HMS Petersham (M2718)

History
United Kingdom
Name: HMS Petersham
Namesake: Petersham
Builder: H. McLean, Renfrew
Launched: 12 January 1955
Completed: 9 March 1955
Fate: transferred to France on completion, 1955
France
Name: Capucine (M782)
Acquired: 1955
Commissioned: 24 June 1955
Decommissioned: April 1984
Struck: 1985
Fate: dismantled at Brest
General characteristics
Class and type: Ham-class minesweeper
Notes: Pennant number(s): M2718 / IMS55

HMS Petersham was a Ham-class minesweeper of the Royal Navy.

Their names were all chosen from villages ending in -ham. The minesweeper was named after Petersham in Surrey.[1]

Petersham was one of fifteen Ham Class minesweepers commissioned for the French Navy.

Unimaginatively re-christened with its hull number; M782 it was not until 22 February 1964 that the vessel was renamed Capucine, (Nasturtium), following the floral naming theme of the group.

Based at Cherbourg, she saw active service on national and multi-national operations. In 1960 she was moved to Paris and in the late '60's was mothballed back at Cherbourg. In the 1970s she was brought out of reserve, re-purposed as a training vessel and, in 1973, re-classified as an auxiliary vessel.

Capucine was taken out of service in April 1984, the Ham class training ships being replaced by eight new Leopard class vessels. In September 1984 she was relocated to the naval cemetery at Landévennec with her siblings. In 1985 she was sold for scrap and dismantled at Brest.[2]

References

  1. Blackman, Raymond V.B., ed. (1953). Jane's Fighting Ships 1952-53.
  2. "Dragueur de mines Capucine" [Minesweeper Capucine] (in French). Retrieved 8 December 2012.



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