St. Roch
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St. Roch

Royal Canadian Mounted Police schooner, the first ship to completely circumnavigate North America


Country
Canada
Country of Registry
Canada
Service Entry
1928
Manufacturer
Burrard Dry Dock
Vessel Type
museum ship: , ship
Ship Type
museum ship
Current Location
49° 17' 39", -123° 9' 50"
Aliases
St Roch

* This information from Wikidata is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

The RCMPV St. Roch is a historic schooner built in 1928 at the Burrard Dry Dock Shipyards in North Vancouver. Designed by Tom Halliday and modeled after Roald Amundsen's ship Maud, the vessel was primarily constructed from thick Douglas fir, with the exterior reinforced by Australian "ironbark" eucalyptus and an interior hull strengthened with heavy beams to withstand Arctic ice pressure. This robust construction enabled her to undertake arduous Arctic missions. St. Roch served as a patrol and supply vessel for Canada’s Arctic waters from 1929 to 1939, establishing her reputation through pioneering voyages. Notably, she became the first vessel to complete a west-to-east transit of the Northwest Passage in 1940–1942, navigating the route from the Pacific to the Atlantic. In 1944, she accomplished the first return trip through the more northerly and considered true Northwest Passage, traversing the passage in a single season—a significant maritime milestone. Between 1944 and 1948, she continued her Arctic patrols. Her most historic achievement occurred on May 29, 1950, when St. Roch became the first vessel to circumnavigate North America, traveling from Halifax, Nova Scotia, to Vancouver via the Panama Canal. Throughout her service, she completed three Arctic voyages, demonstrating her resilience and versatility in polar conditions. After decommissioning in 1954 in Halifax, St. Roch was returned to Vancouver, where she was preserved. In 1958, she was placed in dry dock at Kitsilano Point for restoration, inspiring the location for the Vancouver Maritime Museum, which officially opened in 1960. The ship was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1962 and is now on display at the Vancouver Maritime Museum, where it remains an iconic symbol of Canadian Arctic exploration. The vessel’s enduring significance lies in her pioneering voyages and role in Arctic maritime history.

This description has been generated using GPT-4.1-NANO based on the Vessel's wikidata information and then modified by ShipIndex.org staff.

Ships

13 ship citations (2 free) in 9 resources

St. Roch (Canadian): NW Passage Subscribe to view
St. Roch (RCMP Northern exploration vessel) Subscribe to view
St. Roch (RCMP patrol vessel) Subscribe to view
St. Roch -- power schr.
Book The H. W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest Illustration
Author Gordon R. Newell, ed.
Published Superior Publishing Company, Seattle,
Pages 385, 516, 602, 613, 627, 636, 656, 386, 616
St. Roch, Arctic patrol schooner
Journal American Neptune (1941-1990; Vols. 1-50)
Published Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Mass.,
ISSN 0003-0155
Pages (1942), L, 35
St. Roch, Canadian exploration vessel: book subject Subscribe to view
St. Roch, Canadian exploration vessel: exhibit at Vancouver Maritime Museum Subscribe to view
St. Roch, Canadian exploration vessel: history, description, photo Subscribe to view
St. Roch, Canadian exploration vessel: Intersail member Subscribe to view
St. Roch, Canadian exploration vessel: mentioned Subscribe to view
St. Roch, Canadian ship, Arctic voyages Subscribe to view
St. Roch, RCMP (exploratory vessel) Subscribe to view
St. Roch, Rcmp Schr Subscribe to view