I was just re-reading The Cruel Sea and searched Corvettes- this was the first video that came up. Thank you. As another commenter said- it really is a good book about life (and death) on a Corvette. For a book written in 1953 it addresses PTSD and there is a female officer who isn’t treated like a bimbo! And if in Halifax in summer- the Sackville is not to be missed. Pay attention to when a little tour boat meanders past and sets Sackville rocking and try to imagine being in an Atlantic swell. In January. Thank you again!
@Arthur5432111 ай бұрын
Me too. I found a book about HMS Coventry in the battle for the Falklands (1982) and that spured me on the read The Cruel Sea by comparison. To be fair both books paint a similar picture - god bless the Royal Navy I say (as a Pongo - Navy speak for Army) and (as you point out) both books address PTSD. The bit where they leave the survivors in the water to fight off the U-Boat - well that happened for real to my father. His ship, a destroyer, had to get the sub first before going back for the survivors. It was a famous action and there is a picture of his ship (HMS Venomous) arriving in Casablanca covered in the survivors.
@Calum_S4 жыл бұрын
For those that like reading, The Cruel Sea is a pretty decent story of life on a Flower class corvette.
@Cheeseatingjunlista4 жыл бұрын
The ship in that book is called Compass Rose - the film in black and white with Jack Hawkins is a very early memory for me - the then only TV station used to show it, and other WW2 films constantly
@1337flite4 жыл бұрын
Even better is Three Corvettes which is a factual version of the same author (Nicholas Monsarrat's time as an officer then a captain in corvettes).
@gordonlawrence14484 жыл бұрын
@@Cheeseatingjunlista I had forgotten about that film. Thanks for bringing it to mind.
@yousuck785why4 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@stevefreeland92554 жыл бұрын
BBC radio adaptation: kzbin.info/www/bejne/ppi9n4KaibZ_lbs
@johnnoble15584 жыл бұрын
My dad served on Flower class corvette's as a stoker, he told me it was the only job on board that was warm.
@stekarknugen92584 жыл бұрын
my grandfather served on a Royal Canadian Navy ship from the same dockyard that built these, he was lucky and served on a Corvette however, so he got to sleep in a bunk, inside. Man did he have some crazy stories though
@peterharwood14304 жыл бұрын
@jack tarr blimey jack how old are you?
@peterharwood14304 жыл бұрын
@jack tarr nice one mate. I know all about the indonesia war and why it took place. Having been indoctrinated, as we all were, I found out the truth the hard way hard and has been fighting corruption in British government since my retirement in 2011. As a result I have had my passport revoked by the foreign office. I am very ill and tired but I tell you more another time.
@johnmccallum85124 жыл бұрын
@jack tarr Nice to hear of another TroG sadly it is now a housing estate.
@chuckhainsworth48014 жыл бұрын
And a death sentence if your ship was were hit.
@JohnRodriguesPhotographer4 жыл бұрын
The Flower-class were ships of steel. The crews were made of sterner stuff. The ships were lively on the calmest of days, they beat hell out of their crews before the shooting started. It was amazing what these ships and crews did.
@petergorrie10134 жыл бұрын
The Cruel Sea is a good film, it's about a Flower Class Corvette called Compass Rose. "I think i can reach him now' Sir"
@GUNNYCANUCK4 жыл бұрын
LOVED that book, still own it today! :)
@Excalabur504 жыл бұрын
I still own the DVD of this movie Brilliant to say the least!
@primecreator4 жыл бұрын
Brilliant movie, I watch it every couple of years.
@arieldar4 жыл бұрын
The Cruel Sea was a great book by Nicolas Monsarat before it became a good film.
@jec1ny4 жыл бұрын
One of the best war movies about the battle of the Atlantic.
