STO 1 Olaf Elmer Berge

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STO 1 Olaf Elmer Berge Veteran

Birth
Viking, Lloydminster Census Division, Alberta, Canada
Death
16 Apr 1945 (aged 20)
Nova Scotia, Canada
Burial
Vancouver, Greater Vancouver Regional District, British Columbia, Canada Add to Map
Plot
ABRAY-*-03-018-0014
Memorial ID
View Source
Service Number: V/73882
Age: 20
Force: Navy
Unit: Royal Canadian Naval Volunteer Reserve
Division: H.M.C.S. Esquimalt

Commemorated on Page 495 of the Canadian Second World War Book of Remembrance.
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Royal Canadian Navy Stoker 1st class Olaf Elmer Berge, son of Egil George and Ida Helena Berge of Vancouver, was killed in action 16 April 1945, age 20 while serving aboard HMCS Esquimalt.

In his honour Berge Inlet was named. Located in Blind Bay, South entrance to Jervis Inlet, Latitude: 49°43'17" , Longitude: 124°10'20" .

HMCS Esquimalt was a diesel-powered Bangor-class minesweeper but operated primarily as an anti-submarine escort. She was torpedoed in the approaches to Halifax, five miles off Chebucto Head, in the morning of 16 April 1945 by a German U-boat U-190, just three weeks before the end of the war. Esquimalt was the last Canadian warship lost to enemy action in the war. Of her seventy-two member crew, only twenty-seven survived.
Service Number: V/73882
Age: 20
Force: Navy
Unit: Royal Canadian Naval Volunteer Reserve
Division: H.M.C.S. Esquimalt

Commemorated on Page 495 of the Canadian Second World War Book of Remembrance.
***********
Royal Canadian Navy Stoker 1st class Olaf Elmer Berge, son of Egil George and Ida Helena Berge of Vancouver, was killed in action 16 April 1945, age 20 while serving aboard HMCS Esquimalt.

In his honour Berge Inlet was named. Located in Blind Bay, South entrance to Jervis Inlet, Latitude: 49°43'17" , Longitude: 124°10'20" .

HMCS Esquimalt was a diesel-powered Bangor-class minesweeper but operated primarily as an anti-submarine escort. She was torpedoed in the approaches to Halifax, five miles off Chebucto Head, in the morning of 16 April 1945 by a German U-boat U-190, just three weeks before the end of the war. Esquimalt was the last Canadian warship lost to enemy action in the war. Of her seventy-two member crew, only twenty-seven survived.