HMCS Sans Peur

Last updated

History
Name
  • Trenora
  • Sans Peur
Owner
Port of registry Civil Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg United Kingdom (1933–1939)
Builder John I. Thornycroft & Company, Woolston, Southampton, UK
Yard number1115
Launched11 May 1933
CompletedAugust 1933
In service1933
Out of service1939
FateAcquired by Royal Canadian Navy
Naval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svgCanada
NameSans Peur
Acquired1939
Commissioned3 March 1940
Decommissioned31 January 1947
FateSold for commercial service 1947
Name
  • Trenora
  • Sans Peur
Port of registry Flag of Panama.svg Panama
In service1947
General characteristics in naval service
Type Armed yacht
Displacement856 long tons (870 t)
Length210 ft (64.0 m)
Beam30 ft (9.1 m)
Draught13 ft (4.0 m)
Propulsion
Speed13 knots (24 km/h; 15 mph)
Complement48
Sensors and
processing systems
Type 123 asdic
Armament

HMCS Sans Peur was an armed yacht that served with the Royal Canadian Navy (RCN) during World War II on both coasts. The vessel was constructed as a yacht in 1933 for Ernest G. Stanley at the John I. Thornycroft & Company yard in Woolston, Southampton, United Kingdom and initially named Trenora. It was sold in the 1930s to George Sutherland-Leveson-Gower, 5th Duke of Sutherland who renamed it Sans Peur. The yacht was taken over by the RCN in 1939 and used for anti-submarine patrols and training duties on the British Columbia Coast. In 1944, Sans Peur was brought east to Nova Scotia as a training ship.

Contents

The RCN intended to keep Sans Peur in the postwar era, but budget cuts forced the service to dispose of the ship in 1947. Sans Peur was first acquired by a company from Montreal before being resold to a Panamanian company in 1948, which renamed the vessel Trenora. The vessel was reconverted to a yacht at Gibraltar and acquired by an Italian family in the shipping trade. In 1972, Trenora was sold again to Japanese buyers who renamed the vessel Sans Peur. In 1975, the vessel was used as VIP accommodations during an event at Okinawa. The vessel's fate is unknown.

Description

Sans Peur was designed as a yacht to a modified structure. The ship was planned with a low-strength main deck and upper superstructure carried on stanchions. This made the upper level boat deck the new strength deck. This diversion from traditional yacht structure led to disagreements with Lloyd's Register assessors for insurance purposes. The changes were only deemed acceptable after the intervention of the chief surveyor who granted a dispensation to the existing rules. The yacht was powered by twin Polar Atlas diesel engines with a cruising speed of 12+12 knots (23.2 km/h; 14.4 mph) for 7,000 nautical miles (13,000 km; 8,100 mi) with a top speed of 16 knots (30 km/h; 18 mph), with two propeller shafts. [1] [2] The yacht was 210 ft (64.0 m) long with a beam of 30 ft (9.1 m) and a draught of 13 ft (4.0 m). [3] Trenora was measured at 856  gross register tons  (GRT). [2]

Service history

The yacht was ordered for construction from John I. Thornycroft & Company at their yard in Woolston, Southampton, United Kingdom by Dr. Ernest G. Stanley, a nephew of Rudyard Kipling. [2] [1] The vessel's yard number was 1115 and the ship was launched on 11 May 1933. [2] Completed in August 1933, the vessel was named Trenora by Stanley and was acquired by him to help support the lagging shipbuilding industry during the Great Depression. George Sutherland-Leveson-Gower, 5th Duke of Sutherland purchased Trenora in the 1930s and renamed the vessel Sans Peur after the motto of Clan Sutherland. The Duke of Sutherland used Sans Peur to visit his business holdings in British Columbia while on a world cruise with a friend. While cruising off California in 1939, Sans Peur grounded on a sandbank. [1] The ship had grounded off Espiritu Santo Island in the Gulf of California. The vessel's captain had managed to refloat Sans Peur and anchor it, but a hole had been opened in the bottom and the ship lay partly flooded. With the aid of the tugboat Retriever, the vessel was made sound and the ship resumed its journey. [4] Sans Peur and the Duke of Sutherland was off the coast of British Columbia when World War II broke out. The duke turned his ship over to the British Admiralty at Vancouver in September 1939 and departed by train for eastern Canada to return to the UK. [1]

Royal Canadian Navy service

To augment the local sea defences of East Coast ports, the Royal Canadian Navy (RCN) sought large, steel-hulled yachts to requisition. Sans Peur had been turned over to the Admiralty at the outset of the war by the Duke of Sutherland and formally requisitioned by the Admiralty in October. On 7 October, the British Admiralty offered Sans Peur to the Royal Canadian Navy. The offer was accepted and the yacht was taken into RCN on a charter from the British Ministry of War Transport, initially costing the Government of Canada 569 pounds, 10 shillings per month. [5]