@oh8wingman4 жыл бұрын
After my Father died in 1966 and my Mother dated a fellow named Robert Preston for a while. Robert had served on Corvettes throughout the entire second war after enlisting at 18. He told me that when they left Halifax the rubber boots went on and stayed on until they arrived in England. You had to have lots of clean dry socks so you could change them frequently because between the salt water and the abrasion of wet socks you would find your skin removed from your feet in short order. Another thing most never grew used to was hot bunking. You never grew accustomed to sleeping in another man's stench since you shared bunks and hammocks. The food was not the best but there was plenty of it so you seldom went hungry. In the winter life on a Corvette got really bad. You literally had to wear oilskins all of the time as the storm waves would wash over the ship from stem to stern. One of the more miserable shipboard duties was ice removal. You took sledge hammers and broke ice away from the superstructure to keep the ship from turning turtle. Too much ice and one wave was all it took. It was a job of fear and desperation but if not done you would probably die a cold watery death since your life expectancy in the winter waters was less than 3 minutes, 7 minutes in the summer. One of the best jobs was a stoker or oiler in the engine room. At least you were warm part of the year. Of course, if you were torpedoed chances are you would drown as the ships were small and flooded right quick. If she turned turtle few if any survived trying to swim out of a capsized vessel in the North Atlantic because the hypothermia would render you incapable in no time. I once asked if anyone ever bitched about their conditions. Robert laughed and said they bitched all the time among themselves but never to an officer. Bitching to an officer might get you a job on watch in the crows nest where the roll could make you deathly sick and there was no possibility of ever getting warm on duty, even in summer. "Besides" he said, "We were too dumb in many cases to know what to bitch about. Some of the boys never had it so good. You see, if you were 18 years old and in the navy it was great when compared to the depression and going hungry on the Canadian prairies. For lots of us that was all we knew. Hunger and boredom because there was nothing to do for work." Iron Men in Iron Ships.............
@brianlloyd87588 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing. Reading accounts like makes me appreciate the freedoms we share all the more.
@samhaines82284 жыл бұрын
My father was a radio man on a corvette during WWII. He made many Atlantic crossings. Thanks for this video, it was of particular interest to me for obvious reasons.
@evanloevan4 жыл бұрын
Great video! My grandfather served on the last modified flower-class corvette launched by the Royal Canadian Navy during the war, HMCS Fergus. Was assigned to MOEF escort group C-9, returned in 1945. Wrecked November 1949 during a storm 2.5 nautical miles off of St. Shott's, Newfoundland and Labrador.
@swaghauler83344 жыл бұрын
I watched the Flower Class documentary on the History Channel (back when it was worth watching) and a British Captain of a Flower Class said: "You had to do your depth charge run at FULL SPEED. If you didn't, you'd blow the ship's Transom off when the depth charges exploded." You have to love the "quirks" of military equipment. :)
@edwinlamont41874 жыл бұрын
I had an uncle, who I never met, serve on a Flower class, he was the only naval uncle to survive the war, several in the Army were fine. Mum lost 3 of her brothers to the sea (enemy action).
@frieddoganddriedfrog77144 жыл бұрын
Edwin LaMont cool
@jec1ny4 жыл бұрын
Memory eternal.
@larrymoran_THE_CODGER4 жыл бұрын
Mr. LaMont. Bless them for their service and sacrifice. May they RIP and condolences to your mum, or a prayer for her if she is no longer with you.🙏
@gcprost4 жыл бұрын
I have toured the Sackville. I spent 10 years in the Canadian Naval Reserve. I am extremely proud of those that served so valiantly on these vessels. Thanks for doing this.
@ccga33594 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the video. My father served aboard HMS Cowslip (K196) during the Battle of the Atlantic. I highly recommend the book 'The Corvette Navy: True Stories from Canada's Atlantic War ' by James B. Lamb. An insightful look at life aboard a Flower class Corvette and at Canada's "Wavy" Navy, the RCNVR.
@edwardpatrickdetrafford-mo83478 ай бұрын
⚔️Remembering WW2 when my dad of the RCN, left Victoria bc to serve on a Corvette out of Nova Scotia, from 1942; telling me about them behaving like a cork in high seas. The de icing duties, and the mutton stew meals. He didn’t say much else, as our military service kept us apart. Thanks for the documentary.🛡️
@Ratty_Rex4 жыл бұрын
A very underrated ship. Brave personnel that served on them.
@Night607004 жыл бұрын
No. They were crappy in almost every way possible. The people that served on them would all agree....because they actually did....they were all horribly unlucky to be placed on such horrible ships. They were universally hated. Please stop with your revisionist history thinking that bad things were good.
@nealgallagher46844 жыл бұрын
@@Night60700 my father served on HMS TOWY K294 as a radar operator and if he was still here he would slap you right down to size.you got with the ships handling or you got off one month later once docked,he did the med,atlantic and when ve day came he was half way through a arctic convoy, open bridge and all.And there you are talking utter rubbish.Now be a good boy and crawl back in your hole like a good boy.
@Bird_Dog004 жыл бұрын
I think there was a joke about those ships that went something like this: The Supermarine Walruss seaplane could land on a meadow als long as the grass was somewhat wet. But after its pilot did so, he would find himself next to a Flower class corvette on the same meadow rolling and pitching violently...
