Victory At Sea Atlantic

Victory At Sea Atlantic

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It's about shipcount and real names: UK Royal Navy + Forces Navales Françaises Libres + friends
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Please use the overview function of this guide to get faster to your desired ship-class.

Feel free to copy and paste the names into your campaign.

This overview shows the real ship count and the real ship names for the vessels of the ship-classes which
can be found in the game "Victory at sea: Atlantic" for the Royal Navy + Forces Navales Françaises Libres + friends

Where which ship exactly served is still under construction.

sources: wikipedia.com + againstallodds.fandom.com
   
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Royal Navy + Forces Navales Françaises Libres:




Royal Navy: BBs - Nelson
= 2
Nelson-class (BB)


group 1:
HMS Nelson (commissioned August 1927)

group 2:
HMS Rodney (commissioned November 1927)
Royal Navy: BBs - Queen Elizabeth
Queen Elizabeth-class (super-dreadnought BB)
= 5

group 1:
HMS Barham (commissioned 1915)
HMS Malaya (1916)

group 2:
HMS Queen Elizabeth (1914)
HMS Valiant (1916)

group 3:
HMS Warspite (1915)

HMS Queen Elizabeth:
On 31 January 1941, Queen Elizabeth was recommissioned and assigned to the 2nd Battle Squadron of the Home Fleet.
In May 1941, she was reassigned to the Mediterranean Fleet. On 6 May she departed Gibraltar for Alexandria and, together with Force H, formed convoy escorts to Malta. She then participated in the defence of Crete and the evacuation of British-Australian-New Zealand Expeditionary Force during the German Operation Merkur. On 26 May, she and Barham supported the air attack on the German base at Karpathos by aircraft from Formidable. On 27 May, she became the flagship of the 1st Battle Squadron and flagship of the 2nd Fleet.
On 19 December 1941, Queen Elizabeth and her sister ship Valiant were seriously damaged by limpet mines placed by Italian combat swimmers of Decima Flottiglia MAS, who entered the Allied military port of Alexandria with SLC type "manned torpedoes" ("maiali"). Following completion of temporary repairs in an Alexandria drydock in June 1942, she steamed through the Suez Canal and around Africa to the Navy Yard in Norfolk, Virginia, in the United States. From September 1942 until June 1943, she was comprehensively repaired. Queen Elizabeth went to the Home Fleet in July 1943.

HMS Warspite:
During the Second World War, Warspite was involved in the Norwegian Campaign in early 1940 and was transferred to the Mediterranean later that year where the ship participated in fleet actions against the Royal Italian Navy (Regia Marina) while also escorting convoys and bombarding Italian troops ashore. She was damaged by German aircraft during the Battle of Crete in mid-1941 and required six months of repairs in the United States. Warspite returned home in mid-1943 to conduct naval gunfire support as part of Force H during the Italian campaign. She was badly damaged by German radio-controlled glider bombs during the landings at Salerno and spent most of the next year under repair. The ship bombarded German positions during the Normandy landings and on Walcheren Island in 1944, despite not being fully repaired. These actions earned her the most battle honours ever awarded to an individual ship in the Royal Navy. For this and other reasons, Warspite gained the nickname the "Grand Old Lady" after a comment made by Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham in 1943 while she was his flagship.

