USS West Bridge

United States Navy cargo ship
West Bridge shortly before completion in May 1918
West Bridge in dazzle camouflage shortly before completion in May 1918
History
United States
NameUSS West Bridge (ID-2888)
Builder
Yard number11[2]
Launched24 April 1918[1]
Completed26 May 1918[1]
Acquired26 May 1918[3]
Commissioned26 May 1918[3]
Decommissioned1 December 1919[3]
Identification
  • United States official number: 216348
  • Code Letters LKRQ (1919–34)
  • Code letters KJOO (1934–45)
FateReturned to United States Shipping Board
History
Name
  • 1919–1929: West Bridge
  • 1929–1939: Barbara Cates
  • 1939–1945: Pan Gulf
  • 1945–1966: Lermontov (Russian: Лермонтов)[10]
Namesake1945: Mikhail Lermontov
Owner
Operator
Port of registry
  • 1919: United States Seattle
  • 1929:  San Francisco[4]
  • 1938:  Mobile, Alabama[5]
  • 1940:  Wilmington, Delaware[6]
  • 1944:  New York[7]
  • 1945: Soviet Union Soviet Union[8]
FateScrapped at Split, Yugoslavia, 29 June 1966[1]
General characteristics
TypeCargo ship
Tonnage
Displacement12,200 long tons (12,400 t)[3]
Length
  • 409 ft 5 in (124.79 m) (pp)[1]
  • 423 ft 9 in (129.16 m) (oa)[3]
Beam54 ft 0 in (16.46 m)[3]
Draft24 ft 1 in (7.34 m) (mean)[3]
Depth of hold29 ft 9 in (9.07 m)[3]
Propulsion1 × triple-expansion steam engine,[5] 2,500 hp (1,900 kW)[10]
Speed10.5 knots (19.4 km/h)[3]
Complement88 (as USS West Bridge)[3]
Armament
  • World War I:
  • 1 × 4-inch (102 mm) gun
  • 1 × 3-inch (76 mm) gun[3]

USS West Bridge (ID-2888) was a Design 1013 cargo ship in the United States Navy during World War I. She was begun as War Topaz for the British Government but was completed as West Bridge (though referred to in some publications under the spelling Westbridge). After being decommissioned from the Navy, the ship returned to civilian service as West Bridge, but was renamed Barbara Cates, and Pan Gulf over the course of her commercial career under American registry.

West Bridge was one of the West ships, a series of steel-hulled cargo ships built for the United States Shipping Board (USSB) on the West Coast of the United States. She was launched in April 1918 and delivered to the U.S. Navy upon completion in May. After commissioning, USS West Bridge sailed from the Pacific Northwest to the East Coast of the United States and joined a convoy of cargo ships headed to France in August. After the ship suffered an engine breakdown at sea the convoy was attacked by two German submarines and West Bridge was torpedoed and abandoned. A salvage crew from the American destroyer Smith boarded her the following day, and, working with four tugs dispatched from France, successfully brought the ship into port. Four men received the Navy Cross for their efforts.

After seven months of repair, West Bridge resumed Navy service until her December 1919 decommissioning and return to the USSB. She was laid up from 1922 to 1929, when she was sold for service on an intercoastal cargo service under the name Barbara Cates. By 1938, the ship had been renamed Pan Gulf for service with a subsidiary of the Waterman Steamship Company. During World War II, Pan Gulf made nine round trips between the United States and the United Kingdom without incident in wartime convoys. She also sailed between New York and ports on the Gulf Coast and in the Caribbean. In May 1945, she was transferred to the Soviet Union under Lend-Lease. Renamed Lermontov, the ship sailed in support of the war and continued in civilian service for the Soviets until 1966, when she was scrapped at Split, Yugoslavia.

Design and construction

To replace shipping tonnage lost to German submarines during World War I, the British Shipping Controller sought newly built ships from American shipyards.[12] As part of 700,000 long tons (710,000 t) of shipping which had been ordered by March 1917,[12] an order for nine vessels of 8,800 long tons deadweight (DWT) was placed with J. F. Duthie & Company of Seattle.[13][14][Note 1] Because the United States had not yet entered World War I, the Shipping Controller could not order the ships directly and so, to skirt neutrality laws, these orders were made on the government's behalf by the Cunard Steamship Company.[15] The Duthie company laid down the keel of War Topaz as the eleventh ship begun at their shipyard.[1]

