HMCS Assiniboine
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HMCS Assiniboine

1954 St. Laurent-class destroyer


Country of Registry
Canada
Service Entry
August 16, 1956
Commissioning Date
August 16, 1956
Manufacturer
Marine Industries Limited
Operator
Royal Canadian Navy
Vessel Type
destroyer, St. Laurent-class destroyer
Decommissioning Date
December 14, 1988
Shipwrecked Date
1995
Service Retirement Date
December 14, 1988
Pennant Number
234
Aliases
HMCS Assiniboine (DDH 234), NCSM Assiniboine, NCSM Assiniboine (DDH 234), HMCS Assiniboine (DDE 234), NCSM Assiniboine (DDE 234), DDH 234, DDE 234, and Assiniboine

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

HMCS Assiniboine (DDH 234) was a St. Laurent-class destroyer that served in the Royal Canadian Navy and later the Canadian Forces from 1956 to 1988. Laid down on 19 May 1952 by Marine Industries in Sorel, Quebec, and launched on 12 February 1954, she was commissioned on 16 August 1956. Originally designated DDE 234, she was assigned to the east coast's Third Canadian Escort Squadron and participated in international deployments, including a notable voyage to northern Europe in late 1956. As built, Assiniboine measured approximately 366 feet (112 meters) in length, with a beam of 42 feet (13 meters) and a draught of 13 feet 2 inches (4.01 meters). Her displacement was 2,263 tonnes standard, increasing to 2,800 tonnes at deep load. The ship’s propulsion system consisted of two Babcock & Wilcox water tube boilers powering two geared steam turbines, generating 22,000 kilowatts (30,000 shp) for a maximum speed of 28.5 knots. She carried a crew of 12 officers and 237 enlisted personnel. Designed for anti-submarine warfare and equipped with twin 3-inch/50 caliber guns, 40 mm guns, and Mk. NC 10 Limbo ASW mortars, Assiniboine was built to operate in harsh Canadian conditions, featuring a rounded hull, a sealed "citadel" for crew safety, and ice-resistant design elements. The vessel’s operational range was approximately 4,570 nautical miles at 12 knots. In 1962-63, she underwent a significant conversion into a helicopter destroyer (DDH), performed mainly by Victoria Machinery Depot. The refit included strengthening the hull, installing a helicopter hangar, a helicopter deck, fin stabilizers, and the Beartrap haul-down system, which allowed for secure helicopter operations without deck handling. Her armament was reduced accordingly, removing some guns and one Limbo mortar to accommodate the helicopter facilities. Throughout her service, Assiniboine participated in NATO operations, notably during the Lisbon NATO Force crisis in 1974, and was involved in rescue missions such as recovering crew from the freighter Barma in 1975. She also underwent the Destroyer Life Extension (DELEX) program starting in 1979, which included hull and machinery upgrades. Despite these enhancements, she experienced incidents such as running aground in Halifax Harbour in 1981 and a lengthy refit following upper deck fractures in 1984. Decommissioned on 14 December 1988, Assiniboine served as a harbour training ship until 1995, when she was sold for scrap. She sank in the Caribbean Sea under tow to the breakers that year, marking the end of her nearly four decades of service.

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

3 ship citations (0 free) in 3 resources

Assiniboine (II) Subscribe to view
Assiniboine (II) (Canadian) Subscribe to view
Assiniboine (Propeller, Can. Navy; built Sorel, P.Q., 1954) Subscribe to view