Conversion to an armed yacht involved removing most of the luxurious finery and installing naval hardware. As Sans Peur was the first to be converted to an armed yacht in Canadian service, the vessel was the first to be given Type 123 asdic. The yacht was strengthened both fore and aft for heavier guns and was given an additional 40 mm anti-aircraft gun. The forward gun was a 4-inch (102 mm) model that had been taken from a former Canadian destroyer. [6] [7] The rear gun was a 12-pounder gun. [3] The ship was also given 25 depth charges. In 1941, the yacht was equipped with radar. Despite being one of the more capable armed yachts, Sans Peur did have drawbacks. Fuel tanks 3, 6 and 7 had to remain filled with fuel and if fuel was drawn from these tanks, water was pumped in to take its place. At first this caused issues as every time this happened the tanks had to be cleaned before new fuel could be put in. Later a method was developed where fuel was taken from the top of the tanks as water was pumped in through the bottom. Conversion to an armed yacht took until the end of 1939. [6] [7]

Sans Peur was the first yacht commissioned on 3 March 1940. [8] [lower-alpha 1] Sans Peur sailed on its first patrol on 11 March. Originally intended for local defence, the lack of capable Canadian ships led the armed yachts to be assigned to seaward patrol missions. The yacht was used to patrol along the British Columbia coast along with use as a gunnery and anti-aircraft gunnery training ship. After 1943, the yacht was also used as a radar training ship. After German merchant ships were captured in the Pacific by Canadian and British warships, Sans Peur was used to transport the German prisoners of war from the warships to British Columbia. [9] [10]

After the entry of Japan into the war, the threat to the west coast increased. On 7 June 1942, the Japanese submarine I-26 torpedoed and sank USAT Coastal Trader off Cape Flattery. The United States requested RCN aid and Sans Peur and the corvette Edmundston were dispatched. The two ships began searching for survivors and with the assistance of a Royal Canadian Air Force aircraft, Edmundston recovered the survivors. Later that month, on 20 June, I-26 shelled a lighthouse at Estevan Point on the British Columbia coast, Sans Peur was dispatched with the corvette Timmins to track and destroy the submarine. The Japanese submarine was not found as it had retreated. [9] [11]

As more capable vessels began pouring out of shipyards, the RCN began to rely less on Sans Peur and the other armed yachts for operational patrols. [12] After November 1942, Sans Peur was used solely as a training vessel on the west coast. [13] In April 1943, Sans Peur was purchased outright by Canada for $305,191. [14] The yacht then underwent an extensive refit and in late 1943, after the threat from Japan had subsided on the west coast, the RCN decided to send Sans Peur east. Accompanied by New Glasgow, the two ships departed Esquimalt on 24 January 1944 and arrived at Halifax, Nova Scotia on 6 February via the Panama Canal. After arrival, Sans Peur was then sent to join HMCS Cornwallis, the naval training facility in the Annapolis Basin, where it joined seven other armed yachts. [13] [14] There the yacht took part in anti-submarine training with Royal Navy submarines. [13] Sans Peur operated with the submarines HMS L23, Seawolf, Unseen and Upright. Additionally, the armed yachts stationed at Cornwallis would escort the ferry Princess Helen on the run between Saint John, New Brunswick and Digby, Nova Scotia after the sinking of Caribou. [15]

Post war and commercial service

With the arrival of two Castle-class corvettes at Cornwallis to take over training duties in January 1946 following the end of the war, Sans Peur was sent to Halifax as a training ship and tender to the naval reserve division HMCS Scotian in February. [13] [16] The ship was used for bathythermographic testing in St. Margaret's Bay and training with the submarine HMS Token. During this period, the submarine L23 collided with Sans Peur, punching a hole in the side of the ship at Reed's Point, New Brunswick. As the Royal Canadian Navy's budget shrank in the postwar era Sans Peur was deemed surplus. The vessel was paid off the following year on 31 January 1947 and put up for sale. [17]

Sans Peur was purchased by Maple Leaf Steamships of Montreal on 6 June 1947 but in 1948, was sold again. Registered under a Panamanian flag by the owners, Equipment & Supply Company from New York City, the ship reverted to its original name Trenora. The vessel sailed for the Mediterranean Sea, stopping in Gibraltar where Trenora was reconverted to a yacht by its original builders. Trenora was then acquired by the Ravano family, a family with shipping interests from Genoa. Trenora was used by the family as their personal yacht but also put up for charter with the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Henry Ford and Count Marzotto all spending time aboard. In 1972, the yacht was put up for sale by the Ravano family and was acquired by Japanese buyers. They renamed the vessel Sans Peur and the yacht made its way out to Japan via the Panama Canal and Honolulu, Hawaii, arriving in May 1973. Shortly after the ship's arrival in Japan, it was sold to Hatsubaichi Kanko of Hiroshima. In mid-1975, Sans Peur was used as VIP accommodations during the Ocean Olympics at Okinawa. [13] [18]