@larrymoran_THE_CODGER4 жыл бұрын
🤣🤣 Bless um all!👍👍😁
@kevinchappell36944 жыл бұрын
My late father, Robert William Chappell, served on a RCN Flower Class Corvette during the Second World War. I toured the HMCS Sackville a couple of years back and was permitted below deck in the boiler area. Cold, wet, hard steel everywhere with the ocean just the other side of a fairly thin metal hull. A bugger of a way to spent your late teens and early twenties.
@pussertas8734 жыл бұрын
A Flower Class is currently a Museum Ship in Melbourne. Australian Built.
@ronclark9724Ай бұрын
I believe the HMAS Castlemaine is a Bathurst class corvette, not a Flower class... Similar in concept but the Bathurst's were a bit more multi-functional than the convoy ocean escort Flowers... The Aussies used the Bathurst for convoy ocean escorts, but also for hydrographic surveying as well as supporting and supplying troops ashore the Flowers mostly didn't...The Southwest Pacific theater was a different theater than the North Atlantic....
@peterh62814 ай бұрын
My Father served on a flower class corvette 1943-1945 HMS Heather K69 His name was able seaman William Hoy. He did a few convoys to America, one Artic convoy, and anti submarine duties in the channel during and after D day. I have his service records and medals which I treasure.
@robertcampbell60424 жыл бұрын
The number of servicemen who owe their lives directly to the Flower Class is truly impressive. One role you did not mention was that of picking up survivors of sunken ships. As a Discip. Sergeant In the RCAF my father had the misfortune of being "sunk" by u-boats a total of 13 times while transferring Flight crews to the UK (or on the return trip). About half the time he and "his" crews were recovered by Flower Class Corvettes. Since I wasn't born till 10 years after the war I guess I owe those ships and crews my life too.
@1mustangsally2 жыл бұрын
My dad was an ASDIC operator on the Norsyd. He was 18 when he enlisted .
@hughiecampbell7460 Жыл бұрын
My Father served on the Norsyd in late 1944. coming from the Trillium which he served on for over two years.
@Menddoxs4 жыл бұрын
I am a simple man, I see WW2 Warship, I click on notification instantly
@alaindrolet84917 ай бұрын
My dad and grand father built and repaire Corvettes in Quebec City during the war. I was told that one of them was purchase at the end of the war by Oscar Onassis and became his yacht for many years.
@markuffindell34914 жыл бұрын
Interesting read is the book Ewe Loch, where the Russian convoys assembled with Flower Class corvettes in attendance. My father served on HMS Rhododendron. His one remark like that previously quoted from the stoker, was he was lucky enough to have a hammock next to the stack!
@HSSBaker Жыл бұрын
Whats awesome is the HMCS Sackville was scanned and used in the movie Greyhound.
@pierrenivelt25864 жыл бұрын
wow! you could have choosen a better ship! i never seen a documentary about this class of ship and longing for someone to cover it:D. Thank you:D
@MililaniJag4 жыл бұрын
Great movie The Cruel Sea (1953) portraying a Flower-class corvette & her crew. Cheers!
@ronclark9724Ай бұрын
While Hollywood produced a great RCN Flower class corvette movie in 1953 as well with the famous Randolph Scott, Corvette K-225... I found The Cruel Sea a bit too depressing whereas Corvette K-225 a great action adventure film with a happy ending....
@lawrencewestby92294 жыл бұрын
My father served in HMCS Matapedia (K-112) and HMCS Pictou (K-146). He enlisted in the RCNVR in October, 1939 and mustered out in August, 1945. Being 23 at the time he enlisted he was one of the older crew members. He said that the most common smells aboard ship was fuel oil and vomit.
