HMCS MONCTON K139
Flower Class Corvette
Commissioned at Saint John, N.B. on 24 Apr 1942, she arrived at Halifax on 12 May 1942. She was the last of the RCN's initial Flower class programme to complete, owing to heavy demands on her builder, the Saint John Dry Dock Co., for repair work to war-damaged ships. After working up she joined WLEF, Halifax, and when the force was divided into escort groups in Jun 1943, she became a member of EG W-5. She remained in this service until transferred to the west coast in Jan 1944, proceeding there via Guantanamo, Cristobal, Balboa, and San Pedro, Cal. Upon arrival she was assigned to Esquimalt Force, of which she remained a member until VJ-Day. In the course of an extensive refit at Vancouver from 05 May to 07 Jul 1944, her fo'c's'le was extended. She was paid off at Esquimalt on 12 Dec 1945, and sold for conversion to a whale-catcher at Kiel. She entered service in 1955 as the Dutch-flag Willem Vinke and was broken up at Santander, Spain, in 1966.
Photos and Documents The Ship's Bell
Commanding Officers
In memory of those who made the ultimate sacrifice Lest We Forget
AB, RCNVR died - 25 Jul 1945
In memory of those who have crossed the bar They shall not be forgotten
Former Crew Members
Photos and Documents
(MCT001) HMCS MONCTON K139 with HMCS CAMROSE K154 off to starboard (MCT002) HMCS MONCTON K139 // From the collection of AB François Messier, RCNVR // Courtesy of Denis Messier (MCT003) HMCS MONCTON K138 gunshield art // Photo credit: Naval Museum of Halifax
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