The Uganda Tar Paper: A Ship’s Newspaper and Its Community

Authors

  • Malcolm A.P. Butler

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25071/2561-5467.1347

Abstract

While HMCS Uganda’s operational records have been examined along with the impact of the volunteers-only policy for the Pacific Theatre implemented by the Canadian Government in April 1945, historians have largely overlooked HMCS Uganda’s shipboard newspaper called The Uganda Tar Paper. Recognising the importance of a newspaper to its community and that HMCS Uganda was the sole Canadian warship in combat operations in the Pacific Theatre, this oversight has impacted our understanding of the importance of the newspaper aboard ship and the experiences of the ship’s company. In response, this article offers an examination of the newspaper and its importance to the sense of community aboard while also contributing to the historiography of HMCS Uganda. Furthermore, this article examines the possible use of the newspaper by the senior leadership aboard to influence the results of the Pacific volunteer vote held aboard HMCS Uganda in June 1945.

Author Biography

Malcolm A.P. Butler

Malcolm Butler served in the Royal Canadian Navy as both a Naval Supply Rating and a Naval Logistics Officer from 1990 until his retirement in 2015. Having lived the past seven years in the landlocked Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, he is currently relocating back to Canada along the shores of Lake Ontario where he will start a PhD in History in the fall with the University of Portsmouth.

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Lieutenant Stuart Keate (left), information officer, reading a signal at sea in April 1945. (Credit: Gerald M. Moses, Library & Archives Canada: M-2199 / 3217288)

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Published

2025-11-15

How to Cite

Butler, M. A. (2025). The Uganda Tar Paper: A Ship’s Newspaper and Its Community. The Northern Mariner Le Marin Du Nord, 35(1), 1–28. https://doi.org/10.25071/2561-5467.1347