@geoffcameron11384 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for this video Matsimus - I really enjoyed it and I'd love to see you produce more WWII and naval content (although I enjoy all your videos). I hope to be able to visit HMCS Sackville if and when I can get to Canada after COVID-19. It's sad that more of these Flower-class corvettes weren't preserved as they performed a crucial role during WWII. I'm an Australian and we have a surviving example of an Australian Bathurst-class corvette, HMAS Castlemaine, which is preserved as a museum ship in Williamstown, Victoria and is worth a visit. Although not as well-known or as numerous, the Bathurst-class were an Australian design which was quite similar to the Flower-class in terms of size, speed, crew and armament. They performed much the same primary anti-submarine escort role as the Flower-class (some also performed other duties) and had many of the same drawbacks in terms of cramped crew quarters and very heavy rolling in anything but calm seas. A total of 60 Bathurst-class corvettes were built during WWII and they served primarily in the Pacific and Indian oceans but a small number also served in the Mediterranean and the Atlantic. Anyone who is interested can read more here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bathurst-class_corvette
@johnmclaren70594 жыл бұрын
Job well done sir! My father served on the flower class also, RCNVR joining in 1941 - 1945 with a rank of stoker first class. Along with so many other guys from the prairies , he’d never seen the ocean before nor did he know how to swim lol.The navy was his family during those war years and afterwards he was a member of the Royal Canadian legion and naval veterans Association! I salute those who served during, after and current, Aye Ready Aye 🇨🇦👍
@Conn30Mtenor4 жыл бұрын
That was my father's war. He served on HMCS Moose Jaw, HMCS Saskatoon and HMCS Huntsville. He visited Sackville some years before he passed; he said it was "spooky". All the smells, sights and sounds transported him back to his war experiences. I wish I could have been there with him. He said they were awful to serve in, he was seasick for weeks on end. I highly recommend the film "The Cruel Sea". It tells the story very well.
@hughiecampbell7460 Жыл бұрын
My father served on the HMCS Trillium 172 which is seen at the first of this video and is the only Corvette to spend the entire War as an Open Ocean Escort from HALIFAX NS to Londonderry Ireland Dad was a Gun Layer.
@tonyaughney89453 жыл бұрын
We had three of the Flower Class in the Irish Naval Service from 1946-1972. Been told that they were terrible to sail in on the West coast.
@andrewtaylor9404 жыл бұрын
Ah! the Flower Class. Making the US Buckley class Destroyer Escorts actually look like a more desirable assignment. The only thing that could have possibly made life on the Flower’s worse might have been sending them to the Aleutian Islands. And you just gotta love the extremes of the Royal Navy naming conventions. “OI mate! I got posted to the Victorious! What did you lot get?” “I got posted to the Indomitable!” “I got Warspite!” “What about you Dougie?” “I got the HMS Pansy...” as he hangs his head in shame. I mean at least the US Navy named its most horrible boats after sailors who had died horribly... err I mean honorably, at sea.
@Aluminati14 жыл бұрын
My grandfather served on HMCS Huron, who was also on escort duty, he had nothing but praise for the corvettes & the Merchant Marine.
@LilithNakamura4 жыл бұрын
My grandpa served aboard HMCS Pictou, and designed the Gun Shield! So happy to see this class covered!
@lawrencewestby9229 Жыл бұрын
My father served in Pictou as well. I have a couple of photos showing the Gryphon breaking the U-boat.
@LilithNakamura Жыл бұрын
@@lawrencewestby9229 That’s the one!
@robbhahn88973 жыл бұрын
'The Corvette Navy' by James B. Lamb is an interesting and enlightening book about the Canadian corvette service.
@spiritofthewolf15x3 жыл бұрын
My grandfather served on one of these, the ship he was on was sunk about two weeks after he'd been transferred to a different ship.
@skyjumper9994 жыл бұрын
"We don't have the biggest guns, we don't have the biggest ships, and we don't have the most high tech equipment..." Some things in the CF don't change in 80 years and probably never will HAHAHA!
@Night607004 жыл бұрын
@kevin lawrence No they weren't. That is a common misconception. Infact it's surprisingly hard to use ASW equipment when the ship isn't stable. Corvettes were very very small and designed poorly. They weren't stable enough to accurately use hedgehog systems. This is a problem that Corvette commanders noted both publicly and privately. If you say "but depth charges". Then I and everyone that is in the know, will simply ignore you.
@Night607004 жыл бұрын
@kevin lawrence You're right. You're saying they were effective because they scared U-boats into thinking an actual destroyer was after them. I'm saying that without those actual destroyers the corvettes alone would have scared no one. Remember U-boats would often start an attack on the surface. If they could win a gunnery duel they would certainly try. And corvettes with pop guns were sunk by U-boat gun fire. But you can't afford to do that when there's destroyers around.
@swaghauler83344 жыл бұрын
@kevin lawrence The modern FRIGATE was the ASW solution of choice. Bigger than a Corvette, but not as well equipped for Surface or AA Warfare as a Destroyer, the Frigate was the evolution of the Flower Class corvette.
