HMCS Champlain (1919)

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Champlain circa. 1932
Career (United Kingdom)
Name: HMS Torbay
Namesake: Torbay
Builder: Thorneycroft
Decommissioned: 1928
Fate: Transferred to RCN
Career (Canada)
Name: HMCS Champlain
Acquired: 1 March 1928
Decommissioned: 1937
General characteristics
Class & type: Thornycroft S-class destroyer
Displacement: 1,087 tons
Length: 276 ft (84 m)
Beam: 27.5 ft (8.4 m)
Draught: 10.5 ft (3.2 m)
Speed: 30 knots (56 km/h; 35 mph)
Crew: 90
Armament: 3 x QF 4-inch (101.6 mm) Mark IV guns
1 x 12 pounder
2 × twin tubes for 21-inch (530 mm) torpedo tubes

HMCS Champlain was a Thornycroft S-class destroyer, formerly HMS Torbay built for the Royal Navy in 1917-19.

This ship, along with her sister Toreador, were donated by the British Government to Canada in March 1928 to replace their two existing destroyers, HMCS Patrician and HMCS Patriot.[1] At the same time the Canadian Government commissioned the construction of two further destroyers, Saguenay and Skeena.[2] During the 1930s the Champlain served on the east coast of Canada alongside the Saguenay.[3]

The ship and her sister HMCS Vancouver were paid off and broken up in 1937.[4]


Notes

  1. German (1990), p. 59.
  2. "3". Canadian Forces Logistics Branch Handbook 1. Canadian Forces Logistic Branch. Retrieved 2008-08-11. 
  3. German (1990), p. 62.
  4. German (1990), p. 62.

References

  • German, Tony (1990). The Sea is at our Gates—The History of the Canadian Navy. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart Press. 
  • "Admiralty 'S' Type". Canadian Navy of Yesterday and Today. Retrieved July 21, 2013. 



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