NAC NEWS – EDITION K369 HMCS West York
Your weekly national and international naval news for the week of August 7th 2020
Edition – K369 HMCS West York (Revised Flower Class Corvette)
Rod Hughes – Editor NAC News rhughes@shaw.ca (comments welcome to help improve this service)
Contact David Soule executivedirector-nac@outlook.com if you wish someone (who may be a member or perhaps a good candidate to join) to be added to the NAC News email distribution.
★ Editor’s stars of the week
Keep in touch with the NAC
If you are receiving NAC News, but are not a member, please consider joining NAC https://www.navalassoc.ca/branches/joining-membership-renewal/
Link to Starshell Magazine https://www.navalassoc.ca/naval-affairs/starshell/
Other Interesting Web Sites https://www.navalassoc.ca/naval-affairs/links/
Archived weekly NAC New Links https://www.navalassoc.ca/naval-affairs/nac-news/
TWITTER @navalassn
Should you wish to donate or leave a memorial – NAC Endowment Fund
NAC reference to assist veterans and/or seniors is located at Veteran’s Corner
Keep in touch with the RCN
TWITTER @RoyalCanNavy @MarineRoyaleCan
@Comd_MARPAC @MARPAC @RCN_MARLANT #RCNavy or #MarineRC
YouTube Royal Canadian Navy or Marine royale canadienne
flickr Royal Canadian Navy / Marine royale canadienne
vimeo https://vimeo.com/thenavylamarine
NOTICES
- Navy Bike Ride 2020 – Battle of the Atlantic Challenge: This is a virtual event and you can register thru the summer. The event runs 13 June to 30 August 2020. Check it out! While the original one-day ride event was cancelled, this virtual bike ride event is a great opportunity to support your Navy, support their charities of choice and keep fit. Check it out! Your NAC will be a sponsor – an Orca class sponsor! And it’s free! (but do feel free to step up and buy the tee and while you are at it – donate to their charities of choice!)
- Vanguard Launches First-Ever Canadian Submarine Event (Editor – The next big RCN procurement challenge! The Deep Blue 2020 Forum, a one-day event, will take place on 29 October 2020, details to follow)
___________________________________
CANADA
- Canada’s first Arctic and Offshore Patrol Ship, HMCS Harry DeWolf (Editor – MND in this 2:17 min video and a look at the Commissioning Ceremony in a one minute video)
- Allies testing naval readiness in Canada’s Arctic
- Military police couldn’t find enough evidence to lay charge in Mark Norman document case
- Dr. Bonnie Henry’s military roots
- Thales Delivers In-Service Support for HMCS Harry DeWolf
- COVID-19 blamed for delay on Arctic military port first promised in 2007
- Quebec shipyard is setting up an Arctic icebreaking research centre
- B.C.’s highest honour recognizes 13 British Columbians Editor – John Horton one of our NAC member recognized)
- 9 August 1945…now the 75th anniversary of Lt Hampton (Hammy) Gray’s last battle
___________________________________
USA & AMERICAS
- USNI News Fleet and Marine Tracker: Aug. 3, 2020
- US must increase shipbuilding to keep up with competitors: US senator
- Report to Congress on Chinese Naval Modernization
- Pentagon Justifies Need for First New Nuke in Decades With Rare Critique of Current Weapons
- Sub Base Kings Bay Keeping Current Ohio Subs Ready, Prepping for Incoming Columbia Class
- Ten Performance Gains the Ford-Class Carrier Will Deliver That a Nimitz Never Can
- Marines Identify 9 Killed in AAV Sinking Off California, 2 Marines Still Hospitalized and Navy, Marines Locate Sunken AAV, Human Remains
- VAW-120 Conducts E-2D Tracer Carrier Qualifications on USS Gerald R. Ford
- MDA to Use Destroyer USS John Finn for Defense-of-Hawaii Missile Intercept Test
- Cutter Legare Offloads Nearly 5,000 Pounds of Interdicted Drugs