@Night607004 жыл бұрын
@kevin lawrence First I'm not trying to prove you wrong. I'm just saying think of it from a U-boat's perspective. You have the element of surprise. You have the time to get the exact course and speed of your target. Killing a Corvette with an 88 is easy. And hitting an U-boat at night was far from easy. But why risk it if a destroyer with 4 guns might be around. One gun to one gun. The smaller target wins, especially with surprise on their side. But what fool risks having to get their one gun into a duel against an additional 4 guns. The corvettes simply had to be a distraction. The Germans knew that and often didn't fall for it. Unless they were drunk. Or crazy.
@Night607004 жыл бұрын
@@swaghauler8334 You are stupidly wrong. The frigate is literally the oldest type of ship. Quit please.
@richarddyasonihc4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your your great comments about a ship which helped my Father who served on English merchantmen in WW11 - and from me, as I partly owe my being here at all to all those Canadians who bravely joined us immediately the war broke out. Cllr Richard Dyason, Oakthorpe in Leicestershire.
@blueeyeswhitedragon98394 жыл бұрын
Well done, Matt. As a Canadian, l am proud of how my parents were able to step up to the plate in WWll, air, land & sea.
@Night607004 жыл бұрын
It's not bravery when being jailed by the Canadian government for refusing to work was the other option.
@Night607004 жыл бұрын
@@blueeyeswhitedragon9839 Then you need to learn the history they don't like to talk about.
@Night607004 жыл бұрын
@kevin lawrence The War comes first is the defense Nazis gave at trial. You know, before we executed them. FOR WAR CRIMES.
@cinquine14 жыл бұрын
@@Night60700 Holy false equivalence fallacy. Mining isn't the same as genocide.
@Night607004 жыл бұрын
@@cinquine1 The Nazi Genocide was the working of people to death. Such as in mines. Mine are traditionally dangerous and a great way to work to death people you don't like.
@markwaters87513 жыл бұрын
Can you imagine having an open bridge in a January storm? The watchkeepers must have just about frozen to death!
@casualsuede Жыл бұрын
Fun fact, the sackville was digitally pictured and put into CGI for the Tom Hanks film Greyhound shown as the HMIS Dodge, aka the Dickie.
@denniswilson26904 жыл бұрын
My dad served as a stoker on The Napanee K118 during WWII. He told me he used to hide when there was abandon ship drills cause he couldn't swim.
@subliutenant Жыл бұрын
My Dad was on HMS Crocus in 1939, after being bombed and sunk on HMS Sandhurst in Dover Harbour, he was on north Atlantic convoys and convoys to West Africa and Malta. He left her and went to Marine engineering school to train as an ERA as he was an apprentice welder caulker in Swan Hunter/ Wigan Richardson on the Tyne. I have a rather battered photo of Crocus refueling from an oiler en-route to Malta.
@ASB1174 жыл бұрын
My grandfather was Captain of HMS Abelia for a time. Sank an E-boat, rescued a Norwegian passenger liner and got torpedoed on the same run!
@st.georgeguardabassi72864 жыл бұрын
Excellent presentation. These were one of my favorite class of ships from WW2
@Marinealver4 жыл бұрын
Seaman Flower, what do you have. This is my rifle, there are many like it, but this one is mine, and somehow I am supposed to fight the entire German Navy with it.
@johnyoung44414 жыл бұрын
We shoot the U-Boats with it, sailor!
@ramiii86334 жыл бұрын
Use the stock to knock morse code saying “gerry go away”
@stevewixom93114 жыл бұрын
LOL.. very good
@jamesc.57344 жыл бұрын
My uncle served on the Corvette St. Thomas during WW2. While on his watch they sunk a sub. he was 17 years old at the time. He never really talk about his days, but did go to reunions.
@Canhan1674 жыл бұрын
The HMCS Sackville is the best museum ship in Canada. It is perfectly maintained, and they also let you work the guns. I’ve visited it many times, and it was an inspiration for me to join the navy.
@robbo33534 жыл бұрын
My dad served on Geranium K16 1942, he said it was a wet boat and terrible in big seas but liked it. Moved to Z class Destroyers 1944
@troika9t94 жыл бұрын
Well done-my father was chief engineer HMCS MOSSE JAW and have donated his memorabilia to HMCS SACKVILLE If you are ever in Halifax be sure to tour the ship. Cheers
@josephkrupp74304 жыл бұрын
In the 1970's the US Navy built the Ashville class patrol gun boat. They were designed after the British corvettes and the German E-boats. So the Americans can call the corvettes dad. I know about them because I served on one in Vietnam.