On 6 August 1917, the Emergency Fleet Corporation—an entity created by the USSB shortly after the United States entered the war on 6 April and tasked with overseeing U.S. shipbuilding—requisitioned most ships under construction in the United States;[16] included among those was War Topaz.[2] By the time of her 24 April 1918 launch, the ship had been renamed West Bridge,[1] becoming one of the West ships, cargo ships of similar size and design built by several shipyards on the West Coast of the United States.[17] Just a bit over one month later, on 26 May, the finished West Bridge was delivered to the United States Navy.[3]

As completed, the steel-hulled three-hold ship was 409 feet 5 inches (124.79 m) long (between perpendiculars), 54 feet (16.5 m) abeam, and drew 24 feet 1 inch (7.34 m). West Bridge had a displacement of 12,200 long tons (12,400 t), and her 29-foot-9-inch (9.07 m) depth of hold allowed the ship to be rated at 5,799 gross register tons (GRT).[1][3] The ship was powered by a single steam turbine engine of 2,500 horsepower (1,900 kW), built by the De Laval Steam Turbine Company in Trenton, New Jersey.[14] allowing the single screw propeller to move the ship at up 11 knots (20 km/h).[1] For her U.S. Navy service in World War I, West Bridge was equipped with one 4-inch (102 mm) and one 3-inch (76 mm) gun.[3]

Military career

USS West Bridge (ID-2888) was commissioned into the Naval Overseas Transportation Service (NOTS) at the Puget Sound Navy Yard on 26 May. West Bridge took on an initial load of flour and departed 10 June for the East Coast.[Note 2] Along the way, the ship developed troubles with her engine, which required putting in at Balboa in the Panama Canal Zone for repairs. Getting underway again on 4 July, West Bridge sailed for New York, arriving on 16 July.[3]

After refueling at New York, West Bridge joined Convoy HB-8 bound for France, sailing on 1 August in company with Navy cargo ship West Alsek, United States Army transport Montanan, and 13 others.[18] Escorted by armed yacht Noma, destroyers Burrows and Smith, and French cruiser Marseillaise,[3][19] the convoy was 500 nautical miles (900 km) west of its destination of Le Verdon-sur-Mer by the end of the day on 15 August.[18][20]

Torpedo attack

At 17:40, West Bridge's engine broke down once again and her crew was unable to repair it. Falling off the back of the convoy and adrift, she signaled Marseillaise to request a tow. At sundown, shortly before 18:00, Montanan—still in the convoy, which was by now 4 nautical miles (7.4 km) ahead of West Bridge—was hit by one of three torpedoes launched by German submarine U-90. Montanan began to settle and was quickly abandoned. On West Bridge, Lieutenant Commander Hawkins realized the potential for another submarine attack and ordered his crew to general quarters and reduced the number of men in the mechanical spaces below decks. Noma sailed back to West Bridge, ordered the freighter to extinguish her lights, and stood by. At nearly the same time, U-107 approached and launched two torpedoes at the stationary cargo ship, scoring hits with both. The first struck near the No. 3 cargo hold forward, destroying the cargo ship's wireless, the second amidships near the engine room. West Bridge immediately began listing to starboard, and Hawkins ordered the crew to abandon ship. He and two crewmen remained behind until he felt sure that everyone else had departed. By the time the three left the stricken ship, water was up to the gunwales and lapping at the well deck.[3]

Immediately after the attack, Noma sped off to depth charge the submarine while sending an SOS for West Bridge. Destroyer Burrows arrived to take on West Bridge's survivors, who had situated themselves about a mile (2 km) from the still-floating ship. After the survivors boarded the destroyer, a head count revealed that four men were missing, but also turned up two female stowaways.[3]

Torpedo damage to USS West Bridge seen in a French drydock c. 1918. One of the ship's boilers is visible in the left rear.

By the morning of 16 August, both Montanan and West Bridge were still afloat, with decks awash. Attempts to get Montanan under tow failed, and she foundered later in the morning. Meanwhile, Hawkins and his executive officer were taken by boat to West Bridge to assess her situation. After boarding the ship and finding three cargo holds and her engineering spaces completely flooded, Hawkins advised Burrows' captain that the situation was hopeless and he would only be endangering his ship, crew, and the West Bridge survivors by remaining alongside. Consequently, Burrows departed for Brest, France, leaving the destroyer Smith to stand by the stricken vessel.[3]