- Columbia SSBN Program Doing Land-Based Testing to Avoid Past Shipbuilding Mistakes
- US Navy prepares major surge of littoral combat ship deployments
- US Navy’s 1st Black female tactical air pilot set to get her wings
- US Navy awards contract to Halter Marine for auxiliary general ocean surveillance ship T-AGOS X
- New USS ENTERPRISE (CVN-80) !!! Here’s Next Generation Aircraft Carrier After USS John F. Kennedy
- Big, Ugly Dock Ship Could Replace The U.S. Navy’s Burned-Up ‘Bonhomme Richard’
- U.S. House Appropriations Bill Includes $389 Million for New TAMUG Training Ship
- US Cruising Pause Extended through October
___________________________________
INDO-PACIFIC
- China, Japan island dispute in new sharper focus
- Make in India: Indian and Turkish shipyards close contract for building FSS ships for the Indian Navy
- Taiwan sends marines to reinforce South China Sea outpost amid reports of major PLA landing drill
- PT Caputra Mitra Sejati launches two more PC-40 patrol boats for Indonesian Navy
- PH a ‘legitimate target’ if US bases return in Subic – Navy chief
- Duterte bans exercises with US in South China Sea
- New Zealand at the centre of big power play (Editor –New Zealand has an unexpectedly complex maritime domain described in this 12:04 min video)
- China Builds Surveillance Network in South China Sea
- Taiwan Launches 1st Mine Laying Ship For ROC Navy
- USS Rafael Peralta joins partners for multinational group sail
- Navantia-Built AOR vessel ‘Supply’ intented for Royal Australian Navy starts sea trials
- CIMSEC: Sea Control 192 – IUU fishing and fishing policy in the South China Sea (Editor – 35:03 podcast)
- Report: Crane collapses at Indian shipbuilding yard, 11 dead
- Three Cranes Collapse at India’s Largest Container Port
___________________________________
EUROPE
- Russian MoD: Tsirkon Hypersonic Missile, Poseidon Nuclear Torpedo Trials Close To Completion
- Britain’s New Type 26 Frigate Is Going to Be Amazing (Editor – 2:24 min video)
- New Offshore Patrol Vessel HMS Trent joins fleet
- Russia has several thousand nuclear objects dumped on its Arctic sea floor. Now, the most dangerous will be removed
- Arctic Sea Ice Shrank to Record Lows in July
- next-generation weapons for uk future submarine (Editor – 8:05 min video on SLBMs)
- Carrier HMS Princes of Wales to be used as ‘drone testbed’
- Russian Navy Udaloy-Class Destroyer Vice-Admiral Kulakov Sails to Bay of Biscay
- The Renewed Tupolev Tu 22M Backfire Bomber Threat to the U.S. Navy (Editor – the Cold War Backfire threat is resurrected as explained in this 10:24 min video)
- Amur Shipyard Lays Keel Of 16th Karakurt-Class Corvette ‘Pavlovsk’ For Russian Navy
- Naval Group, French Navy progress Barracuda SSN to weapons systems trials
- Russia’s Project 23900 LHD To Operate As Command Ship
- French Navy Starts Trials Of Variable Depth Sonar Aboard Loire-Class Offshore Support Vessel
- British Coast Guard to Trial Camcopter VTOL UAV for Unmanned SAR Missions
___________________________________
MIDDLE EAST
- Beirut Blast Caused by Ammonium Nitrate Seized from Cargo Ship and
- Beirut blast: 4 Bangladeshis killed, 21 Bangladesh Navy crew injured (Editor – OMG, I don’t recall this scenario in my Officer of the Day preps) and Beirut explosion: Drone footage captures extent of the damage in the city’s devastated port area (Editor – silent 9:48 min video but graphically telling) and one more Beirut Blast: Two Killed on Orient Queen Cruise Ship Docked Near Explosion, Ship Sinks
- ★ Iran Blows Up Gigantic U.S. Carrier Mock-Up during a Naval Exercise Drill and Iran Accidentally Sinks Fake Aircraft Carrier In Wrong Place
- A rare close up look at the Israeli Navy (Editor – interesting 6:51 min video)