@johnutting96154 жыл бұрын
The New Zealand navy had three Moa Kiwi and Tui. The Moa and Kiwi were in Guadacanal in 1943 where the Kiwi rammed a japanese supply submarine the I 1 (2500 tons) and after a fire fight it beached on the coastal reef. Only a matter of months later the Moa while waiting to refuel at Tulagi was bombed by a Japanese aircraft and sunk in 4 minutes taking 5 crew members down. One was my uncle. Members of our family attended the 75th aniversary of the sinking of the Moa a very moving ceremony.
@ronclark9724Ай бұрын
Similar in concept and size as a Flower class corvette, but the HMNZS Moa and Kiwi were bird class minesweepers....
@petestorz1727 ай бұрын
The Flowers, Black Swan class sloops, and USN destroyer escorts were examples of quantity having a quality. Adequate performance, utilizing yard spaces not used for or not suited for larger naval ships, quick and relatively inexpensive to build. Quantifying how many submarines they sank or damaged is "easy". Less easy, and of equal or possibly greater value, is numbering the allied merchant ships not sunk just because they were with the convoys.
@rollout1984 Жыл бұрын
I'm currently reading "The Cruel Sea" by Nicholas Monsarrat and wanted more info on the class of ship in the book. Thank you.
@noele6588 Жыл бұрын
My uncle was XO On the sackville. Barely recognised him on the picture by the portside head.
@PatrickOHanlon-w7t18 күн бұрын
I was a telegraphist in the Irish Navy and I served on board a flower class Corvette in 1966/67, She was named L E Maev, there were three corvettes in the Irish Navy at that time mostly used for fishery protection and sea rescue, They were formerly known as H M S Oxslip H M S Borrich, and H M S Bellworth.
@bfmcarparts4 жыл бұрын
A local character served on a Flower corvette. He told me after a sleepless night he jumped out of his hammock and stepped on a flopping cod- best breakfast he had while on escort.
@oldmansolo5724 жыл бұрын
Check out the book "Corvette Navy", a real eye opener about the RCN and RN's escort efforts in the NA during WW2.
@uxboat4 жыл бұрын
A great period film on the Corvette was Corvette K-225 filmed in Halifax Nova Scotia during the war. Cheers Mike
@ronclark9724Ай бұрын
I like this one better because of the happy ending....
@Cdntrvler544 жыл бұрын
They were also used post war as breakwaters.. We had one, the K 444 (HMCS Matane) ended her life between the Canadian cities of Courtney & Campbell River, British Columbia at Oyster Bay Shoreline Park. It remained there well into skeletal form until the exposed and last parts were taken down for safety reasons.. Although I was told, this was done as a fund raiser as well.. And in an odd coincidence, my mothers late boyfriend, served on board as a gunnery officer.. LEST WE FORGET
@kirklenagh30954 жыл бұрын
Check out the Australian Bathurst Class,very similar
@brentgerchicoff80843 жыл бұрын
My grandfather served aboard one of these. K143
@kleinjahr4 жыл бұрын
Had an uncle who served on them. Apparently the forward messdeck's head drained directly into the sea. Resulting in them becoming bidets when they rolled. A bit chilly in the North Atlantic.
@therealunclevanya4 жыл бұрын
I have a model of the HMCS Stowberry on my desk now. Lovely tubs!
@MeanLaQueefa4 жыл бұрын
WW2, always has me in awe. Such a scale of building and tech in such a short time. Amazing
@SurfTrekTonics4 жыл бұрын
I really enjoy videos about the Merchant Marine Service of WW2, they are the unsung heroes battling the Atlantic and Kriegsmarine allowing the UK to survive being cut off. It would be an interesting video about the Flower Class variants and upgrades from 1940 - 1945.
@victorhamilton90974 жыл бұрын
Thanks, Mat. I enjoyed this bit. My late father served on a corvette. Called it hell on water.
@robgraham56974 жыл бұрын
Thanks for covering one of the great unsung heroes of WWII. Canada finished the war with the 3rd largest navy which consisted mostly of escorts like these. My understanding is that the Canadian Prime Minister felt it was better to contribute quickly rather than wait and build fewer bigger ships. Plus Canada's shipyards could build corvettes without upgrading their equipment.