Notes

  1. Macpherson & Barrie give the commissioning date as 5 May 1940.

Citations

  1. 1 2 3 4 McKee 1983, pp. 84–86.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Miramar Ship Index.
  3. 1 2 Macpherson & Barrie 2002, p. 210.
  4. Popular Mechanics.
  5. McKee 1983, pp. 53, 84–86.
  6. 1 2 McKee 1983, pp. 90–91, 97, 110.
  7. 1 2 Douglas, Sarty & Whitby 2002, p. 55.
  8. McKee 1983, p. 103.
  9. 1 2 McKee 1983, pp. 103, 110–111.
  10. Douglas, Sarty & Whitby 2002, p. 208.
  11. Douglas, Sarty & Whitby 2002, pp. 353, 356.
  12. Douglas, Sarty & Whitby 2002, p. 352.
  13. 1 2 3 4 5 Macpherson & Barrie 2002, p. 211.
  14. 1 2 McKee 1983, pp. 85, 111.
  15. McKee 1983, p. 145.
  16. McKee 1983, pp. 153–154.
  17. McKee 1983, p. 154.
  18. McKee 1983, p. 164.

Related Research Articles

HMCS <i>Florence</i> Royal Canadian Navy patrol vessel

HMCS Florence was a commissioned patrol vessel of the Royal Canadian Navy that served in the First World War. Originally launched as the yacht Czarina, she was acquired by John Craig Eaton in 1910 and renamed Florence. Following the outbreak of war, Eaton donated the yacht to the Royal Canadian Navy. The ship had a short career and proved unsuitable for navy work and was paid off in September 1916. The vessel was subsequently sold to buyers in Martinique, and was reportedly lost in the Caribbean Sea in January 1917.

HMCS <i>Grilse</i>

HMCS Grilse was a commissioned patrol boat of the Royal Canadian Navy during the First World War. Launched in 1912 as the private yacht Winchester of the American industrialist Peter Rouss, the vessel was constructed along the lines of a contemporary Royal Navy torpedo boat destroyer. After the outbreak of war, vessels that could be used by belligerents was prohibited by the government of the then-neutral United States. Canadian millionaire J. K. L. Ross purchased Winchester and returned to Canada with the yacht, where he transferred ownership of the vessel to the Royal Canadian Navy. Renamed Grilse, a pseudonym for Atlantic salmon and converted to a patrol boat, the vessel was deployed as part of Canada's east coast patrol combating the German submarine threat. After the war, she was sold back to private interests, re-converted to a yacht and renamed Trillora. Trillora foundered in 1938 at Long Island, New York during a hurricane.

HMCS <i>Hochelaga</i>

HMCS Hochelaga was a commissioned patrol vessel of the Royal Canadian Navy (RCN) that served in World War I and postwar until 1920. Hochelaga is a historic name associated with Canada, the voyages of Jacques Cartier, and the city of Montreal. Initially constructed as the yacht Waturus in 1900 in Europe, the vessel was sold to an American in 1902. The ship was acquired in 1914 for use as a patrol vessel on the East Coast of Canada. Following World War I, the vessel became a ferry between Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia. After World War II the ship was renamed HaChayal Ha'Ivri and used for illegal Jewish immigration to Palestine. The vessel was scrapped in 1950.

HMCS <i>Ambler</i>

HMCS Ambler was an armed yacht that was acquired by the Royal Canadian Navy during the Second World War as a patrol and training vessel. Constructed in 1922, Ambler was under private ownership until 1940 when the vessel was requisitioned for service in the Royal Canadian Navy. Initially used as a patrol vessel, Ambler was used as a training vessel until 1945. Following the war, Ambler was sold to private interests.

USS <i>Sabalo</i> (SP-225) Patrol vessel of the United States Navy

The first USS Sabalo (SP-225) was a United States Navy patrol vessel in commission from 1917 to 1919. Following World War I, Sabalo was sold to private interests before returning to service as a patrol vessel in World War II, this time with the Royal Canadian Navy, renamed Cougar. Returning to private ownership following the war, the vessel sank in a hurricane in 1950.

