Throughout 1940–1941 the US Navy constructed an airfield and navy base and built an extension to the Newfoundland Railway to service their facilities, owing to the condition of local roads. The navy base construction in particular was a priority with
Navy Operating Base Argentia being officially commissioned on July 15, 1941.
Atlantic Charter in Ship Harbour, Newfoundland for the
Atlantic Charter The reason for the rush was made clear on August 7, 1941, when the heavy cruiser
USS Augusta (CA-31) carrying U.S. President
Franklin D. Roosevelt arrived at an anchorage outside Argentia near Ship Harbour. Roosevelt inspected the base construction progress and did some fishing from
Augusta over the next two days.
Augusta was joined by the British warship
HMS Prince of Wales carrying British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill on August 9, 1941. While in the Ship Harbour anchorage from August 9–12, the chiefs of staff of Britain and the US met to discuss the war strategies and logistics once the US joined the war. The two leaders and their aides also negotiated the wording of a press release that they called a "joint statement". Though not drafted as a legal agreement requiring signatures, Roosevelt and Churchill did sign their own draft markups of the joint statement which was issued as a press release on August 14, 1941, in Washington, D.C., and was issued simultaneously in London, England. Several days later the
Daily Herald, a London newspaper, would characterize the contents of that press release as the
Atlantic Charter statement. On August 28, 1941, Naval Station Argentia was officially commissioned by the US Navy. Argentia would prove to be an important base in the US war effort; by 1943 with the U.S. fully involved in the Second World War, Argentia saw upwards of 10,000 US personnel passing through on the way to the
European Theatre. An adjoining
United States Army base was established as Fort McAndrew to provide anti-aircraft artillery protection for the navy base and naval air station. In 1946 Fort McAndrew became part of the
United States Army Air Forces and was renamed McAndrew Air Force Base in 1948.
Cold War With
VE in 1945, Argentia saw a drop in personnel but by the start of the
Cold War in 1947–1948, personnel numbers rose to 7,000. By the end of the
Korean War in 1953, Argentia saw a total of 8,500 personnel posted in the area. In 1955 McAndrew AFB was deactivated and turned over to the US Navy as the US Air Force moved its personnel to more remote and northern locations along the coast of Newfoundland and Labrador to build radar stations which would become part of the
Pinetree Line and
DEW Line systems. In the 1960s
Naval Station Argentia became a key "node" in the US Navy's
SOSUS underwater
hydrophone system. As such, the base was the target for several
espionage attempts by the
Soviet Union. By 1969 the total US Navy and
Marine Corps contingents had dropped to 3,000 and to 1,000 by 1971.
Closure and abandonment As facilities and structures closed, assets were transferred to the
Government of Canada under the terms of the U.S.-Britain lend-lease program;
Newfoundland having become a Canadian province in 1949. In 1973 Naval Air Station Argentia was closed and by 1975 the entire north side of the base was out of US hands. In 1994 Naval Operating Base Argentia, was officially decommissioned and the site was transferred to the Government of Canada. From 1994 to 2007, the Government of Canada carried out a $106 million
environmental remediation program at Argentia which included the removal of many building structures, and the clean up, removal or safe containment of various hazardous materials on the land and in the water about the site. Concurrently, by 2001, the site was turned over to a private, not-for-profit organization to manage and lead the redevelopment of Argentia. With the military base now closed, Argentia has no permanent residents and is zoned as an industrial area in support of its redevelopment as a seaport and industrial park for the Town of Placentia. ==Redevelopment==