A volunteer work and salvage party from Smith, led by Lieutenant Richard L. Conolly,[3] and which included Chief Boatswain's Mate John Henry Caudell,[21] and Carpenter's Mate, 3rd class Walter Homer Todd,[22] boarded West Bridge and awaited four tugs which had been dispatched from Brest: the U.S. Navy Favorite,[23] two French tugs, and one British tug. Over the course of the next five days, the tugs, joined by patrol yacht Isabel, slowly towed West Bridge to the French coast, eventually arriving at Brest. The ship was towed over 400 nautical miles (740 km) with only 1% buoyancy remaining.[3] Conolly, Caudell, and Todd were each awarded the Navy Cross for their efforts in saving the ship; W. W. Wotherspoon, the fleet salvage officer on Favorite, was also honored with a Navy Cross, in part for his salvage efforts for West Bridge.[23][Note 3]

The extent of the damage and the condition of West Bridge led to some erroneous reports of her loss. News articles on 24 August in both The New York Times and the Chicago Daily Tribune reported the sinking,[24] and the mistaken information was recorded by authors Benedict Crowell and Robert Forrest Wilson in their work The Road to France: The Transportation of Troops and Military Supplies, 1917–1918.[25]

After West Bridge underwent seven months of repairs, the ship resumed service with the NOTS through 1 December 1919, at which time she was decommissioned and handed over to the USSB.[3]

Interwar years

The United States Official Number 216348 and Code Letters LKRQ were allocated to the ship.[26] Little is known about West Bridge's activities after her return to the USSB in 1919, but in June 1922 she was laid up in Philadelphia, where she remained for almost seven years. In March 1929, the USSB approved the sale of West Bridge for $57,000 to the Sudden & Christenson of San Francisco.[11] Before re-entering service her steam turbine machinery was removed and replaced by a triple-expansion steam engine built by the Hooven, Owens, & Rentschler Company of Hamilton, Ohio.[5][14] The engine, with cylinders of 24+12, 41+12, and 72 inches (62, 105, and 180 cm) diameter with a 48-inch (120 cm) stroke,[5] was capable of generating up to 2,500 horsepower (1,900 kW), allowing a speed of 10.5 knots (19.4 km/h).[3][10] By May, the ship had been renamed Barbara Cates and was slated for service on the intercoastal freight service of their Arrow Line, which sailed to the Pacific coast from Baltimore, Norfolk, Virginia, Savannah, Georgia and Jacksonville, Florida. The addition of Barbara Cates and other ships purchased around the same time allowed the Arrow Line to increase its sailings from fortnightly to once every ten days.[27] Barbara Cates' nine years with the Arrow Line were uneventful.

In 1934, her Code Letters were changed to KJOO.[28] By October 1938,[29] the ship had been renamed Pan Gulf to reflect the naming style of her new owners, the Pan-Atlantic Steamship Company, a subsidiary of Waterman Steamship Company.[1][30] The Pan-Atlantic Line sailed in coastal service along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts, and it is likely that Pan Gulf called at typical Pan-Atlantic ports such as Baltimore, Miami, Tampa, New Orleans, Philadelphia, New York, and Boston during this time.[31]

SS Pan Gulf sailed in 18 transatlantic convoys, like this typical one, seen in 1942.

In October 1941, The Christian Science Monitor reported that Pan Gulf had become stuck in the mud off Governors Island after her crew misjudged how far to back out of her berth at the Army base there. The first, unsuccessful attempt to free Pan Gulf involved eight tugs, but the ship did not budge. The newspaper, which had also reported that there was no apparent damage to Pan Gulf in the grounding, carried no further reports on the ship.[32]

World War II and later career

After the United States entered World War II, Pan Gulf frequently sailed in convoys on the North Atlantic, as well as some in the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico. Between April and September 1942, Pan Gulf made two roundtrips from the U.S. to Liverpool.[33] In September, the cargo ship sailed from New York to the Caribbean to take on a load of bauxite in early November,[34] and then sailed on to Galveston, Texas, before returning to New York in mid-February 1943.[33]

In late February, Pan Gulf began the first of a further seven roundtrips to the United Kingdom over the next 21 months, when she sailed from New York in Convoy HX 228 for Halifax. In July, the United States Maritime Commission (USMC) purchased Pan Gulf from the Pan-Atlantic Line, overpaying her value by 16 times, according to Senator George Aiken (R–VT).[35]

On 5 May 1945, the USMC turned over Pan Gulf to the Far East Shipping Company (FESCO) of the Soviet Union under Lend-Lease;[36] FESCO renamed the ship Lermontov (Russian: Лермонтов, Russian pronunciation: [ˈlʲɛrməntəf]) after the poet Mikhail Lermontov. The Soviets armed the ship with a 4-inch (100 mm) gun and other weapons and employed her in cargo duties in support of the war.[36]

