Harold Stinson, officer in charge of the Ottawa aeradio station, Ottawa
Airport, for the past 13 years and one of the pioneers of radio communications
in the Canadian Far North, was honored in Ottawa prior to his retirement
recently.
Mr. Stinson entered the old naval service in June, 1916, as a radio operator
and saw service in the Mediterranean area during World War I. After the war he
continued in the Government service and was among the first men to work on the
extension of radio facilities into the Arctic.
He can recall many hectic adventures during years that saw him do five
"tours" of duty at such then-remote points as Churchill, Resolution Island, Cape
Hope's Advance and others.
He served as radio operator for two seasons on board the Department of
Transport icebreaker CMS N. B. McLean.
Notable Trip
Among his more notable experiences was a trip aboard a hopper barge, part of
a convoy that was being taken to Churchill with equipment needed to establish a
harbor there.
One of the units was a floating dredge, the Kennequhair.
"We had a dreadful time," recalls Mr. Stinson. "The dredge was sunk and the
rest of the convoy gave up trying to get to Churchill by the time they had
reached Port Burwell at the tip of Labrador.
"Only unit to attempt to continue was our hopper barge. We finally got into
Hudson Bay, then became lost for a time. More by good fortune than anything
else we managed to get our bearings and reach Churchill."
"There was no railway to Churchill in those days. The next year the rest of
the equipment was brought in by ship."
Gets
Present
To mark Mr. Stinson's retirement, his colleagues at Ottawa air terminal, as
well as many from telecommunications headquarters, were present when he was
presented with an easy chair and a purse. D. P. Glen, regional director of air
services, Toronto, officiated and paid tribute to the valuable service rendered
by Mr. Stinson during his lengthy career.
"He has been the type of man that forms the backbone of any organization,"
said Mr. Glen.
Mrs. Stinson was presented with a bouquet of roses.

HAROLD WESLEY STINSON, 65, officer in charge of the Ottawa aeradio station
for 13 years before his retirement last summer, died at his home in Ottawa
December 15, 1961.
Mr. Stinson, who was a veteran employee of the department and a pioneer of
radio communications in Canada's Far North, is survived by his widow and five
children.