- Barakah: UAE starts up Arab world’s first nuclear plant
_______________________________
GLOBAL INTERESTS
- Population decline: A coming global crisis (Editor – a rework of a recent non-maritime article but its implications are far reaching)
- CIMSEC: implications of hybrid warfare for the order of the oceans (Editor – great explanation)
- Study: Shipping’s emissions could increase by 50 % until 2050 if left unchecked
_______________________________
SCUTTLEBUTT
- Wolfpack & U-Boat Tactics – How U-boats decimated Allied Convoys (Editor – post the Greyhound movie here is an interesting 20:12 min video from the German perspective)
- Inside a Nuclear Submarine USS Nautilus at Submarine Force Museum (4K) (Editor – special museum shown in this 11:17 min video)
- Hiroshima 1945 – The British Atomic Attack (Editor – not a naval story but interesting in this 15:28 min video)
- Asian Stalingrad – The Battle of Manila 1945 (Editor – a horrific story with a strange naval involvement explained in this 22:14 min video)
__________________________________
SIGNIFICANT RCN DATES – AUGUST
(If you see any omissions or errors please inform me, and any more modern significant dates are also welcomed. The list draws primarily from the Directory of History and Heritage’s comprehensive “Significant Dates in Canadian Military History”, the now defunct “Canada Channel”, “Legion Magazine”, Roger Litwiller’s excellent web site, the encyclopedic guidance from Fraser McKee, and anywhere else I can find credible information.)
- 1 August 1910 HMCS Rainbow is commissioned at Portsmouth, England, as the first warship in the RCN.
- 1 August 1959 The RCN is presented with Queens Colours by Her Royal Highness Queen Elizabeth II in Halifax.
- 3 August 1942 RCN Corvette HMCS Sackville sinks U-boat in Atlantic; one of four RCN kills in five weeks. North Atlantic.
- 4 August 1914 War is declared between Great Britain and Germany. Canada is automatically at war with Germany as well.
- 5 August 1914 Two submarines, later designated CC-1 and CC-2, are purchased for the RCN by the Premier of British Columbia in Seattle, Washington.
- 5 August 1944 HMCS Iroquois commanded by Cdr James C. Hibbard, DSC, RCN, with HMCS Haida commanded by Cdr Harry G. DeWolf, DSO, RCN, and other allied forces, sank German minesweepers M-263 and M-486.
- 6 August 1942 RCN destroyer HMCS Assiniboine commanded by A/LCDR John H. Stubbs, RCN, pursues and rams German submarine U-210 in the fog, finally sinking her with a 4.7 inch shell. North Atlantic.
- 7 August 1975 Pierre Trudeau announces that Canada will seek agreement to set up 370 km (200-mile) economic coastal zone.
- 8 August 1813 US Commodore Isaac Chauncey’s ships Hamilton and Scourge capsize in minutes in a heavy gale off Forty Mile Creek on Lake Ontario, and 53 sailors drown; the ships were putting on extra sail to escape British Captain James Yeo’s fleet, and sank from a shift in weight of the guns; largest loss of life suffered by the United States Navy in the war. Yeo did not see the disaster happen, and did not press his advantage.
- 8 August 1944 German U-boat U-667 torpedoes and sinks RCN Flower Class corvette HMCS Regina off Trevose Head, Cornwall, UK; thirty of her ship’s company are lost.
- 9 August 1945 Temporary Lt (RCNVR) Robert Hampton Gray VC, DSC was shot down and killed in a dive-bombing raid at Onagawa Wan as he attacked and sank a Japanese destroyer; serving with the Royal Navy as a Corsair pilot aboard HMS Formidable Gray he was one of the last Canadian known to have died In World War II; he was awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross. In 1989, in Sakiyami Park, Japan, Gray became the first member of the Allied Forces honored by the Japanese with a memorial.