@ronclark9724Ай бұрын
While Canada built a large ocean escort ASW navy during the Second World War, the RN at towards the end thought the RCN wasn't a balanced navy giving the RCN two light cruisers the RCN quickly decommissioned after the war... Even after the RCN purchased two light aircraft carriers these carriers were quickly set up to be ASW escort carriers after the Korean War... Even today with numerous islands off the mainland, two of which have significant population, the RCN has NO sea lift ships suitable to support and supply any significant army deployment on any of the islands.... At least the RCN is building new Arctic Polar Patrol Vessels with small support and supply capabilities for the Far North archipelago for their small militias, but with dog sleds, ski mobiles, and quads...
@martinsmith26004 жыл бұрын
A late friend of mine served as navigator on K36 HMS Clematis, he always said it was like a Cork in a very large bottle.
@ChrisParadise-wv5iz4 жыл бұрын
Mad Respect to anyone who ever set foot on one or even fight on one. Id be hard pressed to trust one on Great Lakes storms ..
@lordwintertown82844 жыл бұрын
G'day Matsimus, Ahh the Flower class corvette such an iconic ship that fought in one of the roughest oceans, same can be said for the Town class Destroyers the thing was the crews hated them more than the flowers & such. It was also nice to see there was a WT screenshot there as well & it's represented as H.M.C.S Brantford K-218 if some wanted to know. We in Australia had a very similar ship to the Flower class as well the Bathurst Class AMS the only real difference was the Bathurst had two screws & sometimes lighter weapons but they did so much service and were triumphant on several occasions inculding in sinking a Merchant Raider when in Indian service while escorting an oil tanker. If you ever come here in Victoria we have two left H.M.A.S Castlemaine J244 and H.M.A.S Whyalla J153 & of the class only one was lost to enemy action in the second world war H.M.A.S Armidale J240, four would also be lost post war as well inculding one being bombed in foreign service by the CIA in the 80's by a WWII aircraft a B-26. I hope to one day travel to Canada to see the H.M.C.S Sacksville K-181 & H.M.C.S Haida G63 maybe as the same planned idea trip to Belfast to see the H.M.S Caroline C class Cruiser similar to K-181 being the last of the class.
@jerry2357 Жыл бұрын
I went to Belfast to see HMS Caroline this summer: fantastic! Quite different from HMS Belfast only about 20 years younger.
@glenn1826 Жыл бұрын
Brisbane has one too at its maritime museum
@--Dani4 жыл бұрын
I like the variety, ships, tanks, aircraft and guns. These flowers kept helped keep the world free, pls do more vids like this one. Love the content keep it up Mat👍
@SteveJonesScaleModellingSite4 жыл бұрын
Just discovered your channel and subscribed. My Grandfather was Yeoman of signals on the Corvette HMS Godetia in WWII. Great to see this video. Thanks for sharing
@Nicholas-ks8xp2 жыл бұрын
The HMCS Sackville has been restored to like new 🥰
@alganhar14 жыл бұрын
There is an old story, a group of USN and RN sailors were having a drink (or three) in a pub and talking the night away. By the end they had all decided that while the Catalina was an excellent aircraft and could, if it wished to, land in wet grass, when it got there it would find a Flower Class Corvette rolling wildly in the dew....
@spetsnatzlegion33664 жыл бұрын
It’s like the fairey swordfish, it’s another british design that seems to be completely outdated and ill-equipped for its duty but did really well anyways because it doesn’t care what you think
@drewstafford85062 жыл бұрын
My grandad served on a flower class k192
@billhuber29644 жыл бұрын
" the cruel sea " was a great movie .
@rustyshakleford65532 жыл бұрын
Only one left. Every time I’m in Halifax NS I stop by
@carmengrace24134 жыл бұрын
Visit the HMS Sackville in Halifax and imagine as my father in law did escorting convoys across the Atlantic. How did they fit their balls in such a small ship!
@MarkChristopherpens4 жыл бұрын
I live in NS and was down to see the HMCS Sackville yesterday. Wonderful video!!
@mbryson28994 жыл бұрын
Great video! Thank you, Matsimus, it was an unexpected topic but I certainly enjoyed it.
@VikingTeddy4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this. I'm looking forward to more older stuff with your usual content.
@GlenWood474 жыл бұрын
I think the story of HMS Starling commanded by Captain Frederick Walker fighting the U-Boats is worth including in a future video. Apologies if it has already been covered and I have missed it.
