HMCS Moose Jaw (K164)


HMCS Moose Jaw, circa 1941.
Career (Canada)
Name: HMCS Moose Jaw
Namesake: Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan
Builder: Collingwood Shipyards Ltd., Collingwood
Laid down: 12 August 1940
Launched: 9 April 1941
Commissioned: 19 June 1941
Decommissioned: 8 July 1945
Identification: Pennant number: K164
Honours and
awards:
Atlantic 1941-43
English Channel 1944-45
Normandy 1944
Fate: Scrapped in September 1949 in Canada.
General characteristics
Class and type: Flower-class corvette
Displacement: 925 long tons (940 t; 1,036 ST)
Length: 205 ft (62.48 m) o/a
Beam: 33 ft (10.06 m)
Draught: 11.5 ft (3.51 m)
Propulsion:
  • single shaft
  • 2 x fire tube Scotch boilers
  • 1 x 4-cycle triple-expansion reciprocating steam engine
  • 2,750 ihp (2,050 kW)
Speed: 16 knots (29.6 km/h)
Range: 3,500 nautical miles (6,482 km) at 12 knots (22.2 km/h)
Complement: 85
Sensors and
processing systems:
  • 1 × SW1C or 2C radar
  • 1 × Type 123A or Type 127DV sonar
Armament:

HMCS Moose Jaw was a Royal Canadian Navy Flower-class corvette which took part in convoy escort duties during World War II, and together with HMCS Chambly achieved the RCN's first U-boat kill of the war.

She was laid down at Collingwood Shipyards Ltd., Collingwood on 12 August 1940 and launched on 9 April 1941. She was commissioned into the RCN two months later on 19 June.

Contents

Wartime service

Moose Jaw was decommissioned from the RCN on 8 July 1945 and scrapped in September 1949 in Canada.

Quote

"Because the U-boats were operating against a slow-moving target it was to their advantage to break wireless silence in order to call in a gaggle of their friends and mount what they called a wolf-pack attack. Their system of attack was to concentrate ahead of the convoy at nightfall and allow the convoy to come to them while they saved the charge in their batteries. In one very serious battle, that connected with the convoy SC 42, it happened that two of my Newfoundland vessels had a week to spare and they were allowed to go on a training jaunt along the possible convoy routes in the vicinity of the East coast of Greenland, where U-boats were liable to be found, and by good luck, were in a position to reinforce the escort group involved. They joined the Convoy just at late dusk, coming down from ahead. In fact they came from outside the position of the U-boats waiting to attack. The U-boats had no eyes for anything but the Convoy ahead and did not expect attack from behind them. In this way the “Chambly” and “Moose Jaw” killed the RCN’s first U-boat” - Leonard W. Murray, Commander-in-Chief, Canadian Northwest Atlantic, 1943-1945[1]

References

Notes
  1. ^ Notes prepared by Murray for CBC interview in 1967, Library and Archives of Canada, Admiral Murray papers, Collection MG30 E207
Bibliography

External links