HMCS THIEPVAL
Battle
Class Trawler
HMCS THIEPVAL
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Launched: 1917
Commissioned: 24
Jul 1918
Paid off: 19
Mar 1920
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Re-commissioned:
01 Apr 1923
Paid
off:
Sunk: 27
Feb
1930
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Built at Kingston Shipbuilding Co.,
Kingston, Ont, she was launched in 1917 at
Kingston, THIEPVAL was in commission between 24 Jul 1918 and 19 Mar 1920, when she was turned over to the Department of Marine and
Fisheries as a patrol vessel. Taken back into the RCN, she was
commissioned 02 Apr 1923, for service on the west coast. In Feb 1924, one of the few ships in the post-First World War Royal
Canadian Navy, THIEPVAL became the
first Canadian warship to visit the Soviet Union and Japan when it
provided support for a British attempt to fly around the world. She was detailed to proceed across the north Pacific
to Hakodate, Japan, to deposit fuel and lube "dumps" for
the round-the-world flight of Maj. Stuart MacLaren. Travelling over
11,000 miles in the process, THIEPVAL also salvaged what remained of
the aircraft after it was wrecked at Nikolski, USSR, on 03 Aug 1924.
THIEPVAL was wrecked on an uncharted rock in Barkley Sound,
B.C., on 27 Feb 1930.
Photos
and Documents Ship's company
photos
HMCS
THIEPVAL - The accidental tourist destination
Commanding Officers
Lt,
William James Robert Beech, RCN - 11 Feb 1924 - unk
LCdr Harold Reed Tingley, RCN - ?? - 27 Feb 1930
In memory of those who have crossed the bar
They shall not be
forgotten
Beech,
William James Robert
Drafted to THIEPVAL 11 Feb 1924
as Lt, RCN
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Betts, Wallace Havelock
1897-1962
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Gagnon,
Amedee
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Jordan,
Russell H. |
MacDonald,
Herbert C. |
Marr, David
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Shirley, Robert
Drafted to THIEPVAL 22 Feb 1924
as Lt, RCNVR
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Smith, Roy |
Tingley, Harold Reed
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Watt, Ernest F. B. |
Photos and Documents
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Article
on HMCS THIEPVAL, HMCS GIVENCHY, HMCS ARMENTIERES and HMCS STADACONA
transiting from Halifax to Esquimalt. THIEPVAL arrived safely in
Esquimalt, while ARMENTIERES and GIVENCHY had to escort / tow STADACONA to
San Francisco after she lost her rudder in a storm
The Daily Colonist, Victoria, BC, Saturday 24 May 1919
Courtesy of Dwight Farrell
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HMCS THIEPVAL in
Nazan Bay, Atka Island, in the Aleutians
Nazan
Bay was one of HMCS THIEPVAL's last stops before the diminutive trawler
crossed the north Pacific on the way to the Soviet Union and Japan. This
hand-coloured photograph gives an idea of the barren shores THIEPVAL would
visit during this 1924 journey. A secret component of the mission involved
examining Alaskan and northern Japanese ports to determine whether the
United States or Japan was contravening the 1922 Washington Naval Treaty by
fortifying these areas. Reports by THIEPVAL's commander, W.R.J. Beech,
detailed resources, the presence of military or government officials, and
the state of communications in several northern ports.
Source: George
Metcalf Archival Collection
CWM 19710050-001_16
Courtesy
of the Canadian War Museum
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12-Pounder Cannon, HMCS
THIEPVAL
Members
of THIEPVAL's crew maintain the ship's main armament, a 12-pounder cannon
mounted on a platform in the bow. THIEPVAL's limited weaponry was sufficient
for the ship's peacetime patrol work. After being transferred to the west
coast from Halifax in 1919, THIEPVAL's duties included counting seals,
patrolling against rum-runners, and ensuring that American fishing boats did
not enter Canadian territorial waters. Years after THIEPVAL's 1930 sinking,
divers raised this gun and placed it on display at nearby Ucluelet, British
Columbia.
Source: George Metcalf Archival Collection
CWM
19710050-001_86
Courtesy
of the Canadian War Museum
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HMCS THIEPVAL in Petropavlovsk harbour,
1924
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Bruno was adopted in northern Japan by the crew of HMCS
THIEPVAL and brought to Naden in 1924
Source: CFB Esquimalt Naval and Military
Museum
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Bruno with an unknown officer on HMCS THIEPVAL
In
1924, one of the few ships in the post-First World War Royal Canadian Navy,
the Battle-class trawler HMCS THIEPVAL, became the first Canadian warship to
visit the Soviet Union and Japan when it provided support for a British
attempt to fly around the world. While in Hakodate, Japan, HMCS THIEPVAL'S
crew adopted the small brown bear seen here and named him Bruno. Also known
as "Haca-Daddy" (a play on "Hakodate"), Bruno shows up
in a number of other photographs taken during THIEPVAL'S trip. Brought back
to Canada, Bruno spent years living at HMCS NADEN, the Royal Canadian Navy's
base at Esquimalt. Bruno subsequently developed a dependency on alcohol.
Sadly, he came to a tragic end when he died of poisoning after ingesting
dockyard supplies.
George Metcalf Archival Collection
Courtesy
of the Canadian War Museum
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Soviet Soldiers and HMCS THIEPVAL Lieutenant
A group of Red Army soldiers and other onlooker's
clusters beside one of HMCS THIEPVAL'S lieutenants
George Metcalf Archival Collection
Courtesy
of the Canadian War Museum
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The RAF flying boat seen here involved in an ambitious
round-the-world flight attempt
The
British round-the-world flight attempt ended on this beach near Nikolskoye
on Bering Island, off the Kamchatka Peninsula.
Soon
after leaving Petropavlovsk, the Vickers Vulture flying boat made a forced
landing in the ocean. The crew were able to get their aircraft to the
nearest beach, but the damage seen here could not be repaired. HMCS THIEPVAL
raced through the night to meet the stranded crew and then salvaged their
aircraft, hauling it up on the ship's rear deck for the trip to Canada. The
propeller from this aircraft was subsequently displayed in the naval
officers' mess at Esquimalt.
George Metcalf Archival Collection
Courtesy
of the Canadian War Museum
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