HMCS Hochelaga armed with a 12-pounder gun | |
History | |
---|---|
Name |
|
Owner |
|
Operator | 1915: Canadian Navy |
Port of registry |
|
Builder | Hawthorns & Co, Leith |
Yard number | 83 |
Launched | 30 April 1900 |
Completed | July 1900 |
Refit | 1902, 1915 |
Identification | 1917: UK official number 138074 |
Fate | unknown |
General characteristics | |
Type | steam yacht |
Tonnage | |
Length | 192.6 ft (58.7 m) |
Beam | 27.6 ft (8.4 m) |
Depth | 14.8 ft (4.5 m) |
Decks | 2 |
Installed power | 162 NHP |
Propulsion |
|
Speed | 12 knots (22 km/h) |
Sensors and processing systems | by 1926: submarine signalling |
Armament | 1915: 1 × 12-pounder gun |
HMCS Hochelaga was a steam yacht that was converted into a Royal Canadian Navy (RCN) patrol ship. She was built in Scotland, and launched in 1900 as Waturus for Archduke Charles Stephen of Austria. He sold her to a US buyer in 1902, who sold her to the Canadian Government in 1915. She was converted into an armed yacht, renamed Hochelaga, and patrolled the Atlantic coast of Canada. She was in naval service until 1920, when she was offered for sale. From 1923 to 1942 Hochelaga was a ferry linking Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia. From 1943 to 1945 the United Fruit Company used her in the sugar trade with Puerto Rico. In 1946 she was renamed HaChayal Ha'Ivri, although officially she remained registered as Hochelaga. As HaChayal Ha'Ivri she tried to take Jewish emigrants from Belgium to Palestine, but was stopped by the Royal Navy. By 1951 she was registered under the Panamanian flag of convenience. Lloyd's Register still listed her in 1959.
Hawthorn and Company of Leith, Scotland built the ship as yard number 83. She was launched on 30 April 1900 as Waturus, and completed that July. [1] Her registered length was 192.6 ft (58.7 m), her beam was 27.6 ft (8.4 m), and her depth was 14.8 ft (4.5 m). [2] Her tonnages were 628 GRT and 427 NRT. [3] She had a single screw, driven by a three-cylinder triple-expansion engine that was rated at 162 NHP [2] and gave her a speed of 12 knots (22 km/h). She had a steel hull, clipper bow, two masts, and one funnel.
Archduke Charles Stephen registered Waturus in Lussingrande on the Adriatic Sea, now Veli Lošinj in Croatia. [2] In June 1902 he sold her to Randal Morgan of Philadelphia, [4] who registered her in the Port of Philadelphia. [5] Morgan paid $150,000 for her, and spent another $40,000 having her refitted. [6] Morgan entered Waturus in races on the East Coast of the United States. [7]
In World War I the RCN sought vessels suitable for conversion to patrol Canada's Atlantic coast against U-boats. [8] Finding few available in Canada, the RCN sent agents to acquire vessels in the United States. In July 1915 it sent Aemilius Jarvis to buy two yachts in New York City. One of these was Waturus, which in 1914 was for sale via shipbrokers Cox & Stevens for $80,000. Jarvis bought her, and she was sailed to Montreal for conversion to an armed yacht. On 13 August 1915 she was commissioned as HMCS Hochelaga – an historic name associated with Canada, the voyages of Jacques Cartier, and the city of Montreal. [9]
Hochelaga reached Sydney, Nova Scotia in September 1915 to patrol the Atlantic coast. [10] [11] From 1917 she was registered in Ottawa as a civilian ship, with the United Kingdom official number 138074, and the Minister of Naval Service as her manager, [12] although in fact she remained in RCN service. She was in Halifax Harbour during the Halifax Explosion in 1917. She was damaged, and several members of her crew were injured. She was part of the East Coast patrol until 1918. [13]
On 21 August 1918 Hochelaga, while performing an anti-submarine patrol with a flotilla of four ships off the coast of Nova Scotia, found U-156 as it was boarding and sinking Canadian fishing schooners. Hochelaga's commander, Lieutenant RD Legate, ordered the ship to turn and head back towards the flotilla instead of intercepting the enemy. For failing to confront the enemy he was arrested and court-martialled in Halifax in October. Legate was found guilty and dismissed from the service. [14]
Hochelaga remained on the Atlantic patrol until the end of the war, and remained in RCN service until 1920. [10] She was briefly reactivated for active duty in July 1919 for Edward, Prince of Wales' visit to Canada and carried several guests, including Admiral Sir Charles Kingsmill and the Governor General of Canada, along the St. Lawrence and Saguenay Rivers. In October 1919 she toured the lighthouses and maritime radio stations along the coasts of the Gulf of St. Lawrence and Newfoundland. [13] She was paid off on 30 October 1920 and offered for sale. She was not sold until 23 February 1923, when John Simon of Halifax, Nova Scotia bought her. [15]
Hochelaga's new owner was the Hochelaga Shipping and Towing Co Ltd of Halifax. [16] She became a ferry between Pictou, Nova Scotia and Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. [10] [15] By 1926 she was equipped with submarine signalling. [3]
