Créole (Q193)
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Model of the Africaine (Q196), sister-ship of the Créole |
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Career (France) | |
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Name: | Créole |
Namesake: | "Creol" |
Builder: | Le Havre |
Laid down: | 1937 |
Launched: | 8 June 1940 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: | Aurore class submarine |
Displacement: |
900 tonnes surfaced |
Length: | 73.5 metres |
Beam: | 6.5 metres |
Draught: | 4.2 metres |
Propulsion: |
Diesel: 3000 shp (2237 KW) |
Speed: |
15 knots surfaced |
Range: |
5600 nm a 10 knots |
Test depth: | 100 m |
Armament: |
1 x 100 mm deck gun |
The Créole ("Creol") was an Aurore class submarine of the French navy.
The Créole was launched on 8 June 1940 at Le Havre. To avoid capture by the advancing German armies, the Créole, still unfinished, was towed to La Pallice, and on 18 June she was taken in tow from La Pallice to Swansea. On 1st July 1940, she was taken in British custody during Operation Catapult [1].
The Créole was completed after the war and commissioned in the French Navy on 1 April 1949. Her silhouette was departed from the pre-war design, with a modified sail and a schnorchel.
The Créole took part in the Suez Crisis, and sustained damage in a friendly fire incident with airplanes from the Arromanches.
On 23 March 1962, she collided with the Sidi Ferruch, off Toulon, severely damaging her sail plan.
She was eventually decommissioned and broken up in 1963.