At war's end, Lermontov remained with FESCO through 1950. At that time she was transferred to the Black Sea Shipping Company, with which she remained into the 1960s.[10] Lermontov was delivered to shipbreakers Brodospas in Split, Yugoslavia on 26 June 1966.[1]

Notes

  1. ^ In addition to War Topaz, the other eight ships built by the Duthie company were War Leopard, War General, War Emerald, War Sun, War Moon, War Fort, War Disk, and War Ruby. See: McKellar, pp. 283–84.
  2. ^ The West ships, to avoid sailing empty to the East Coast, loaded grain products intended for the United Kingdom, France, and Italy and sailed to Europe without unloading or transferring their cargo. This avoided extra handling of the cargo and the United States Shipping Board, by prior arrangement, then received an equivalent amount of cargo space in foreign ships for other American cargoes. See: Crowell and Wilson, pp. 358–59.
  3. ^ In addition to his salvage work on West Bridge, Wotherspoon was honored for his efforts for Westward Ho, Mount Vernon, Conner, and Murray. See: Stringer, p. 147.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "West Bridge (5520680)". Miramar Ship Index. Retrieved 1 September 2008.
  2. ^ a b Colton, Tim. "J. F. Duthie & Company, Seattle WA". Shipbuildinghistory.com. The Colton Company. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Naval Historical Center. "West Bridge". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.
  4. ^ Register of Ships (1937–38 ed.). "Scan of page 'Ban–Bar'" (PDF). Hosted at plimsollshipdata.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 December 2017. Retrieved 12 May 2009.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Register of Ships (1938–39 ed.). "Scan of page 'Pam–Pan'" (PDF). Hosted at plimsollshipdata.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 December 2017. Retrieved 12 May 2009.
  6. ^ Register of Ships (1940–41 ed.). "Scan of page 'Pan'" (PDF). Hosted at plimsollshipdata.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 December 2017. Retrieved 12 May 2009.
  7. ^ Register of Ships (1944–45 ed.). "Scan of page 'Pan'" (PDF). Hosted at plimsollshipdata.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 December 2017. Retrieved 12 May 2009.
  8. ^ a b Register of Ships (1945–46, supplementary ed.). "Scan of page 'L'" (PDF). Hosted at plimsollshipdata.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 December 2017. Retrieved 12 May 2009.
  9. ^ Register of Ships (1943–44 ed.). "Scan of page 'Pan'" (PDF). Hosted at plimsollshipdata.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 December 2017. Retrieved 12 May 2009.
  10. ^ a b c d e f "Реестр флота ДВМП: Лермонтов (Pan Gulf)" (in Russian). FESCO Transport Group. Retrieved 4 September 2008. Google translation into English.
  11. ^ a b "Shipping Board approves sale". Los Angeles Times. 27 March 1929. p. 13.
  12. ^ a b McKellar, p. 270.
  13. ^ McKellar, pp. 283–84.
  14. ^ a b c Mitchell & Sawyer, pp. 8–9
  15. ^ Mitchell & Sawyer, p. ix.
  16. ^ McKellar, p. 271.
  17. ^ Crowell and Wilson, pp. 358–59.
  18. ^ a b Naval Historical Center. "West Alsek". DANFS.
  19. ^ Mann. "Burrows". DANFS.
  20. ^ "Montanan (2211088)". Miramar Ship Index. Retrieved 4 September 2008.
  21. ^ Stringer, p. 54.
  22. ^ Stringer, p. 137.
  23. ^ a b Stringer, p. 147.
  24. ^ "Three of our ships torpedoed; 19 missing from the crews" (PDF). The New York Times. 24 August 1918. p. 1. Retrieved 27 May 2009. "3 U. S. ships in foreign waters sunk by U-boats". Chicago Daily Tribune. 24 August 1918. p. 2.
  25. ^ Crowell and Wilson, p. 530.
  26. ^ "Navires a Vapeur et a Moteurs" (PDF). Lloyd's Register. Lloyd's of London. 1930. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 February 2018. Retrieved 26 February 2018 – via Plimsoll Ship Data.
  27. ^ Drake, Waldo (13 May 1929). "Shipping news and activities at los angeles harbor". Los Angeles Times. p. 14.
  28. ^ "Steamers & Motorships" (PDF). Lloyd's Register. Lloyd's of London. 1934. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 February 2018. Retrieved 26 February 2018 – via Plimsoll Ship Data.
  29. ^ Lafourche, J. B. (8 October 1938). "Longshoreman injured". The Pittsburgh Courier. p. 23.
  30. ^ Finch, Ted; Gilbert Provost. "WWI Standard Ships: T". WWI Standard Built Ships. Mariners. Retrieved 4 September 2008.
  31. ^ de la Pedraja Tomán, p. 564.
  32. ^ "Stuck in mud craft awaits high tide aid". The Christian Science Monitor. 13 October 1941. p. 2.
  33. ^ a b "Port Arrivals/Departures: Pan Gulf". Arnold Hague's Ports Database. Convoy Web. Retrieved 4 September 2008.
  34. ^ "Convoy TAG.18". Arnold Hague Convoy Database. ConvoyWeb. Retrieved 4 September 2008.
  35. ^ "Aiken scores ship deal". The New York Times. Associated Press. 24 October 1943. p. 38.
  36. ^ a b Radigan, Joseph M. (2006). "West Bridge (ID 2888)". Section Patrol Craft Photo Archive. NavSource Online. Retrieved 4 September 2008.

