Every Place Has a Story

Burnaby’s Top Secret Submarine Base

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At the Barnet Marine Park you can check out the  remnants of a once thriving village, sawmills, and Burnaby’s top secret submarine base.

For more stories like this one, check out Vancouver Exposed: Searching for the City’s Hidden History

Barnet Marine Park, 2020. Eve Lazarus photo

Took the dog for a walk at the Barnet Marine Park in Burnaby last week and found a whole bunch of fascinating history. There are remnants of a once thriving village built around a saw-mill, and most intriguing, rumours of a secret submarine base.

Burnaby Archives, Planning Department
Submarines come to Burnaby:

In 1914, Russia needed submarines to defend itself against the Germany Navy in the Black Sea. James Venn Paterson headed up a dry dock company in Seattle and had already built H-class subs—he’d sold two of them to the BC government. Problem was, the US was neutral and couldn’t be seen building subs for warring nations, so Paterson started the British Pacific Construction and Engineering Company and smuggled the parts across the border.

Barnet submarine plant, ca.1915. Courtesy Burnaby Archives
Top Secret Plant:

The yard at Barnet was surrounded by a high barbed wire fence and search lights. There was a guard of nine men on loan from the military, and after four weeks the subs were well under way. The top-secret plant soon had 460 employees working day and night, under the ruse that they were constructing oil barges.

Submarine on scaffolding, ca 1915. Burnaby Archives Planning Department

In December 1916, three subs were knocked down and shipped from Vancouver to Vladivostock where they would travel to the Baltic and Black Seas by rail. The Barnet plant closed down soon after that over a land dispute.

Barnet submarine yard, ca.1915. Burnaby Archives Planning Department

Jim Wolf, Burnaby City Planner and historian has written about the submarines in his book In the Shadow by the Sea: Recollections of Burnaby’s Barnet Village. He tells me that the submarine assembly plant was on the old Western Steel Company plant. That’s right beside the current Chemtrade Solutions building, which ironically is also behind barbed wire and no trespassing signs.

“The operation was short-lived and they used the existing wharf and plant,” says Jim. “Most of the old steel plant was obliterated with later developments. What you are seeing on site today is the old Bestwood Lumber Plant remains.”

Source: W. Kaye Lamb: Building Submarines for Russia in Burrard Inlet, BC Studies, No. 71, Autumn, 1986.

And, with thanks to Jim Wolf.

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