HMS Alisma (K185)
{{Short description|Flower-class corvette}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Infobox ship image |Ship image = File:HMS ALISMA, BRITISH FLOWER CLASS CORVETTE. 22 APRIL 1942.jpg |Ship caption = }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header = |Ship country = United Kingdom |Ship flag = {{shipboxflag|United Kingdom|naval}} |Ship name =HMS Alisma |Ship ordered = |Ship awarded = |Ship builder = Harland and Wolff, Belfast |Ship original cost = |Ship yard number = 1096 |Ship way number = |Ship laid down = 19 August 1940 |Ship launched = 17 December 1940 |Ship sponsor = |Ship christened = |Ship completed = 13 February 1941 |Ship acquired = |Ship commissioned = 15 February 1941 |Ship recommissioned= |Ship decommissioned= 11 June 1945 |Ship refit = |Ship struck = |Ship homeport = |Ship identification=Pennant number: K185 |Ship motto = |Ship nickname = |Ship honours = |Ship fate = Sold 1947. Sunk 1954. |Ship notes = |Ship badge = }} {{Infobox ship characteristics |Hide header = |Header caption = |Ship class = {{sclass2|Flower|corvette}} |Ship displacement = 925 long tons |Ship length = {{convert|205|ft|m|abbr=on}} o/a |Ship beam = {{convert|33|ft|m|abbr=on}} |Ship height = |Ship draught = {{convert|11|ft|6|in|m|abbr=on}} |Ship depth = |Ship propulsion =*1 × 4-cycle triple-expansion reciprocating steam engine
|Ship speed = {{convert|16|kn|km/h|abbr=on}} |Ship range = {{convert|3500|nmi|km|abbr=on}} at {{convert|12|kn|km/h|abbr=on}} |Ship endurance = |Ship complement =85 |Ship sensors =*1 × SW1C or 2C radar
|Ship EW = |Ship armament=*1 × BL 4 inch Mk IX naval gun
|Ship armour = |Ship notes = }} {{Infobox service record |is_ship = yes |label = |partof = |codes = |commanders ={{Unbulleted list| 1941 A/Lt.Cdr. M.G. Rose, RANVR | 1943 Lt. G. Lanning, RANVR}} |operations ={{Unbulleted list| Battle of the Atlantic | Battle of the Mediterranean }} |victories = |awards = }} |
HMS Alisma was a {{sclass2|Flower|corvette}} that served in the Royal Navy.
Background
At the outbreak of World War II the Marine nationale (French Navy) needed ships for anti-submarine warfare (ASW) and, following the Royal Navy's example, placed orders from Smith’s Dock in South Bank, Middlesbrough, for four ASW corvettes. Following this the Marine nationale ordered a further 18 ships, to be built at a number of British and French shipyards; 6 were built by Harland and Wolff in Belfast. The Fall of France in June 1940 brought a drastic change to these building programmes. Of the second order, the 12 ships under construction in Britain were taken over by the RN and re-armed with British ordnance; all of these French corvettes were renamed and given 'Flower' names in keeping with the class.{{sfn|Elliott|1977|p=188}}From Harland and Wolff: {{HMS|Abelia|K184}}, HMS Alisma (K185), {{HMS|Anchusa|K186}}, HMS Armeria (K187), HMS Aster (K188) & {{HMS|Bergamot|K189}} Alisma was laid down as Yard No. 1096, and originally intended as the French Pertuisane.{{csr |register=MSI |id=6111605 |shipname=Alisma |access-date=2021-01-27}}
HMS Alisma (and HMS Burdock) wore a yellow and blue pattern of ship camouflage in the Atlantic. The colour faded quickly in service, becoming a yellow-tinged, off-white colour.{{cite web |url= http://www.shipcamouflage.com/royal_navy3.htm | title=Ships Camouflage data}}{{cite web |url= https://www.flickr.com/photos/shipsprofiler/38692320542/ | title=Colour image of camouflage design| date=29 November 2017}}
Officers and crew
During her service with the Royal Navy she was commanded by Acting Lieutenant Commander Maurice George Rose, RANVR from 2 May 1941 to 1 May 1943.{{cite web |url=https://uboat.net/allies/commanders/2163.html|first=Guðmundur |last=Helgason |title=Warship Commanders|website=Uboat.net |access-date=30 September 2019}} He was succeeded by Lieutenant George Lanning, RANVR until 11 June 1945. The RANVR was a volunteer reserve force of the Royal Australian Navy.