HMCS <i>Raccoon</i>

HMCS Raccoon was an armed yacht that served in the Royal Canadian Navy during World War II. Purchased by the Royal Canadian Navy in 1940, the ship was originally known as the yacht Halonia. Used as a patrol vessel and convoy escort, the ship was sunk by the German submarine U-165 in the St. Lawrence River on 7 September 1942. Raccoon was escorting Convoy QS-33 at the time. The entire ship's crew was lost.

HMCS Courtenay was a Bangor-class minesweeper constructed for the Royal Canadian Navy during the Second World War. Entering service in 1942, Courtenay spent the entire war on the West Coast of Canada. The vessel was decommissioned in 1945 and sold for mercantile service in 1946. The fate of the vessel is uncertain.

HMCS Grandmère was a Bangor-class minesweeper constructed for the Royal Canadian Navy during the Second World War. Entering service in 1941, the minesweeper took part in the Battle of the Atlantic and the Battle of the St. Lawrence before being taken out of service in 1945. The ship was sold for mercantile service following the war, first as the yacht Elda and then the cargo ship Jacks Bay. The ship was sold for scrap in 1968.

HMCS Georgian was a Bangor-class minesweeper constructed for the Royal Canadian Navy during the Second World War. Primarily used as a convoy escort in the Battle of the Atlantic and the Battle of the St. Lawrence, the minesweeper had the misfortune of mistakenly sinking the British submarine HMS P514 off the coast of Newfoundland. Georgian also saw service in European waters, taking part in the invasion of Normandy. Following the war the ship was discarded and sold for scrap.

HMCS Quatsino was a Bangor-class minesweeper constructed for the Royal Canadian Navy during the Second World War. Entering service in 1941, the minesweeper spent the entire war on the West Coast of Canada. Following the war, the vessel was sold for mercantile conversion in 1947 and renamed Chen Hsin. In 1950 the merchant ship was sold and renamed Concord before being broken up for scrap in 1951.

HMCS Lockeport was a Bangor-class minesweeper initially constructed for the Royal Navy during the Second World War. Loaned to the Royal Canadian Navy in 1942, the minesweeper saw service on both coasts of Canada as a patrol vessel and convoy escort. Returned to the Royal Navy in 1945, Lockeport was discarded in 1948.

HMCS Kelowna was a Bangor-class minesweeper constructed for the Royal Canadian Navy during the Second World War. Entering service in 1942, the minesweeper spent the entire war on the West Coast of Canada, mainly as a patrol vessel. Following the war, Kelowna was sold for mercantile conversion. Renamed Hung Hsin and Condor, the final disposition of the vessel is disputed.

HMCS Swift Current was a Bangor-class minesweeper that served with the Royal Canadian Navy during the Second World War. Entering service in 1941, the warship used as a training ship and convoy escort and took part in the battles of the St. Lawrence and the Atlantic. Following the war the ship was laid up until reacquired during the Korean War. Never re-entering service with Canada, Swift Current was sold to the Turkish Navy in 1958. Renamed Bozcaada, the minesweeper was discarded in 1971.

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 Otter was an armed yacht in service with the Royal Canadian Navy during World War II. Launched in 1921, the vessel was constructed as Nourmahal for Vincent Astor of New York as a pleasure yacht. He sold the vessel in the late 1920s and it was renamed Conseco. The Royal Canadian Navy, finding a lack of suitable vessels in Canadian ownership to be taken into naval service, sent Canadian yacht owners south to the United States to find those vessels. Conseco was acquired and brought north to Halifax, Nova Scotia where the vessel was converted to an armed yacht in 1940. Renamed Otter the ship participated in the Battle of the Atlantic, escorting convoys and patrolling the Canadian coast. On 26 March 1941, Otter suffered a catastrophic fire aboard that sank the armed yacht. Two officers and seventeen ratings died in the incident.

HMCS Grizzly was an armed yacht acquired by the Royal Canadian Navy during World War II for coastal patrol and anti-submarine defence. Constructed in 1909 as Machigonne, a yacht for William L. Douglas, the vessel was purchased by the United States Navy in 1917 for use as a patrol ship on the United States East Coast during World War I and named USS Machigonne (SP-507). Following the end of the war, Machigonne was demobilised and returned to service as a yacht.

HMCS <i>Wolf</i>

HMCS Wolf was an armed yacht of the Royal Canadian Navy during World War II that saw service on the British Columbia Coast of Canada. Constructed in 1915 as the yacht Wenowah, with the US entry into World War I, the vessel was taken into United States Navy service as USS Wenonah (SP-165) as a patrol ship. The vessel escorted convoys between the United States and Europe and between Gibraltar and Bizerte, Tunis and Genoa, Italy. After the war, Wenonah was loaned to the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey for three and a half years before being sold to private interests in 1928. In private ownership, the vessel was renamed at least twice, including Stranger and Blue Water.

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.

References