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US Navy – Air Units
US Navy – Lufteinheiten
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USMC – Air Units
USMC –
Lufteinheiten
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Marine International
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Waffensysteme
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Marine News
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Sonderberichte
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Dies & Das
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In eigener Sache
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Canada – Royal
Canadian Navy / Marine Canadienne
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Cruiser
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C 66 / 31 -
HMCS Quebec (ex Uganda)
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in RN service as HMS Uganda
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DND photo
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Type,
Class:
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Royal Navy – Fiji Class
Light Cruiser; built as HMS Uganda for the
Royal Navy; commissioned in RCN in 1944; renamed HMCS Quebec (C 31)
in 1952; |
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Builder:
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Vickers Armstrong Ltd.; Newcastle-on-Tyne, Scotland, U.K.
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STATUS:
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Laid down: July 20, 1939 Launched: August 7, 1941 Commissioned: January
3, 1943 (Royal Navy) October 21, 1944 (Royal Canadian Navy) Decommissioned:
June 13, 1956 Fate: scrapped in Osaka, Japan, 1961 |
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Homeport:
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-
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Crest
Motto:
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> Nos Canons Parleront <
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Displacement:
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10850 tons (fulll load)
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Length:
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169,30 meters
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Beam:
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18,90 meters
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Draft:
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5,30 meters
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Propulsion:
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4 oil-fired 3-drum Admiralty type
boilers; 4 geared turbines; 4 shafts; 4 propellers; 72500 shp;
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Speed:
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31+ knots
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Crew:
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730
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Armament:
(as built) |
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3
Mk.23 6”/50 triple guns; 4
Mk.16 HA 4”/45 twin QF guns; 2
40mm quad AA; 10 20mm twin AA; 2 triple 21” Torpedo Tubes; |
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Aviation :
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none;
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Pictures,
photos & more ...
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…
Information & History … |
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HMS Uganda (C66), was a Second
World War-vintage Royal Navy Colony class cruiser. She was transferred to the
Royal Canadian Navy and recommissioned as HMCS Uganda, and later renamed HMCS
Quebec. HMS Uganda was commissioned by
the Royal Navy on 17 December 1942. While serving in the Mediterranean Sea
she took a direct hit from a 1.4-tonne glider-bomb off Salerno Italy. There
being no dry dock available in the theatre of war that could handle the
repairs, the Uganda was sent to the United States Navy shipyard at
Charleston, South Carolina. During this time the Canadian government arranged
to acquire the Uganda. Originally she had two hangars for Supermarine Walrus
aircraft that were designed for reconnaissance work, but the aircraft were
later removed and the hangars used for radio and radar rooms as well as crew
amenities. Theatres of service Home fleet 1943 Mediterranean fleet 1943-44, Refit U.S.A. 1944, With RCN assigned to Pacific
fleet 1945 With RCN assigned to Atlantic
Duty 1952 With RCN Korean War Service with the Royal Navy In March 1943 after training
at Scapa Flow, HMS Uganda sailed as convoy escort to protect a convoy bound
for Sierra Leone from the German Narvik class destroyers operating out of the
Bay of Biscay. After two such convoy duties, she was sent as escort for the
Queen Mary carrying Winston Churchill and his staff to Washington. The journey
was made at 30 knots, and the ship sailed into Argentia, Newfoundland low on
fuel. Upon return from that duty the Uganda returned to Plymouth for a refit. Mediterranean Operations With the refit completed she was
sent to the Mediterranean as escort to one of the largest troop convoys of
the war heading to Sicily. The Uganda was part of the bombardment fleet for
Operation Husky, the invasion of Sicily on July 10, 1943. She was then
assigned to close support for major bombardments throughout Sicily. On the
opening of Operation Avalanche, September 9, 1943, she was part of the fleet
bombardment covering the invasion of Italy at Salerno. Battle Casualty On 13 September the ship was
hit by a new German radio controlled glider bomb. The bomb hit the starboard
side aft and penetrated through seven decks and the ship's bottom before
exploding. Sixteen crew were killed and seven injured. Damage control under
Lieutenant Leslie Reed managed to get the ship moving with one engine. Repair and Refit The ship was towed to Malta by
the USS Narragansett, where temporary repairs were made. The heavily damaged
ship, with only one of her four propellers working, then proceeded across the
