History
United Kingdom
NameHMS Mersham
NamesakeMersham
BuilderP.K. Harris
Launched5 April 1954
Completed14 January 1955
FateTransferred to France, 1955
France
NameViolette
Acquired1955
Stricken1987
General characteristics
Class & typeHam-class minesweeper
Displacement
  • 120 tons standard
  • 164 tons full
Length106ย ft 6ย in (32.46ย m)
Beam22ย ft (6.7ย m)
Draught5ย ft 9ย in (1.75ย m)
Propulsion2 shaft Paxman 12YHAXM diesels, 1,100ย bhp (820ย kW)
Speed14 knots (26ย km/h)
Complement2 officers, 13 ratings
Armament1 ร— Bofors 40 mm L/60 gun / 20 mm Oerlikon gun
NotesPennant number(s): M2709 / IMS46

HMS Mersham was a Ham-class minesweeper of the Royal Navy. All ships of the class were named after villages ending in -ham. The minesweeper was named after Mersham in Kent.[citation needed] Constructed at Appledore, in Devon, Mersham was launched in April 1954 and completed in January 1955. In April 1955, the ship was transferred to the French Navy and in French service, was known by its pennant number, M773, until it was renamed Violette in 1964. Throughout the 1950s and early 1960s, the vessel undertook minesweeping duties from Brest in Brittany, before being laid up in 1965. In 1974, the ship was transferred to the Gendarmerie and undertook patrol duties until finally being decommissioned in 1987.

Design and description

edit

In the early 1950s, the Royal Navy had a requirement for large numbers of minesweepers to counter the threat to British shipping from Soviet mines in the event of a conventional Third World War. The navy's existing minesweepers were obsolete, while the increasing sophistication of modern mines meant the mine warfare forces could not be supplemented by requisitioned fishing vessels as had been done in previous wars. Large orders were placed for coastal minesweepers (the Ton) and for smaller inshore minesweepers and minehunters intended to operate in inshore waters such as river estuaries (the Ham and Ley classes). As the navy did not have sufficient manpower to operate all the required ships in peacetime, it was planned to lay a large number up in reserve, so they could be manned by reservists (in many cases the crews of the fishing boats which would previously have been used in the same role) in time of emergency.[1][2][3] Additional ships were ordered by the United States for supply under the Mutual Defense Assistance Pact (MDAP), with 15 Ham-class minesweepers being allocated to France.[4]

Construction and service

edit

Mersham was launched at the P. K. Harris yard at Appledore, Devon on 5 April 1954 and was completed on 14 January 1955. She was transferred to the French Navy on 4 April 1955, being initially only known by her pennant number M773, but was given the name Violette on 22 February 1964.[5][6][7]

On entering service, M773 joined the 26th Minesweeper Division based at Brest in Brittany. The minesweepers of the 26th Division were employed on clearing wartime mines, together with normal training operations. In 1958, M773, together with sister ships M772 (later named Armoise) and M789 (later named Pรฉtunia) visited Douala in Cameroon. On 1 March 1965, Violette was laid up in reserve at Cherbourg.[7]

In the 1970s, all of the French Navy's Ham-class minesweepers were transferred to subsidiary duties as tenders or patrol boats, with five vessels transferred to the Maritime Gendarmerie, the seagoing branch of the National Gendarmerie police force. Violette was transferred to the Gendarmerie on 27 March 1974.[7][8] Violette remained in use as a patrol boat at La Pallice in 1985,[9] but was now obsolete even in the patrol role, and was decommissioned and stricken on 13 February 1987.[7]

Citations

edit
  1. ^ Gardiner & Chumbley 1995, pp.ย 480, 541
  2. ^ Brown & Moore 2012, pp.ย 130โ€“132
  3. ^ Friedman 1987, pp.ย 45โ€“46
  4. ^ Blackman 1962, p.ย 283
  5. ^ Colledge & Warlow 2006, p.ย 224
  6. ^ Worth 1986, pp.ย 124, 134
  7. ^ a b c d Dubey, Franck (2007). "Dragueur de mines Violette". Net-Marine (in French). Retrieved 8 June 2019.
  8. ^ Gardiner & Chumbley 1995, p.ย 130
  9. ^ Moore 1985, p.ย 187

References

edit
edit

๐Ÿ“š Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Mersham

Mersham (listen) is a mostly agricultural large village and civil parish near Ashford in Kent, England. The population of the civil parish includes the

Violette

based in Port-au-Prince, Haiti Violette (film), a 2013 French drama film HMSย Mershamย (M2709), a Royal Navy minesweeper transferred to France in 1955 and renamed

Ham-class minesweeper

2017) HMSย Littleham (IMS44) HMSย Ludham (IMS45) HMSย Malham (IMS89) HMSย Mersham (IMS46) HMSย Mickleham (IMS47) HMSย Mileham (IMS48) HMSย Neasham (IMS49) HMSย Nettleham

Patricia Knatchbull, 2nd Countess Mountbatten of Burma

Hayling Island in Hampshire. Countess Mountbatten died at her home in Mersham, Kent, on 13 June 2017, aged 93. Her funeral service took place on 27 June

Funeral of Lord Mountbatten

and Doreen, Lady Brabourne, was held at St John the Baptist Church in Mersham, Kent, near Newhouse, the Knatchbull's family seat. It was attended by

Assassination of Lord Mountbatten

Lady Brabourne and Nicholas Knatchbull took place at the family church in Mersham, Kent. Mountbatten's ceremonial funeral was held on 5ย September 1979 at

John Knatchbull (Royal Navy officer)

the Knatchbull family estate at Mersham, south-east of Ashford, with a mansion house known as 'Mersham Hatch' or 'Mersham-le-Hatch' (completed in 1763)

State funerals in the United Kingdom

Even the unintended drawing of the hearse by a Royal Guard of sailors (from HMS Excellent) became tradition almost immediately when the royal coffin was