Bibliography

  • Crowell, Benedict; Robert Forrest Wilson (1921). The Road to France: The Transportation of Troops and Military Supplies, 1917–1918. How America Went to War: An Account From Official Sources of the Nation's War Activities, 1917–1920. New Haven: Yale University Press. OCLC 18696066.
  • de la Pedraja Tomán, René (1994). "Waterman Steamship Corporation". A Historical Dictionary of the U.S. Merchant Marine and Shipping Industry: Since the Introduction of Steam. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-27225-7. OCLC 29311518.
  • Lloyd's Register of Shipping (1856). Register of Ships (various editions). London: Lloyd's Register of Shipping.
  • Mann, Raymond A. (21 November 2005). "Burrows". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Navy Department, Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved 4 September 2008.
  • McKellar, Norman L. (May–June 1962). "Steel Shipbuilding under the U. S. Shipping Board, 1917–1921". The Belgian Shiplover (87). Brussels: Belgian Nautical Research Association: 270–85. OCLC 5887022.
  • Mitchell, W H; Sawyer, L A (1968). British Standard Ships of World War 1. Liverpool: Sea Breezes/Journal of Commerce and Shipping Telegraph.
  • Naval History & Heritage Command. "West Alsek". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Navy Department, Naval History & Heritage Command. Retrieved 4 September 2008.
  • Naval History & Heritage Command. "West Bridge". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Navy Department, Naval History & Heritage Command. Retrieved 4 September 2008.
  • Stringer, Harry R. (1921). The Navy Book of Distinguished Service. Washington, D.C.: Fassett Pub. Co. OCLC 2654351.