Atlantic ocean to Charleston, South Carolina for repairs. She arrived on 27
November 1943. Whilst under repair the Canadian government negotiated with
Britain to obtain Uganda for the Canadian Navy. Service with the Royal Canadian Navy Uganda had been refitted and
improved during the repairs. The Walrus aircraft and catapult were removed
and the hangars were converted to crew recreation and radar suites. The
radar, radio and aircraft identification package on the Uganda was amongst
the latest available. The ship was recommissioned into the Royal Canadian
Navy on Trafalgar Day, 21 October 1944. Upon commissioning, Uganda became the
pride of the Royal Canadian Navy, being the largest and most powerful ship in
their fleet. Uganda was also to become the first Canadian warship to
circumnavigate the globe. The Canadian Crew The officers assigned to the
Uganda were of the highest quality. The captain was Captain Rollo Mainguy,
OBE, who is considered to have been one of the best officers in the RCN. He
later became Chief of Naval Staff. The First Officer (executive officer),
Commander Hugh Pullen, and other officers including Lieutenant Commanders
Landymore and Littler were all eventually promoted to flag rank. Lieutenant
John Robarts, Aircraft Recognition Officer, went on to become Premier of
Ontario. The other members of her crew of 907 were also a carefully picked
group and additional training was provided by sending personnel to gain
experience on Royal Navy cruisers. The crew came from every province in
Canada and Newfoundland. Eight-seven percent were reservists (RCNVR and
RCNR), and the balance RCN. Assignment to Far East Uganda was sent to join the
British Pacific Fleet's operational area south of Sakishima Gunto. Leaving
Halifax, Nova Scotia on 31 October 1944, she steamed via the United Kingdom,
Gibraltar, Alexandria, through the Suez Canal, and on via Aden and Colombo,
Ceylon to the fleet base at Fremantle, Australia, where she arrived on 4
March 1945. She joined the 4th Cruiser Squadron and spent the rest of the
month working up. The conditions for the crew were hard since the ship had
not been modified for tropical conditions, which would have provided better
air circulation throughout the ship and more fresh water capacity. Pacific Operations Uganda proved valuable during
operations undertaken by the British Pacific Fleet because her radar and
aircraft identification capabilities were amongst the best in the fleet. On
10 April 1945, the strike against Sakishima was cancelled and the Task Force
was ordered to attack Formosa instead. For three days they attacked the
Formosan airfields. They were then directed back to Sakishima Gunto. The
islands were attacked from 15 April to 20, before the fleet was sent to Leyte
Gulf. She later joined the U.S. Third Fleet 300 miles east of Japan and
was the only Canadian warship to fight in the Pacific Theatre against the
Imperial Japanese Navy. Out of the Action It was while Uganda was
involved in these Pacific operations that a directive came through from
Ottawa to poll the crew on whether they would volunteer for the Pacific war.
The requirement that only volunteers would be sent to the war zones had
become a major issue in the Canadian election. Canada had faced a desperate
shortage of soldiers in the closing days of the European war. As a result,
"zombies" (conscripted soldiers who refused combat duty) had been
ordered into combat roles. This had caused a political storm, and Prime
Minister Mackenzie King, trailing in the polls, promised that only volunteers
would fight against Japan. He narrowly won the election, largely because of
the military vote. When the war ended in Europe the rate of re-enlistment
fell dramatically. While this was going on the Canadian government wanted the
crew to volunteer for the war in the Pacific. The crew for one reason or
another felt they had volunteered for "hostilities only", (i.e.,
hostilities against Germany) but now found themselves fighting a different
enemy in a quite different part of the World. On 7 May 1945, the vote was
held on the Uganda and 605 crew refused to volunteer for the Japanese war.
The British Admiralty was furious and said it could not replace the ship
until 27 July. An embarrassed Canadian Government offered to replace Uganda
with HMCS Prince Robert, an anti-aircraft flak ship that was being refitted
in Vancouver. HMCS Uganda was detached from the fleet on 27 July when HMS
Argonaut joined the fleet. The ship proceeded to Eniwetok, and then to Pearl
Harbor for refuelling before heading for Esquimalt. En route to Pearl Harbor,
one boiler suffered a liner collapse which would have required the ship's
withdrawal from active combat. The ship limped into Pearl Harbor on 4 August,
but was not welcomed because of the resentment that they were
"quitting" the war. They were refuelled and sent on their way. En
route to Esquimalt, the crew heard news about the atomic bombs being dropped
on Japan. They arrived in Esquimalt on 10 August, the day the Japanese
announced their acceptance of the terms of surrender. Had the ship remained
in the Pacific, she would probably have steamed into Tokyo Bay on 30 August
to witness the official surrender, as it was no Canadian ships were present
at the ceremony. HMCS Québec On 1 August 1947, HMCS Uganda
was paid off into reserve status. As a result of the Korean War, on 14
January 1952, HMCS Uganda was recommissioned as HMCS Quebec. She was moved to
her new station on Canada's east coast. Another cruiser, HMCS Ontario, which
didn't come on steam until the war was over, was stationed on the west coast.
In 1953, HMCS Québec was the flagship of Rear Admiral Bidwell which lead the
Canadian ships to Spithead for the coronation of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth
II. The Canadian group consisted of a carrier, two cruisers, one destroyer,
and two frigates. HMCS Québec served two tours in the Korean War theatre. As
part of the post-war reduction, HMCS Québec was paid off in June 1956 and
scrapped in Japan. |
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… and patches. |
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