A plaque in the cathedral commemorates three crewmen whose bodies were not recovered following a 1943 crash of a Royal Canadian Air ForceB-24 Liberator into Gander Lake.[6] In August 1985, Robert Runcie, the then-Archbishop of Canterbury, arrived in Gander unannounced before starting a 18-day tour of Canada. He was greeted by officials from the cathedral.[7] Runcie's sermon at St. Martin's was his first major event of the tour.[8]
The interfaith memorial service for the 256 U.S. Army soldiers killed on Arrow Air Flight 1285R was held in St. Martin's Pro-Cathedral on 15 December 1985, drawing between 600 and 900 people.[9][10] A 25th anniversary memorial service was held at the cathedral in 2010.[11]
The diocese's first youth synod was held in 2003, including services at the cathedral.[12]Bruce Stavert, the Bishop of Quebec, was elected as the metropolitan bishop of the Ecclesiastical Province of Canada in 2004 at St. Martin's.[13]David Torraville, former rector of the parish in Gander and the cathedral, was elected as Bishop of Central Newfoundland in 2005.[14] When Claude Miller, the Bishop of Central Newfoundland, became the Metropolitan of Canada in 2009, he signed his oath in St. Martin's.[15] In 2016, the cathedral's rectorJohn Watton was elected bishop of the Diocese of Central Newfoundland.[16] The diocese credits Watton's rectorate with making St. Martin's among the fastest-growing Anglican parish communities in Canada.[17]
^"Canada elects Stavert as metropolitan". Anglican Journal. 130 (9). Anglican Church of Canada: 17. November 2004.
^Sison, Marites N. (October 2005). "Nfld. diocese gets new bishop: it took three ballots to elect Torraville". Anglican Journal. 131 (8). Anglican Church of Canada: 13.