- 9 August 1941 HMC Ships Assiniboine and Restigouche escort HMS Prince of Wales, with Prime Minister Winston Churchill aboard, into Placentia Bay, Newfoundland.
- 10 August 1813 Sir James Yeo’s forces capture American schooners USS Julia and USS Growler in an engagement near Twelve Mile Creek on Lake Ontario; the British rename the schooners Confiance and Hamilton and will use them as troop transports until Isaac Chauncey recaptures them near False Ducks Islands on 5 October. New York State.
- 10 August 1941 US President Franklin Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill have their second meeting at Placentia, on a British warship; four days later they will issue the Atlantic Charter setting forth eight goals for the world; a document that will serve as the basis for the United Nations Charter. Placentia Bay, Newfoundland.
- 10 August 1990 Canada to send three ships and 800 sailors to the Persian Gulf as part of multinational force to force Iraq to withdraw from Kuwait.
- 11 August 1954 HMCS Venture is commissioned in Esquimalt, British Columbia, as a naval cadet training establishment.
- 12 August 1814 Royal Navy Capt Alexander Hobbs, commanding 70 seamen and marines, attacks three U.S. armed schooners supporting Major General Jacob Brown’s Fort Erie campaign; masquerading as American supply boats, the British board and seize USS Somers and USS Ohio while USS Porcupineescapes; the vessels are renamed Huron and Sauk; last naval engagement on Lake Erie in the war.
- 12 August 1917 HMCS Shearwater and submarines CC-1 and CC-2 are the first Canadian warships to pass through the Panama Canal.
- 12 August 2010 HMCS Winnipeg intercepts a Thai ship, the MV Sun Sea carrying Tamil refugees from Sri Lanka, off the coast of British Columbia. BC.
- 13 August 1813 British schooner HMS Nancy discovered and trapped by a US squadron at the Nottawasaga River; Capt Lt Miller Worsley of the Royal Navy, warned of a close American presence, had the Nancy towed two miles up the river, where he built a blockhouse armed with two 24-pounder carronades and a 6-pounder gun from the schooner; his force consisted of 21 sailors, 23 Ojibwa and 9 French-Canadian voyageurs; the following day, 14 August, some American wood-cutting parties discovered the schooner’s hiding place, and Worsley was forced to scuttle the ship. Wasaga Beach, Ontario.
- 13 August 2010 The MV Sun Sea, carrying 490 Tamil migrants from Sri Lanka, is towed to the docks at CFB Esquimalt; the Thai cargo ship was intercepted off Vancouver Island on 12 August; the Tamils are moved to detention centres in the Vancouver area to await processing of their refugee claims.
- 14 August 1944 HMCS Iroquois commanded by CDR James C. Hibbard, DSC, RCN during a mixed melee ran German minesweeper M-385 aground.
- 14 August 1945 Japan offers its unconditional surrender.
- 14 August1946 11 Naval Reserve Air Squadrons authorized to be formed. Not all were ever established.
- 14 Aug 2008 Leading Seaman Robert Teodor Binder MB, of Mississauga was a member of the Canadian Forces Naval Reserve who was posthumously awarded the Medal of Bravery on 26 November 2010. The citation to his award notes that on the night of 14 August 2008, at the age of nineteen, he and two others repeatedly dove and performed CPR in order to rescue the occupants of a sinking car.