Rose, as a Lieutenant, joined HMS Erica building at Harland and Wolff in Belfast. The ship was commissioned in August 1940. Promotion to Acting Lieutenant Commander with seniority from 4 October 1940 aroused in the 38 year old thoughts of his own command. Rose wrote to the Admiralty informing them that he would like promotion, not to a trawler, but a new corvette from Harland and Wolff with all his officers to be Australian Reservists; he also requested that his anti-submarine ratings be Australians. The specific request for a Harland and Wolff ship had come after a study of vessels from various yards convinced him of the superiority of that company’s craft. My Lords of the Admiralty, surprisingly, had granted his request when Rose commissioned HMS Alisma on 14 February 1941.{{cite book |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=bqulDgAAQBAJ&dq=HMS+alisma&pg=PA12 | title= HMAS Diamantina, page 12| isbn= 9781925522358| last1= Nunan| first1= Peter| year= 2017| publisher= Boolarong Press}}
Service history
=Battle of the Atlantic=
In 1941 Western Approached Command had formed 8 escort groups.{{sfn|Elliott|1977|p=59}} The 1st Escort Group consisted of six destroyers and four Flower-class corvettes.HMS Alisma (K185), HMS Dianella (K07), HMS Kingcup (K33) & HMS Sunflower (K41)
They were soon in action with other groups between 19 July – 1 August 1941 with Convoy ON 69 defending 26 merchant ships from 8 U-boats and 2 Italian submarines.
File:Corvettes of Escort Group B7.jpg In February and March 1942 the original eight escort groups were reorganized into the Mid-Ocean Escort Force (MOEF). Alisma was part of Escort Group B7, one of seven such British naval groups which served with the Mid-Ocean Escort Force (MOEF). It provided convoy protection in the most dangerous midsection of the North Atlantic route.{{cite web |url=http://www.uboat.net/allies/warships/ship/4706.html |first=Guðmundur |last=Helgason |title=HMS Alisma (K 185) |website=Uboat.net |access-date=28 September 2019}} B7's first convoys, in the spring of 1942, were uneventful, and as the pace of the Battle of the Atlantic hotted up in the summer and autumn, the group's charges were escorted without loss. But in December, while escorting ON 153, the convoy came under attack, and three ships were sunk. During this action, on 11 December, Firedrake was torpedoed by the U-boat {{GS|U-211||2}} and sank with the loss of 168 of her crew, including her current commander, and the group's Senior Officer – Escort (SOE), Commander Eric Tilden. Initially 35 survived the torpedoing, but only 27 managed to get on board Sunflower, which was under the command of Lieut- Commander John Treasure Jones.Tramp to Queen pp. 69–79
B7 was involved in the battles for convoys ONS 20 and ON 206, ON 207 and ON 208, during which period nine U-boats were destroyed.
=Battle of the Mediterranean=
From autumn 1943 until April 1945 Alisma was deployed in the Mediterranean escorting KMS and MKS convoys. The KMS series of mercantile convoy sailed from the UK to Gibraltar and onward into the Mediterranean from October 1942. The MKS series of convoy replaced the earlier HG series and ran from the Mediterranean to the UK via Gibraltar. The new series was introduced after Operation Torch in October 1942 and operated until May 1945.{{cite web |url= http://www.convoyweb.org.uk/hague/index.html?search3.php?query=Alisma&Submit=Find+Vessel~haguemain,/|title=HMS Alisma on the Arnold Hague database at convoyweb.org.uk}}
She then returned to the North Atlantic until the end of the war, escorting convoys between Liverpool and New York.
Post-WW II
Alisma was decommissioned on 11 June 1945 and sold in 1947. After conversion to a {{GRT|724}} merchant cargo ship, including replacement of her steam machinery with diesel, she entered service in 1949 as Laconia for Compañia Marítima Mensabe SA, and was registered in Panama. In 1950 she was purchased by K. Samartzopoulos of Piraeus, where she was registered, and renamed Constantinos S. She was resold in 1952 to D. Efthimiou, also of Piraeus, and renamed Parnon. On 16 July 1954 she sank in position {{coord|40.15|13.20|}}, south west of Naples, as a result of water leakage (flooding) during a voyage from Marseille for Eleusis with a cargo of ammonium sulphate.{{cite web |title=Parnon MV [+1954] |url=https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?176749 |website=Wrecksite |access-date=27 January 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210127235149/https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?176749 |archive-date=27 January 2021}}
References
{{reflist}}
Sources
- {{cite book|last1=McCluskie|first1=Tom|title=The Rise and Fall of Harland and Wolff|date=2013|publisher=The History Press|isbn=9780752488615}}
- {{Cite book |last=Elliott |first=Peter |title=Allied Escort Ships of World War II |year=1977 |publisher=Macdonald and Jane's |isbn=0-356-08401-9 }}
- {{Cite web |url=http://worldatwar.net/article/australiannavyreserve/ |first=Graham |last=Donaldson |title=Royal Australian Naval Volunteer Reserve |website=The World at War}}
- {{Cite book |last=Nunan |first=Peter |title= HMAS Diamantina: Australia's last river class frigate, 1945-1980|year=2005 | publisher= Slouch Hat Publications |isbn=978-0957975279}}
- {{Cite book |last=Treasure Jones |first=John |title=Tramp to Queen |year=2008 |publisher=The History Press |isbn=978-0-7524-4625-7}}
{{Flower class corvette}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Alisma, HMS}}
Category:Flower-class corvettes of the Royal Navy
Category:Ships built by Harland and Wolff
Category:Ships built in Belfast
Category:Merchant ships of Greece