External links

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  • Bittern
  • Bolivian
  • Bolivier
  • Boma
  • Bonheur
  • Borga
  • Boswell
  • Brockey
  • Canonesa
  • Catalonier
  • Cervantes
  • Ciscar
  • Clan MacIndoe
  • Clan McInnes
  • Clearton
  • Collooney
  • Colon
  • Daybeam
  • Delfina
  • Dundrum Castle
  • Edenside
  • Fabian
  • Fantee
  • Freeland
  • Gallicier
  • Gazana
  • Glassford
  • Gloxinia
  • Goodig
  • Grodno
  • Hermione
  • Hesione
  • Highland Warrior
  • Ioanna
  • Jetblack
  • Jolly Marie
  • Kara
  • Kidderpore
  • Kittiwake
  • Knebworth
  • Koranton
  • Lahore
  • Langley
  • Linerton
  • Lord Guilford
  • Mabriton
  • Macedonier
  • Mackarra
  • Macumba
  • Mahmoudieh
  • Merganser
  • Molton
  • Mondara
  • Muristan
  • Nagpore
  • Narenta
  • Nash Light
  • Nebraska
  • New Brighton
  • New Mexico
  • New Texas
  • New Toronto
  • Nitcheroy
  • Olympier
  • Orlock Head
  • Peterton
  • Philadelphian
  • Pinar del Rio
  • Port Curtis
  • Portscatho
  • Salland
  • Sarthe
  • Silarus
  • Siris
  • Sirsa
  • Stonewall
  • Suevier
  • Sunniside
  • Surada
  • Tarnwater
  • Tiberton
  • Venus
  • War Acacia
  • War Aconite
  • War Acorn
  • War Adder
  • War African
  • War Afridi
  • War Agate (II)
  • War Airman
  • War Ajax
  • War Ally
  • War Almond
  • War Alne
  • War Alyssum
  • War Anchusa
  • War Anemone
  • War Angler
  • War Anglian
  • War Apollo (II)
  • War Apple
  • War Apricot
  • War Arabis
  • War Argus
  • War Arrow (II)
  • War Arun
  • War Aryan
  • War Aspen
  • War Aster
  • War Atilla
  • War Avoca
  • War Avon
  • War Azalea
  • War Bagpipe
  • War Bahadur
  • War Bailey
  • War Balloon
  • War Balsam
  • War Bann
  • War Barrage
  • War Bastion
  • War Bat
  • War Battery
  • War Beetle
  • War Begonia
  • War Begum
  • War Beryl
  • War Bharata
  • War Birch (II)
  • War Bison
  • War Bittern
  • War Bobtail
  • War Bracken
  • War Brae
  • War Brahmin
  • War Bramble
  • War Bulldog
  • War Camel
  • War Canna
  • War Caracul
  • War Castle (II)
  • War Cateran
  • War Cedar
  • War Celt
  • War Ceres
  • War Chamois
  • War Char
  • War Charon
  • War Chateau
  • War Chelmer
  • War Cherry
  • War Chine
  • War Citadel
  • War Clarion
  • War Climax
  • War Cloud (II)
  • War Clover
  • War Cluny
  • War Clyde
  • War Coast (II)
  • War Cobra
  • War Coleus
  • War Collie
  • War Colne
  • War Combe
  • War Comet (II)
  • War Condor
  • War Coney
  • War Coot
  • War Coppice
  • War Coral
  • War Country
  • War Courag
  • War Cove
  • War Cowslip
  • War Craft
  • War Crag
  • War Crane
  • War Crater (II)
  • War Creek
  • War Crocus
  • War Crouch
  • War Crow
  • War Cuirass
  • War Currant
  • War Cygnet
  • War Cypress
  • War Daffodil
  • War Dagger (II)
  • War Dahlia
  • War Damson
  • War Darenth
  • War Dart (II)
  • War Date
  • War Deer
  • War Delta
  • War Dene
  • War Diamond (II)
  • War Dagger (II)
  • War Dirk
  • War Diwan
  • War Dodder
  • War Dogra
  • War Donjon
  • War Down
  • War Drake
  • War Dream
  • War Dragon (II)
  • War Duck
  • War Duty (II)
  • War Emu
  • War Energy
  • War Envoy
  • War Epic
  • War Ermine
  • War Exe
  • War Expert
  • War Fal
  • War Falcon
  • War Fantail
  • War Ferret (II)
  • War Fervour
  • War Fife
  • War Fig
  • War Fijian
  • War Finch (II)
  • War Firth
  • War Flower
  • War Fly
  • War Foam
  • War Forest
  • War Forth
  • War Fox (II)
  • War Foyle
  • War Gaekwar
  • War Gale
  • War Gannet
  • War Garry
  • War Gascon
  • War Gazelle
  • War Genista
  • War Genius
  • War Ghurka
  • War Glade
  • War Glen
  • War Globe
  • War Glory
  • War Gnat
  • War Grange
  • War Grape
  • War Griffin
  • War Guava
  • War Hagara
  • War Hamlet
  • War Harbour (II)
  • War Haven (II)