@Puymouret3 жыл бұрын
Walker R.N. a great book and man
@GlenWood473 жыл бұрын
@@Puymouret When did you read the book? I must have read it almost 60 years ago and it has stayed with me ever since. The only other reference to Capt Walker’s amazing exploits I can remember since then was an entry in the Guinness Book of Records.
@kxd25914 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid in the 50's I would rush home from school to catch the Afternoon Movie. These were old b/w from the 30's and 40's for the most part. And one of these movies was "Corvette K225". I ate it up. All the patriotic WWII movies, those were my cup of tea. These were movies that could make an eleven year old believe that a sailor on a submarine could knock a Japanese Zero out of the air using a Thompson submachine gun, "I always wanted a crack at one of these babies!" And, "Corvette K225" was right up there at the top! Noble deeds! Daring do! God Bless'em All!
@survak4 жыл бұрын
Great video These were great little ships
@benwilson61454 жыл бұрын
Smiths Dock in Middlesboro built many more vessel types and did not build Fishing boats. The Whale Catcher were designed for service in Antarctica in 60 and 70 South, worse than the North Atlantic. Rolling is not a design defect, these were very good sea boats. Many were sold and became whale catchers.
@nealgallagher46844 жыл бұрын
im from co durham and my father told me the history of them because he served on one k294 which was built in middlesboro. You are right about design, as a kid he told me it was shaped like a duck so it could ride over the waves opposed to a bigger ship smashing through a wave. i asked whats best and he shook hes head slowly and said its not nice in a storm having the waves braking on the bow everone hears it and can't sleep.But once you get youre sea legs on a corvette its just the cold and wet to contend with.
@NickNZ4 жыл бұрын
Great episode. Would like to see more in a similar vein.
@Scriptorsilentum4 жыл бұрын
want fun? talk to the men who served coastal escorts in UK and Canada with the Fairmile motor launches. the men called them :holy rollers".
@donlavery51374 жыл бұрын
Surprised Matsimus that you didn't know that 3 Flower class Corvettes served with the Irish Naval Service until the 70s.
@PieAndChips3 жыл бұрын
HMS Mallow K81 was later given to the Egyptian Navy where she served until 1975
@nickdanger38022 жыл бұрын
Canada built Corvettes "The core of this program was 90 merchant ships to be built in Canada for the British and paid for by the Americans through lend-lease. The Americans were also prepared to pay for warship construction in Canada for the British, and the Canadian government-itself strapped for U.S. dollars-committed its ‘surplus’ productive capacity to meet the need." "The American money that funded them was crucial to Canada’s balance of payments with the U.S. Just as importantly, British expertise in the building of frigates was a welcome boost to Canadian shipbuilders who would ultimately build the same types for the RCN." "By December 1941, HMCS Arrowhead, Bittersweet, Eyebright, Mayflower and Snowberry were in American yards having their forecastles extended and modern radar installed." Legion magazine the-sheep-dog-navy-navy-part-39 page
@wesley.wesolowski81014 жыл бұрын
WW 2 my grandfather served on this Vessel HMCS Sackville K181 and I heard stories of Battle Altantic from him and HMCS Orillia Dawson and these ship were crazy serve on water would get into lower decks and ice swell would serious damage the vessel and grandfather was from Saskatchewan were best sailor and at the time RCN RCN NAVAL RESERVE AND VOlunteer service reserve as well RCNVR and there is book of remembrance Chief Petty officer Frank Pickell
@1Dropboys4 жыл бұрын
So when is the drachinifel Collab? :p
@Night607004 жыл бұрын
When will he talk about something that isn't Canadian.
@TheVargr4 жыл бұрын
The earlier built Flower-class ships have the mast in front of the bridge. Later built ships had it moved behind the bridge.
@Mr-Spook-19714 жыл бұрын
you can find another flower class in Whyalla, south Australia en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMAS_Whyalla_(J153)
@ronclark9724Ай бұрын
She is a Bathurst class corvette, similar in size and concept, but a bit more multi-functional... Similar to the HMAS Castlemaine at Williamstown, Victoria... The Aussies used their Bathursts for hydrographic surveying, minesweeping, supporting and supplying the troops ashore, as well as convoy ocean escorting... All of the Bathursts were built in Australia with mostly Australian manufactured parts, although a very few were British imports...
@nathandamaren20934 жыл бұрын
Flower class corvettes are awsome.
@hagbard723 жыл бұрын
My father was on a Corvette in the Canadian Navy, worked in the bottom of the ship listening for subs on headphones. After the war, he refused to ever put headphones on.