HMS Hecate (A137)
Template:Short description Template:Other ships Template:Use dmy dates Template:More footnotes needed
Template:Infobox ship imageTemplate:Infobox ship careerTemplate:Infobox ship characteristicsTemplate:Infobox service recordHMS Hecate (A137) was a Royal Navy deep ocean survey vessel of the Template:Sclass. She was present at the "presentation of fleet colours" review in Torbay on 29 July 1969. The ship was decommissioned in 1990.
Design and construction
The Hecla class were designed as combined hydrographic and oceanographic survey ships, built to merchant ship standards and of similar design to Script error: No such module "WPSHIPS utilities".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters"..[1] She was laid down at Yarrow Shipbuilders' Scotstoun shipyard on 26 October 1964, was launched on 31 March 1965 and was commissioned on 20 December 1965.[1] She had the pennant number A137.[2]
Hecate was Template:Convert long, with a beam of Template:Convert and a draught of Template:Convert. Displacement was Template:Convert light and Template:Convert full load, with a gross tonnage of 2,898.[1] She had diesel-electric propulsion, with three Paxman Ventura 12-cylinder diesel engines rated at Template:Convert powering two electric motors, rated at a total of Template:Convert and driving one propeller shaft, giving a speed of Template:Convert. She had a range of Template:Convert at a speed of Template:Convert and Template:Convert at Template:Convert.[3] The ship had a complement of 127 officers and other ranks.[1] She was fitted with a hangar and helideck aft to allow operation of a single Westland Wasp helicopter, while two surveying launches were carried.[1][3]
History
On 21 April 1971, two launches attached to HMS Hecate were towed out to sea and bombed by the Provisional Irish Republican Army while the vessels were moored at Baltimore, Republic of Ireland. One of the launches, Stork, was wrecked, while the other boat, Puffin, survived with minor damage. HMS Hecate was carrying out a hydrographic survey in collaboration with the government of the Republic.[4][5]
In the mid-1970s HMS Hecate was in the Persian Gulf surveying the entrance areas in the event of conflicts while based in Bandar Abbas, Iran.
In November 1981 while on a routine visit to Nantes, France, an attempt was made to sink the vessel using a bomb placed on the hull by divers. The detonator went off in the early hours of the morning, but the explosive failed to detonate. Template:Cnspan calling themselves "the Bobby Sands Committee" later claimed responsibility.[6] Hecate was undamaged and conducted North Atlantic surveys for the next 4 months, visiting Gibraltar, Tangiers, Madeira and Lisbon.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
In June 1982, during the Falklands War, while her sister ship were used as hospital ships, Hecate was painted grey and given an armament of two 20 mm guns and Blowpipe surface-to-air missiles. On 23 July, after the ceasefire had ended the fighting, Hecate was sent to the South Atlantic to relieve Template:HMS as Ice Patrol Ship while Endurance returned to Britain for a refit.[3][7] Hecate conducted patrols and surveys in the South Atlantic. A survey was made at Mare Harbour in East Falkland, which later became the port facilities for RAF Mount Pleasant. A survey was also made of the Bay of Isles, South Georgia. Hecate visited British Antarctic Survey bases and spent Christmas in Grytviken, South Georgia, where the crew attended a candlelit Christmas mass in the settlement's old whaling church. The New Year was spent at the Falkland Islands before Hecate became the first Royal Navy ship to visit South America following the hostilities. Hecate embarked a Chilean pilot at Punta Arenas before sailing to Talcahuano, Chile via the Patagonian Channel. Following a brief visit, Hecate took passage through the Panama Canal for a four-day visit to Antigua. Hecate returned to the UK in February, 1983.
Notes
References
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External links
Template:Hecla class survey ship Template:1971 shipwrecks
- ↑ a b c d e Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
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- ↑ a b c Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
- ↑ Parliamentary Debate - 26 April 1971
- ↑ Parliamentary Debate - 28 April 1971
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