
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The McCallum family experiences life in a fallout shelter.
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The Emergency Measures Organization tests its cross-Canada evacuation ...
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The Tocsin nuclear drill is evaluated.
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U.S. President John F. Kennedy imposes a quarantine on ships docking i...
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The nuclear crisis reaches its peak when it is reported that interball...
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Nuclear fear is the inspiration for a new musical composition.
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The Emergency Measures Organization is evaluated in the post-Cold War ...
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Civil defence workers in the 1950s are exposed to dangerous radioactiv...
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Old bomb shelters are converted to meet the new era of stability.
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A CBC News announcer recalls a very strange assignment in a very uniqu...
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No longer a top-secret hideaway, the Diefenbunker doors swing open.
