Coastal Forces was a division of the Royal Navy established during World War II. It consisted of small coastal defence craft which the Navy designated with names such as: Motor Launch, High Speed Launch, air-sea rescue, Motor Gun Boat and Motor Torpedo Boat. It did not include landing craft, trawlers or purpose-built minesweepers. Other Navies operated equivalent boats, but classified and named them somewhat differently.
This article attempts to pull together, for comparative purposes, some statistics concerning the coastal forces of different navies. It starts with the above British definition of "Coastal Forces" and attempts to identify the equivalent boats in other navies.
Type | Designation | Built | Lost | Designed purpose |
---|---|---|---|---|
Motor Launches | ML, HDML ASR | Harbour Defence Motor Launches (HDML) and submarine chasing or for armed high speed Air Sea Rescue. | ||
Motor Gun Boats | MGB | |||
Steam Gun Boats | SGB | 7 | 1 | Hunting down German E-boats |
Motor Torpedo Boats | MTB |
Type | Designation | Built | Lost | Designed purpose |
---|---|---|---|---|
PT boats | PT- | |||
Submarine chasers | SC- and PC- |
Type | Designation | Built | Lost | Designed purpose |
---|---|---|---|---|
Schnellboot (E-boats) | S- | |||
R boat |
Type | Designation | Built | Lost | Designed purpose |
---|---|---|---|---|
MAS-boat | ||||
Motoscafo Silurante | 36 |
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Post war there seemed to be no need for small coastal force vessels. They were generally withdrawn and their functions taken over by larger corvettes, frigates, and destroyers. A few remained in service with Third World navies. The RN's last boats built in any number were the Dark-class fast patrol boats of the mid-1950s; Coastal Forces was reduced in 1957 to a few vessels.
In time, the need for smaller vessels re-asserted itself, as in this experience of the Royal Australian Navy:
The motor launches quickly passed out of service after the war and coastal patrol duties once more devolved upon larger RAN ships. From the early 1960s the Ton class minesweepers took on significant patrol responsibilities, particularly during the Indonesian Confrontation from 1962-1966. This experience led directly to the decision to reintroduce patrol boats to the RAN inventory, as the minesweepers were expensive to maintain and their engines were not designed to loiter on patrol.
— [1]
Coastal boats reappeared in navies around the world now generally adapted to the need to "patrol" and designated as "patrol boats".
Following is a list of notable surviving coastal craft from World War II.
Vessel MGB81 | Country Great Britain | Type Motor Gun Boat | Design British Powerboat Company | Built 1942 | In the care of Portsmouth Naval Base Property Trust | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
HNoMS Hitra | Norway | submarine chaser | Only remaining World War II submarine chaser with intact armament [2] | |||
S-130 | Germany | E-boat | 1943 | British Military Powerboat Trust [3] | Only surviving German E-boot. Participated in Exercise Tiger and attacks on the D-day invasion fleet. | |
PT 617 | US | PT-boat | 80-foot Elco | Battleship Cove Museum [4] | Only completely restored 80-foot Elco PT-boat in existence [5] | |
PT 796 | US | PT-boat | 78-foot Higgins | Battleship Cove Museum [6] | restored [7] | |
MTB 102 | UK | MTB | Private venture | 1937 | MTB 102 Trust | capable of 48 knots unladen |
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A PT boat was a motor torpedo boat used by the United States Navy in World War II. It was small, fast, and inexpensive to build, valued for its maneuverability and speed but hampered at the beginning of the war by ineffective torpedoes, limited armament, and comparatively fragile construction that limited some of the variants to coastal waters. In the US Navy they were organized in Motor Torpedo Boat Squadrons (MTBRONs).
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A motor launch (ML) is a small military vessel in Royal Navy service. It was designed for harbour defence and submarine chasing. Similar vessels were used by the Royal Air Force for armed high-speed air-sea rescue. Some vessels for water police service are also known as motor launches. Motor launches were slower than motor torpedo boats and motor gun boats
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Coastal Forces was a division of the Royal Navy established during World War II. It consisted of small coastal defence craft such as motor launches, submarine chasers, air-sea rescue launches, motor gun boats and motor torpedo boats. It did not include minesweepers, naval trawlers or landing craft. This article is about the equivalent boats used in the Royal New Zealand Navy (RNZN).
Coastal Forces was a division of the Royal Navy established during World War II. It consisted of small coastal defence craft such as motor launches, submarine chasers, air-sea rescue launches, motor gun boats and motor torpedo boats. It did not include minesweepers, trawlers or landing craft. This article is about the equivalent boats used by the Royal Australian Navy (RAN).
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The Canadian Fairmile B was a motor launch built during the Second World War for the Royal Canadian Navy. They were adaptations of the British Fairmile B motor launch design incorporating slight modifications for Canadian climatic and operational conditions. Eighty-eight were built in Canada for service with the Coastal Forces of the Royal Canadian Navy in home waters, of which eight were supplied to the United States Navy.
Splinter fleet or Splinter navy was a nickname given to the United States wooden boats used in World War II. The boats served in many different roles during the war. These boats were built in small boatyards on the West coast and East coast, Great Lakes and the Gulf of Mexico. They could be built quickly, in just 60 to 120 days. Most of the boats were built by boatyards that already had the tools and knowledge from building yachts, sailboats and motor boats. Many were built by craftsmen in family-owned small businesses. Under the Emergency Shipbuilding Program and War Shipping Administration contracts went out to over fifty boatyards across the country. The boats were built for the US Navy, the United States Army Air Forces, United States Coast Guard, and US Army. Some of the wooden boats went to Allied nations on the Lend-Lease program.