HMCS Rouille (fireboat): Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 10:41, 14 July 2022

Rouille in 1941.
Rouille fighting a fire in Halifax during WW2.

The Rouille (later HMCS Rouille) was a Canadian fireboat.[1] She was a steam-powered vessel, built in Collingwood, Ontario on October 26, 1929.

She served in Toronto, up until World War 2. During World War 2 the Rouille was transferred to Halifax, Nova Scotia, the port where most Atlantic convoys assembled.[2][3][4]

According to the Maritime History of the Great Lakes she sank off Cape Smoky, Nova Scotia, during bad weather, on March 11, 1954.[5]

specifications[5]
tonnage 214
length 100  ft (30.48  m)
beam 25  ft (7.62  m)
draft 13  ft (3.96  m)

References

  1. Mac Mackay (2014-11-26). Preserver returns from Bedford Magazine. Shipfax.
  2. The other Halifax Explosion, New Bedford Magazine, 1945-07-18. “The fire ship James Battle was standing by at the Halifax Shipyards along with the smaller Rouille.”
  3. Donal Baird (1999). The Robbie Touch : Exploits of an Uncommon Sailor. Lulu.com, 65, 84, 132. ISBN 9780969803119. Retrieved on 2019-07-27. 
  4. Terence Robertson. The short heroic cruise that saved Halifax, Maclean's magazine, 1962-02-24, pp. 18,36. Retrieved on 2019-07-27.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Rouille (1929), Maritime History of the Great Lakes. Retrieved on 2019-07-27.