HMCS Cape Breton (ARE 100)

Career
Name: HMS Flamborough Head
Builder: Burrard Dry Dock, Vancouver
Launched: 7 October 1944
Out of service: 1952
Honours and
awards:
Arctic 1944, Normandy 1944, Atlantic 1944-45
Fate: Sold to Canadian Government, 1952
Career
Name: HMCS Cape Breton (ARE 100)
Namesake: Cape Breton
Acquired: 31 January 1953
Fate: Sunk as artificial reef, 20 October 2001, near Nanaimo, Vancouver Island
General characteristics
Class and type: Cape-class maintenance ship
Displacement: 8,580 long tons (8,718 t)
Length: 134.7 m (441 ft 11 in)
Beam: 17.4 m (57 ft 1 in)
Draught: 6.1 m (20 ft)
Propulsion: Oil-fired triple expansion steam engines, 2 boilers, 1 shaft, 2,500 hp (1,864 kW)
Speed: 11 knots (20 km/h; 13 mph)
Complement: 270
Armament: 16 × 20 mm guns
Aircraft carried: can handle Sikorsky H04-S
Aviation facilities: helicopter pad

HMCS Cape Breton (ARE 100) was a RCN Cape-class escort maintenance ship. Originally built for the Royal Navy as HMS Flamborough Head in 1944 she was transferred in 1952.

Contents

Construction

Flamborough Head (pennant F88) was one of the 21 Beachy Head class repair ships.[1]

Royal Canadian Navy

It was transferred to the Royal Canadian Navy in 1952 and served till 1975. It was used as a floating machine shop until the late 1990s. Except for a short section of the stern and her engines, which will comprise a significant portion of the Maritime Museum in North Vancouver BC, it was sunk in the waters of British Columbia in 2001 by the Artificial Reef Society of British Columbia after extensive cleaning to meet Environment Canada requirements. It now lies near Snake Island in Nanaimo harbour and is a popular scuba diving site.

Canadian Forces Maritime Command

Fleet Maintenance Facility Cape Breton was formed in 1996 at CFB Esquimalt from the amalgamation of three shore-based units: Ship Repair Unit (Pacific), Naval Engineering Unit (Pacific), and Fleet Maintenance Group (Pacific). FMF Cape Breton took its name from HMCS Cape Breton.

Ship's Bell

The Christening Bells Project at Canadian Forces Base Esquimalt Naval and Military Museum includes information from the ship's bell of HMCS Cape Breton (2nd) 1959 - 1993, which was used for baptism of babies onboard ship 1959 - 1971. The bell is currently held by the CFB Esquimalt Naval & Military Museum, Esquimalt, BC. [2]

References

Notes
Bibliography