In 1942 Thomas C Wilwerth of New York bought Hochelaga, and commissioned Sullivan Shipyard in Brooklyn to convert her boiler furnaces from coal to oil fuel. However, the US Government took over the yard for Second World War work, and required Wilwerth to remove his ship. He moved Hochelaga to Todd Shipyards to complete the conversion. The United States Coast Guard inspected her there, and found several hull plates needed replacing, and the number of crew should be increased to 24. On 3 July 1943, the United States Marshals Service seized the ship in lieu of unpaid bills. [17]
In 1943 the Janet Steamship Corporation, a subsidiary of the United Fruit Company, bought Hochelaga from the US Government. She was registered in Puerto Cortés in Honduras, [18] and used in the sugar trade with Puerto Rico. Janet Steamship Corp was registered as her owner until 1949, when Lloyd's Register recorded that she was intended to be broken up. [19] However, another source asserts that United Fruit sold her at the end of the Second World War. [17]
The same source asserts that in 1946 an Em Fostinis of Marseille owned Hochelaga, although she remained registered in Honduras. She was renamed HaChayal Ha'Ivri – Hebrew for "Jewish Soldier", although this name was not recorded with Lloyd's Register. On 14 July 1946 she left Antwerp carrying 550 Jewish emigrants to try to enter British-ruled Palestine. The destroyer HMS Saumarez stopped her off Haifa, and she and her passengers were escorted to Cyprus. [20]
By 1951 a Compañía Maritima Las Palmas was recorded as owning Hochelaga, and she was registered in Panama. [21] Lloyd's Register continued to record her under the same owner and port of registry until at least 1959. [22]
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HMCS Ypres was one of twelve Battle-class naval trawlers constructed for and used by the Royal Canadian Navy (RCN) during the First World War. Named after the Second and Third battles of Ypres, the ship entered service in 1918, patrolling the east coast of Canada for submarine activity. Following the war, the ship remained in service with as a patrol and training ship. In 1938, the vessel recommissioned as a gate vessel, re-designated Gate Vessel 1, in service at Halifax, Nova Scotia. On 12 May 1940, the gate vessel was rammed and sunk in a collision with the British battleship HMS Revenge.
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HMCS Lynx was an armed yacht in service with the Royal Canadian Navy (RCN) during World War II. The vessel was built at Newport News Shipbuilding as the yacht Dolphin in 1922. The yacht was sold in 1929, becoming Ramona. In 1940, the RCN acquired the vessel as part of the effort to bolster its patrol forces, armed and renamed the vessel Lynx. However, the vessel suffered a series of mechanical issues and was taken out of service in 1943 and sold for commercial service. Renamed Elena and then Samana Queen the ship was used in the banana boat trade, taking on its final name Rican Star in 1952. The vessel was converted to a fishing trawler in 1959 before sinking on 25 May 1960 off Hummocky Island, Queensland.
HMCS Husky was an armed yacht used for patrol and training purposes during World War II by the Royal Canadian Navy. The ship was constructed as the yacht Wild Duck in 1930 in Bay City, Michigan. Having several owners through the 1930s, the vessel was renamed Xania II. Acquired by the Royal Canadian Navy in 1940 for patrol, escort and training duties in Atlantic Canada, the ship was taken out of service at the end of the war and sold into commercial service. The vessel was purchased by the Port of New Orleans, Louisiana for use as an inspection ship. In 1967 the ship was sold again, renamed Aquarius No. 2 and used as a diving tender based in Honduras. In 1979 the vessel was acquired by American interests who brought the ship back to New Orleans and converted it to a floating restaurant.
HMCS Vison was an armed yacht of the Royal Canadian Navy during World War II. The vessel was acquired in 1940 for use as a patrol boat and later, as a training ship. In 1946, following the end of the war, Vison was sold into private ownership. The vessel was constructed as Avalon in 1931 by Pusey & Jones of Wilmington, Delaware, United States on behalf of Ogden L. Mills, the Secretary of the United States Treasury. During its service during World War II, Vison participated in the Battle of the Atlantic and the Battle of the St. Lawrence escorting convoys and defending them against German U-boats.
HMCS Moose was an armed yacht of the Royal Canadian Navy during World War II. The vessel, originally the yacht Cleopatra constructed in 1930 in Massachusetts, was acquired for port defence in 1940. Following the war, Moose was sold into private ownership and reconverted to a pleasure yacht. Still in service, the vessel has been named Fraternité, Ottelia, Shogun, Naroma, Eretria, Candida A and as of 2019, Uthingo.
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