HMCS Discovery
HMCS Discovery | |
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RHIB (ZH-733 CDO) | |
Battle honours |
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Commanders | |
Commanding Officer | Cdr Rebecca Hardie |
Executive Officer | LCdr Jeff Baxter |
Coxswain | CPO2 Al Loy |
HMCS Discovery is a
The stone frigate takes its name from HMS Discovery, the ship used by George Vancouver to chart most of North America's northwestern coast. Originally based at the Stanley Park Barracks, in 1944 it moved to its current location on Deadman's Island, in Coal Harbour, adjacent to Stanley Park.
History
World wars
Discovery traces its history to the creation of the "Number 2 (Vancouver) Company" of the
During the Second World War, the role of the reserves increased, reflecting the need to maintain sufficient manpower for the war effort. On 1 November 1941, the division was newly commissioned as HMCS Discovery and it moved into Stanley Park Barracks. In 1944, the unit was permitted to occupy Deadman Island in Stanley Park and turn this property into a training facility. During the Second World War, Discovery was one of the greatest sources of naval recruits in Canada, having enrolled 372 officers, 6,974 ratings and 650 Wrens (Women's Royal Canadian Naval Service – WRCNS). Of those, 61 were killed in action. At the end of the war, Discovery became the discharge centre for the whole of the British Columbia mainland, and 8,378 men and women were discharged through the base.
Modern era
HMCS Discovery continues to serve as a training facility, force-generating personnel for Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) operations. Discovery personnel have been deployed to Korea, the Persian Gulf, Egypt, Bosnia, Iraq, Japan, Golan Heights and Afghanistan. The facility provided support for the 1997 APEC meeting in Vancouver. It was the Olympic Maritime Operations Centre for the 2010 Winter Olympics and conducted port-security around the country.
It is also the site of the Western Region Diving Centre, coordinating the efforts of the various port inspection diving teams at Naval Reserve Divisions in Western Canada. The unit continues to serve as host and ambassador to dozens of foreign vessels visiting the Port of Vancouver.
In addition to the Naval Reserve, Discovery houses
Badge
. It depicts a gold disc on top of a shake-fork that looks like the letter Y; a "disc over Y".Citations
References
- Winters, Barbara (1995). H.M.C.S. Discovery: A History of the Naval Reserve in Vancouver. p. 200. OCLC 36191328.
- Davis, Chuck (2009), The History of Metropolitan Vancouver