HMS Vancouver (1917)


As HMS Vancouver
Career (United Kingdom)
Name: HMS Vancouver
Launched: 28 December 1917
Out of service: March 1947
Honours and
awards:
  • "Dunkirk 1940"
  • "Arctic 1944-5".
Fate: Sold for scrap
General characteristics (see below)
Class and type: V class destroyer
Type: destroyer
Armament:

4 QF 4-inch (102-mm) Mk.V L/45 guns, mount P Mk.I
1 QF 3-inch (76-mm) 20 cwt Mk.I anti-aircraft gun, mount HA Mk.II

4 (2x2) tubes for 21-inch torpedoes

HMS Vancouver was a British V class destroyer. She was launched on 28 December 1917; in July 1922 she accidentally rammed the submarine H24. She was renamed HMS Vimy in April 1928. She served with distinction during World War II, earning two battle honours and damaging or sinking three enemy submarines. The Royal Navy retired her in 1945 and she was scrapped in 1948.

Contents

Service during World War II

On 6 February 1940, Vimy rescued the sole survivor of a crew of four from an Avro Anson that had crashed into the sea while escorting a convoy.

In May 1940 she participated in the Dunkirk evacuation. Anticipating the need, the Royal Navy had sent 200 seaman and marines aboard Vimy, to organise the port of Boulogne. At one point, U-60 fired at her but without result as the torpedoes were faulty. On 27 May, small arms fire from the shore wounded Lieutenant-Commander Colin George Walter Donald, RN, her captain; he then left the bridge without returning while her first lieutenant, A.P.W. Northby, RN, took temporary command. Later, the crew searched the entire vessel for Donald, without result.

On 1 June, Vimy collided with and sank the yacht Amulree in the Gull Channel, to the west of the Goodwin Sands. That same day an air attack caused some damage. During the evacuation of Dunkirk, Vimy transported 2976 troops; for her efforts she received the battle honours "Dunkirk 1940".

In 1941 she was reconstructed to Long Range Escort, the work being finished in June 1941. On 21 September 1941, depth charges from Vimy (Lt.Cdr. H.G.D. de Chair, RN), damaged the Italian Marconi class submarine Luigi Torelli, which was attempting to attack convoy HG 73, west of Gibraltar.

On 3 September 1942, depth charges from the British destroyers Vimy, HMS Pathfinder (Commander E.A. Gibbs, DSO and Bar, RN), and HMS Quentin (Lt.Cdr. A.H.P. Noble, DSC, RN), sank the German submarine U-162 in the mid-Atlantic north-east of Trinidad, in position 12º21'N, 59º29'W. The U-Boat had had a particularly successful year to that point, having sunk 14 vessels totaling 82,000 tons. Lt.Cmdr. de Chair received the DSC for this action. All but three of the submarine's crew survived to be taken prisoner. Its captain, Jürgen Wattenberg, went on to organize a break from the POW camp at Papago Park, in Arizona.

On 18 September, Vimy rescued survivors from the US merchantman SS West Lashaway, which U-66 had sunk on 30 August.

On 4 February 1943, Vimy (Lt.Cdr. Richard Been Stannard, VC, RNR) and HMS Beverley, using HF/DF, located U-187, which was shadowing convoy SC-118 in the North Atlantic, south of Greenland at the exit of the Baffin Bay. Depth charges from the three destroyers sank the submarine 966 km (600 mi) south-east of Cape Farewell, Greenland. U-187 was on her first cruise and had not had any successes. Nine of her crew members perished, including the commander, during the sinking but Vimy and Beverley rescued forty-five. Stannard received a DSO for Vimy's contribution to breaking up the U-boat pack hunting SC-118.

Fate

Vimy was no longer listed as an active unit in the July 1945 Navy list. She was sold for scrap in March 1947 and was scrapped at Rosyth in February 1948.

References

External links