- 15 August 1827 Royal Navy Captain John Franklin lands at the entrance of the Rideau Canal, on his return down the Ottawa River from the Arctic, welcomed by Colonel By, he is escorted up to Barracks Hill (what is now Parliament Hill), then the encampment of the 71st Regiment. The following day, 16 Augiust, he will lay the foundation stone of the Ottawa Locks being built by Thomas Mackay. A reporter from the Montreal Herald witnessed the event: “I have this evening to communicate to you one of the most important events that ever occurred in the Canadas — an event which will doubtless form an era in the history of this country for ages to come. It was no less than the depositing of the first stone of the locks of the Rideau Canal… to the tap of MacKay’s trowel young Capt. Franklin put the one-and-one-quarter ton stone to bed while the garrison band played and loud “huzzas” went up from the excavation in a strange and wild setting.”
- 15 August 1944 HMC Ships Prince David and Prince Henry participate in the Allied landing in southern France, codenamed Operation Dragoon.
- 16 August 1956 HMCS Assiniboine is commissioned into the RCN as the first of the new St. Laurent class of destroyer escorts.
- 16 August 2011 Government announces that the name “Air Command” is being changed to the air force’s original historic name: Royal Canadian Air Force, and the name of Maritime Command to RCN to better reflect Canada’s military heritage and align Canada with other key Commonwealth countries whose military units use the royal designation.
- 17 August 1809 Construction of Admiral Horatio Nelson’s Monument begins; at the top of Jacques Cartier Square. Montréal, Québec
- 17 August 17, 1940 Mackenzie King meets Franklin D. Roosevelt for two-day conference at Ogdensburg to discuss North American Defence; will sign Ogdensburg Agreement on August 18 the parties will discuss modifying cash and carry principle for delivery of arms from US factories to Canadian forces; on August 18, the parties will agree to set up a Canadian-American Permanent Joint Board of Defence, composed of senior officials from both countries.
- 17 August 17, 1943 The first Quebec Conference (codenamed “QUADRANT”) – Mackenzie King hosts Franklin D. Roosevelt, Winston Churchill and the Combined Chiefs of Staff at the sixth Anglo-American War Conference, held at the Citadelle and in the Chateau Frontenac hotel; ends August 24, 1943; plans developed for Overlord, the 1944 landings in France; Churchill and Roosevelt also secretly signed the Quebec Agreement to share nuclear technology.
- 18 August 1833 Steamship Royal William leaves Pictou NS; will arrive in Gravesend September 11; the first vessel to cross the Atlantic under steam power.
- 18 August 1944 HMC Ships Ottawa II commanded by Cdr James D. Prentice, DSO, RCN, HMCS Kootenay commanded by A/LCdr William H. Wilson, RCN, and HMCS Chaudiere commanded by A/LCdr C. Patrick Nixon, RCN sank the German submarine U-621 while on patrol in the Bay of Biscay.
- 18 August 2005 HMCS Fredericton (FFH 337) deployed to the Canadian Arctic to prohibit illegal fishing and to reassert sovereignty in the North.
- 19 August 1914 World War I – Canada officially declares war on Germany and Austria-Hungary. Ottawa, Ontario
- 20 August 1942 HMC Ships Prince Robert, Prince Henry, Prince David, Dawson and Vancouver leave Esquimalt, British Columbia, to commence operations in the Bering Sea.
- 20 August 1944 HMC Ships Ottawa commanded by CDR James D. Prentice, DSO, RCN, HMCS Kootenay commanded by A/LCDR William H. Wilson, RCN, and HMCS Chaudiere commanded by A/LCdr C. Patrick Nixon, RCN sank the German submarine U-984 while on patrol in the English Channel – their second combined victory in three days.
- 21 August 1872 Chebucto Head Lighthouse starts operations, Halifax, Nova Scotia
- 21 August 1940 The Permanent Joint Board of Defence is established to co-ordinate Canadian and American activities relating to the defence of North America.
- 21 August 1944 HMCS Alberni is torpedoed and sunk by the German submarine U-480 in the English Channel. 59 of her ship’s company are lost.
- 22 August 1711 An English naval expedition against Quebec is wrecked on reefs north of Anticosti island.
- 22 August 1944 HMS Nabob, a British aircraft carrier but with a RCN crew, is torpedoed off Norway and severely damaged.