  • War Heather
  • War Hecuba
  • War Hermit
  • War Highway
  • War Hind
  • War Hindoo
  • War Horizon
  • War Horse (II)
  • War Hostage
  • War Hound (II)
  • War Humber
  • War Hunter
  • War Huron
  • War Hussar
  • War Icarus
  • War Idyll
  • War Iliad
  • War Irwell
  • War Island
  • War Isthmus
  • War Jackdaw
  • War Jandoli
  • War Jasmine
  • War Jasper
  • War Javelin
  • War Jemadar
  • War Jonquil
  • War Jupiter (II)
  • War Justice
  • War Keep
  • War Kennet
  • War Kestrel
  • War Khan
  • War Kinsman
  • War Kochia
  • War Kookri
  • War Krishna
  • War Laurel (II)
  • War Lea
  • War Legate
  • War Lemon
  • War Lemur
  • War Leopard (II)
  • War Leven
  • War Liffey
  • War Liberty
  • War Lilac
  • War Lily (II)
  • War Linnet
  • War Llama
  • War Lobelia
  • War Loch
  • War Lodge
  • War Logan
  • War Lupin
  • War Lurcher
  • War Lynx (II)
  • War Magpie
  • War Maker
  • War Malayan
  • War Mallard
  • War Mallow
  • War Mammoth
  • War Mango
  • War Manor
  • War Mansion
  • War Marten
  • War Master
  • War Mastiff
  • War Matron
  • War Mavis
  • War Maxim
  • War Medway
  • War Mehtar
  • War Melody
  • War Melon
  • War Memory
  • War Merlin
  • War Mersey
  • War Midge
  • War Minaret
  • War Mist (II)
  • War Mogul
  • War Mole
  • War Monsoon
  • War Moon (II)
  • War Moorhen
  • War Moose
  • War Mortar
  • War Mosque
  • War Moth
  • War Music (II)
  • War Musket
  • War Myrtle
  • War Nawab
  • War Nemesia
  • War Ness
  • War Nidd
  • War Nizam
  • War Norman
  • War Oasis
  • War Obelisk
  • War Opal
  • War Orange
  • War Orestes
  • War Oriole
  • War Ostrich
  • War Otter (II)
  • War Ouse
  • War Owl
  • War Pageant
  • War Painter
  • War Palace
  • War Palm (II)
  • War Pampas
  • War Pansy (II)
  • War Panther
  • War Paris
  • War Parrot
  • War Parsee
  • War Passion
  • War Pathan
  • War Patriot
  • War Peacock
  • War Peahen
  • War Peewit
  • War Pelican
  • War Penguin (II)
  • War Perch
  • War Peridot
  • War Persian
  • War Peshwa
  • War Petunia
  • War Phlox
  • War Pibroch
  • War Picotee
  • War Picture
  • War Pigeon
  • War Pike
  • War Pindari
  • War Pintail
  • War Pioneer
  • War Planet
  • War Platoon (II)
  • War Plover
  • War Plum
  • War Pointer
  • War Poplar (II)
  • War Poppy
  • War Priam
  • War Primula
  • War Project
  • War Prophet
  • War Proteus
  • War Prune
  • War Puffin
  • War Puma
  • War Pundit
  • War Punjabi
  • War Python
  • War Quail
  • War Quarry
  • War Quince
  • War Raisin
  • War Rajah
  • War Rajput
  • War Rambler
  • War Rampart
  • War Ranee
  • War Rapier
  • War Raven (II)
  • War Ravine
  • War Redcap
  • War Redtail
  • War Reef
  • War Relief
  • War Reynard
  • War Riddle
  • War Rider
  • War Ripple
  • War River
  • War Roach
  • War Robin
  • War Rock (II)
  • War Roebuck
  • War Roman
  • War Romance
  • War Rose
  • War Rother
  • War Ruby (II)
  • War Ruler
  • War Sable
  • War Seagull
  • War Seal
  • War Sepoy
  • War Server
  • War Setter
  • War Severn
  • War Shamrock
  • War Shannon
  • War Shark (II)
  • War Shell (II)
  • War Shikari
  • War Sikh
  • War Simoom
  • War Singer
  • War Sirdar (II)
  • War Sirocco
  • War Sky (II)
  • War Smilax
  • War Snake
  • War Spaniel
  • War Sparrow
  • War Spartan
  • War Spey
  • War Sphere
  • War Spider
  • War Spirea
  • War Spray
  • War Stag
  • War Star
  • War Stoat
  • War Stock
  • War Stour
  • War Subadar
  • War Succour
  • War Sudra
  • War Summit
  • War Sun (II)
  • War Srf (II)
  • War Swale
  • War Swallow
  • War Swan
  • War Swell
  • War Swift (II)
  • War Sybil
  • War Tabard
  • War Taff
  • War Tamar
  • War Tank
  • War Tapir
  • War Tay
  • War Teasel
  • War Tees
  • War Tempest
  • War Temple
  • War Terrace
  • War Terier
