HMCS BRANDON
HMCS BRANDON - Flower Class Corvette
The Story of HMCS BRANDON - 1941 to 1945
Commissioned at Quebec City on July 22, 1941, Brandon arrived
at Halifax August 1. She joined Newfoundland Command in September
after working up and left St. John's September 26 for her first
convoy, SC.46. She served as an ocean escort to and from Iceland
until December, when she arrived in the U.K. for three months'
repairs at South Shields. From mid-March, 1942, after three
weeks' workups at Tobermory, she served on the "Newfie-Derry"
run almost continuously until September, 1944. From December,
1942, onward, she served with EG C-4, helping defend the hard-pressed
convoy HX.224 in February, 1943, and in the following month
escorting convoys to and from Gibraltar. In August, 1943, she
had a three-month refit at Grimsby, England, including focsle
extension. She left Londonderry September 2, 1944, to join her
last transatlantic convoy, ONS.251, and, after two months' refit
at Liverpool, N.S., worked up in Bermuda. On February 5, 1945,
she arrived at St. John's to join EG W-5, Western Escort Force,
in which she served until the end of the war. Paid off at Sorel
on June 22, 1945, she was broken up at Hamilton, Ont. in 1945.
HMCS BRANDON - 1999 to Present

HMCS BRANDON lies outboard in a nest
of her sister ships in
Esquimalt Harbour. Photo credit Maritime Forces Pacific.
One of the newest ships in the Canadian navy HMCS BRANDON,
a Maritime Coastal Defence Vessel was commissioned in 1999 and
is now based in Esquimalt, BC. HMCS BRANDON, classified as a
MCDV, is manned mainly by reservists.
MCDV
CHARACTERISTICS
MCDVs are designated under NATO classification
"MM" as general mine warfare vessels. Design - Commercial design
and construction standards. Military standards for stability,
flood control zones, doors, turning/stopping distances, ammunition
spaces.
Dimensions:
Length: 55.3m
Beam: 11.3m
Draught: 3.4m
Displacement - 970 tonnes
Accommodation - mixed gender crew to 36
in two and three person cabins
Range - 5000 nautical miles, primarily operating
in Canadian waters however out-of-area operations possible
Normal Mission - 18 days Maximum Speed -
15 knots
Propulsion - diesel-electric
MCDV MISSION SYSTEMS
Weapons: 40-mm Bofors Gun two .50-calibre
machine guns
Sensors: Radars, surveillance and navigation;
Passive electromagnetic surveillance measures
Communications: VHF and UHF and HF, including
secure voice automated message processing system
MCM Capability - limited capability with
deployment of modular payloads: four route survey, two mechanical
minesweeping and one bottom object inspection. Systems are designated
to accommodate future growth and evolution.
©1996-2004
- The Naval Museum of Manitoba - 1 Navy Way - Winnipeg Manitoba
- R3C 4J7