
Corvette HMCS Chambly in Halifax,
April 1941. Commissioned
at Quebec City 18 December 1940,
Chambly participated in escort
missions and trained other corvettes
for the duration of the war. |
| Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-105255. |
|
To meet its urgent need for patrol and
escort vessels, the British Admiralty decided
to build a smaller ship, developed by naval
engineer William Reed and based on a whaling
boat design. The "Patrol Vessel - Whaler
Type" could be constructed rapidly
and in large numbers. Satisfied with the
design but unhappy with the name, Sir Winston
Churchill chose a shorter and more warlike
name, the corvette, after a sailboat of
old.
A corvette's shape and equipment being quite
similar to that of a merchant ship, Canada
was able to commission existing shipyards
on the Atlantic or Pacific coasts, and along
the St. Lawrence down to the Great Lakes,
to build corvettes. Contracts were signed
for the production of 64 corvettes in 1939-1940.
The following years, 43 more were built
by Canadian shipyards. They were called
Flower class corvettes, as the first ones,
supplied to the Royal Navy received flower
names (Eyebright, Fennel, Hepatica). Later
on, the Royal Canadian Navy (RCN) chose
to give them names of Canadian cities (Chilliwack,
Napanee, Saskatoon, Levis), although the
term Flower class remained in use.

A
sheet of sea water splashes over
a crew member on HMCS Trillium,
September 1943. |
| Photo
by Jacques Trépanier. Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-037474. |
|
With a length of 62.5 metres and a displacement
of 950 tonnes, the first corvettes carried
five officers and a crew of some 70 men.
They were admirably seaworthy and able to
withstand the worst North Atlantic storms.
That did not make the corvette a comfortable
ship: as soon as the sea gets choppy, corvettes
tend to roll and pitch wildly. The fo'c'sle
is too short to prevent sheets of water
from crashing down on the deck, and the
men cannot leave their mess without getting
drenched. When the weather is bad, water
is everywhere.
"The corvettes
spent monotonous months plodding back and
forth across the trackless waste of grey
seas that were never at rest. To the men
who sailed in these ships came a great weariness
from the relentless watches, the untempting
food, and the constant, chafing motion."
-
Lieutenant William Pugsley, excerpts from
Saints, Devils and Ordinary Seamen

On
23 October 1944, four days after
being commissioned in Kingston,
revised Flower class corvette
HMCS Belleville pays a visit to
her namesake city. The RCN encourages
such courtesy calls to foster
patriotic feelings in the population. |
| Photo
by Richard G. Arless. Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-136925. |
|
Corvettes were not ideal to detect and
attack U-boats. Equipped with reciprocating
piston steam engines because Canadian shipyards
did not have the technical expertise to
produce high-performance engines, their
speed was limited to 16 knots, i.e. they
were slower than U-boats. In addition, they
navigated with unreliable magnetic compasses
and their detection systems were limited
to the ASDIC.
Throughout the war, corvettes will have
to be modified to extend the fo'c'sle, improve
detection systems and armament. The later
Canadian-built Flower class corvettes benefited
from those upgrades.
"During the
summer of 1943, Rimouski had her focsle
extended at the Mersey Pulp and Paper
Co. at Liverpool, Nova Scotia. At the
same time she received many other improvements,
including the fitting of Type 271 radar,
moving the foremast abaft the bridge,
removing the mainmast and completely re-arranging
the compass platform, asdic hut and chart-room.
She came out a vastly better ship than
when she went in. When I assumed command,
the ship's company consisted of six officers
and about seventy men. Now we had two
additional officers, an engineer officer
and, of all things, a medical officer,
to go with our fine new sick bay. We had
somewhere between eighty and eighty five
men."
- R.J. Pickford,
RCNVR, captain of HMCS Rimouski (from
Salty Dips, vol. 2, p. 103)
To serve aboard a corvette required unflinching
courage and tenacity, as demonstrated by
the glorious deeds of Canadian sailors escorting
merchant convoys. The corvette remains the
symbol of the Royal Canadian Navy's relentless
fight against enemy submarines during WWII.
Nowadays there is only one Canadian corvette
still maintained in her original state,
HMCS Sackville.
| Flower
class Corvette |
| |
1939-1940 |
Revised,
1941-1944 |
| Length |
62.5
m |
63.4
m |
| Width
|
10
m |
10
m |
| Displacement |
950
tonnes |
970
tonnes |
| Maximum
Speed |
16
knots |
16
knots |
| Armament |
One
4-inch (100 mm) gun at the fore, Two
.50-caliber machine gunsTwo Lewis .303-caliber
machine-guns40 depth charges, launchers
on both sides, rail at the stern |
One
4-inch (100 mm) gun at the fore,One
2-pound pom-pom gun Two Oerlikon 20-mm
guns, 70 depth charges, launchers on
both sides, rails at the sternOne Hedgehog |
| Crew |
5
officers, 70 men |
7
officers, 80 men |
|