- 23 August 1953 HMCS Caribou is commissioned as a Naval Reserve Division in Cornerbrook, Newfoundland.
- 24 August 1949 North Atlantic Treaty goes into effect, with the parties agreeing that an armed attack against one country would be considered ‘an attack against them all.’ NATO created by Canada, the US and 10 European countries.
- 24 August 1957 Military – Wind class icebreaker HMCS Labrador under RCN Capt O.C.S. “Long Robbie” Robertson the first deep draught vessel to navigate Bellot Strait; will become the first ship to circumnavigate North America in a single voyage; transferred to the Department of Transport on 22 November 1957, and re-designated the Canadian Government Ship (CGS) Labrador; later CCGS Labrador.
- 24 August 1969 US oil tanker Manhattan leaves Chester on trial voyage through Northwest Passage; helped by Canadian Coast Guard ice-breaker CCGS John A. Macdonald, the Manhattan will reach Sachs Harbour, NWT, on September 15.
- 24 August 1990 HMC Ships Athabaskan, Protecteur, and Terra Nova with 934 personnel sail from Halifax to participate in the United Nations to participate in the blockade of Iraq over its invasion of Kuwait three weeks earlier, Operation Friction.
- 26 August 1939 World War II – The British Admiralty transmits the single word ‘funnel’ – the agreed-upon signal transfers control of Canadian merchant ships from the owners to the RCN.
- 27 August 1942 The Women’s Royal Canadian Naval Service is established.
- 27 August 1944 Actions by Flying Officer Roderick Gray of the RCAF over the Atlantic Ocean earn him the George Cross. (Posthumous).
- 28 August 1942 HMCS Oakville commanded by LCDR Clarance A. King, DSC, RCNR during convey escort duties and working with a USN PBY sank the German submarine U-94 in the Caribbean Sea by depth-charges and three rammings.
- 28 August 1992 RCN sends destroyer HMCS Gatineau to monitor UN embargo against Yugoslavia; moves to NATO standing force in Mediterranean.
- 29 August 1911 The prefix “”Royal”” is granted to the Canadian Navy by the King.
- 29 August 1917 Robert Borden’s Military Service Act gets Royal Assent; all male British subjects up to 45 years of age liable for conscription; with certain exceptions. Ottawa, Ontario
- 30 August 1943 HMCS ATHABASKAN (Destroyer) is commissioned at Newcastle on the Tyne, England.
- 30 August 2003 HMCS Haida (G63), Canada’s most famous warship and the last remaining Tribal Class in the world, is moved to the Hamilton waterfront by Parks Canada; on the 60th anniversary of her commissioning into the RCN.
- 31 August 1694 – Royal Navy vessel William and Maryattacks seven French warships at Ferryland, Newfoundland.
- 31 August 1939 HMC Ships Fraser and St. Laurent leave Vancouver for Halifax to take up war stations in the North Atlantic Ocean.
- 31 August 1942 German U boats sink 108 merchant ships this month, with a loss of 544,000 tons. Atlantic Ocean.
- 31 August 1942 HMCS Morden sinks with depth charges U-756 440 miles WSW of Cape Farewell; the kill was originally credited to a USN Catalina.
- 31 August 1945 HMCS PRINCE ROBERT entered Hong Kong where her commanding officer represents Canada at the surrender ceremonies of Japanese forces, and to liberate POWs.
- 31 August 1946 The Women’s Royal Canadian Naval Service is disbanded.
- 31 August 1993 Fishery – Mulroney Government slaps a complete ban on cod fishing after stocks dwindle. A year earlier, Fisheries Minister John Crosbie ordered the $700 million northern cod fishery shut down for two years to conserve stocks; in total, 40,000 Atlantic Canadians lose their jobs, in the single largest mass layoff in Canadian history. At its peak in the late 1960s, the northern cod fishery hauled in up to 800,000 tonnes a year.