  • War Thames
  • War Thesus
  • War Thistle
  • War Thrush (II)
  • War Tolka
  • War Tomtit
  • War Torpedo
  • War Torrent
  • War Toucan
  • War Trefoil
  • War Trench
  • War Trent
  • War Triumph
  • War Tulip
  • War Tummel
  • War Turret
  • War Tweed
  • War Typhoon
  • War Unicorn
  • War Usk
  • War Valour (II)
  • War Valley
  • War Verbena
  • War Vigour
  • War Violet
  • War Viper
  • War Vision
  • War Vulture
  • War Wager
  • War Wagtail
  • War Walrus
  • War Wandle
  • War Warbler
  • War Waveney
  • War Wazir
  • War Weapon
  • War Wear
  • War Wensum
  • War Wey
  • War Whale (II)
  • War Wharfe
  • War Whippet
  • War Yare
  • War Zebra
  • War Zenith
  • War Zephyr
  • Western Coast
Ships built by
other shipyards
  • Alaska
  • Asp
  • Porsanger
  • Samnanger
  • Tento
  • War Admiral
  • War Algoma
  • War Amazon
  • War Armour
  • War Atlin
  • War Babine
  • War Badger
  • War Beach
  • War Beacon (II)
  • War Beagle
  • War Bee
  • War Bomber
  • War Breaker
  • War Breeze (II)
  • War Brigade (II)
  • War Briton
  • War Brosna
  • War Browney
  • War Buckler
  • War Buffalo
  • War Bugler
  • War Bure
  • War Burman
  • War Cadet
  • War Calder
  • War Cam
  • War Camchin
  • War Camp
  • War Capitol
  • War Cariboo
  • War Carp
  • War Cavalry
  • War Cayuse
  • War Charger
  • War Chariot
  • War Chief
  • War Chilkat
  • War Column
  • War Comox
  • War Company
  • War Convoy
  • War Cornet
  • War Coronet
  • War Council
  • War Dame
  • War Derwent
  • War Diadem
  • War Dog
  • War Driver
  • War Drummer
  • War Duchess
  • War Earl
  • War Edensaw
  • War Erie
  • War Ewen
  • War Faith
  • War Fiend
  • War Fish
  • War Fundy
  • War Fury
  • War Gaspe
  • War Haida
  • War Halifax
  • War Halton
  • War Hamilton
  • War Hathor
  • War Helmet
  • War Hero
  • War Horus
  • War Hydra
  • War Isis
  • War Joy
  • War Karma
  • War King
  • War Kitimat
  • War Lance
  • War Leveret
  • War Lion
  • War Magic
  • War Maid
  • War Masset
  • War Matane
  • War Miner
  • War Mingan
  • War Mink
  • War Mirage
  • War Mohawk
  • War Moncton
  • War Nanoose
  • War Niagara
  • War Nicola
  • War Nipigon
  • War Noble
  • War Nootka
  • War Nymph
  • War Ocean (II)
  • War Odyssey
  • War Olive
  • War Ontario
  • War Osiris
  • War Ottawa
  • War Pilot
  • War Piper
  • War Power
  • War Prince
  • War Puget
  • War Quebec
  • War Queen
  • War Racoon
  • War Radnor
  • War Regalia
  • War Sailor
  • War Sceptre
  • War Scilla
  • War Scot
  • War Selkirk
  • War Seneca
  • War Sioux
  • War Skeena
  • War Sniper
  • War Soldier
  • War Songhee
  • War Sorel
  • War Stikine
  • War Storm
  • War Sumas
  • War Suquash
  • War Syren
  • War Tanoo
  • War Tatla
  • War Taurus
  • War Tiara
  • War Tiger
  • War Timiskaming
  • War Toronto
  • War Trooper
  • War Tyee
  • War Vixen
  • War Wallaby
  • War Wasp
  • War Weasel
  • War Witch
  • War Wizard
  • War Wolf
  • War Wombat
  • War Yukon
Unbuilt ships
  • War Baluchi 1
  • War Bamboo 2
  • War Bantam 1
  • War Beaver (II)3
  • War Bengali1
  • War Boyne 1
  • War Briar (II) 2
  • War Bustard1 or 2
  • War Coquet 1
  • War Daisy (II)1
  • War Deodar1
  • War Digby1
  • War Dolphin1
  • War Dragon (II)1
  • War Eland1
  • War Elm1
  • War Freedom 1
  • War Fowey1
  • War Furze 1
  • War Geum 1
  • War Glamour 2
  • War Grampus2
  • War Grouse2
  • War Gunner2
  • War Honour (II)1
  • War Medina1
  • War Medlar 1
  • War Oak (II)1
  • War Pagoda1
  • War Pink 1
  • War Pollux1
  • War Recruit 1
  • War Sapper 1
  • War Serpent (II)1
  • War Veteran 1
  • War Wave (II)1
  • War Willow1
  • War Wonder (II)1
  • War Wren (II)1
  • War Wryneck1
  • War Yew1
  • War Zinnia1
1 = Cancelled. 2 = Probably completed under a different name. 3 = Not completed