HMS Valiant:
Returning to Britain in December 1939, she escorted Canadian troops across the Atlantic and joined Home Fleet on 7 January 1940. Valiant engaged in escort duty for troop transports and in May 1940 supported the British landing forces in the Norwegian campaign.
Mers-el-Kébir - Operation Catapult
On Wednesday, 3 July 1940, Force H under the command of Vice Admiral James Fownes Somerville consisting of the aircraft carrier Ark Royal, the battlecruiser Hood, the battleships Valiant, Resolution, and Nelson, and other cruisers and destroyers appeared off the harbor entrance at Mers-el-Kébir. After the ultimatum expired, the Valiant opened fire along with the Hood and Resolution. The Dunkerque the Provence and the Brittany were hit and heavily damaged the latter exploded and sank. After Somerville had ceased fire to give Gensoul another chance, he overlooked that the Strasbourg together with the five remaining destroyers had escaped into the open sea behind the thick smoke of the explosions. In September, she joined the carrier HMS Illustrious with the squadron at Alexandria. On the night of 18–19 December, together with the Warspite, she shelled the Albanian port of Valona.
Battle of Cape Matapan
With the help of an intercepted Luftwaffe radio message decoded by ULTRA, Admiral Cunningham learned that the Italians, intended to attack the British fleet to distract them from transporting German troops to North Africa. After the Italians sortied in a convoy of 22 ships, including the battleship Vittorio Veneto, on 26 March, Cunningham brought all the ships into position, including the Barham. On 28 March, British cruisers encountered the Italian fleet but were forced to retreat by the Vittorio Veneto. Multiple air strikes by Formidable's Fairey Swordfish torpedo bombers damaged the Vittorio Veneto and crippled the heavy cruiser Pola. Admiral Iachino ordered the two other heavy cruisers of the 1st Division to render assistance to Pola in the darkness. The Italian ships and the British arrived almost simultaneously at Pola's location. The British opened fire at point-blank range and sank the Zara and Fiume.
Operation Husky and Operation Avalanche
On 17 June, Valiant departed Scapa Flow for Gibraltar along with the Nelson, Rodney and Warspite, joining Force H on arrival. Between 2 and 3 September, Valiant and Warspite covered the attack across the Strait of Messina and bombed the Italian coastal batteries at Reggio. She returned home for overhaul in October 1943. Upon completion on 1 December, Valiant was detached to the Eastern Fleet.

HMS Barham:
Barham, the battlecruiser Repulse and the destroyers Fame, Icarus, Imogen, Isis and Nubian were on patrol off the Butt of Lewis to protect against a possible break-out into the Atlantic by German warships when they were spotted by the German submarine U-30, on 28 December '39. U-30 fired four torpedoes at the two capital ships, and one struck Barham on her port side. She was repaired at Birkenhead that lasted until April 1940. Barham played no role in the Norwegian Campaign. The ship was detached from the Home Fleet on 28 August and was assigned to Force M, the Royal Navy component of the operation Menace, a British naval attack on Dakar, Senegal. She became the flagship of Force M. Arrived at Dakar the British battleships opened fire to bombard the harbour and Richelieu. Barham took two hits. The severe damage to Resolution caused Operation Menace to be abandoned. Barham escorted a convoy to Gibraltar where she was repaired on 15 October. She took part at Operation Collar and the Battle of Cape Matapan. She was hit by a 250 kg bomb on 27 May 1941 at Greece and was repaired in the U.S.. On 30 July she returned to Alexandria as flagship of the 1st Battle Squadron.
On 24 November 1941 she was sank by U-331 in the Mediterranean Sea.

HMS Malaya:
Malaya served in the Mediterranean in 1940, escorting convoys and operating against the Italian fleet.
On 9 June '40. British forces engaged an Italian fleet, including the battleships Conte di Cavour and Giulio Cesare. Malaya fired several main battery rounds against the Italians while under fire from Conte di Cavour. Through her actions, Malaya helped to chase off all of the Italian warships with no damage received or hits scored, though most of the heavy lifting was carried out by her sister ship Warspite. She shelled Genoa in February 1941 as part of Operation Grog.
On 7 March 1941, while escorting convoy SL 67, Malaya encountered the German capital ships Scharnhorst and Gneisenau. By her presence she forced them to withdraw.
On the evening of 20 March 1941 Malaya was hit by a torpedo from U-106.
She was repaired in Trinidad and New York.
Malaya was placed in reserve at the end of 1943.
She was reactivated for the Normandy landings to act as a reserve bombardment Battleship.


Royal Navy: BBs - King George V
King George V-class (BB)
= 5


group 1:
HMS King George V (commissioned 1 October 1940)
HMS Anson (14 April 1942)
HMS Howe (17 June 1942)

group 2:
HMS Prince of Wales (19 January 1941)

group 3:
HMS Duke of York (19 August 1941)

HMS King George V:
She operated during the Second World War in all three major naval theatres of war, the Atlantic, Mediterranean and Pacific, as well as part of the British Home Fleet and Pacific Fleets. In May 1941, along with HMS Rodney, King George V was involved in the hunt for and pursuit of the German battleship Bismarck, eventually inflicting severe damage which led to the German vessel's sinking. On 1 May 1942 the destroyer HMS Punjabi sank after a collision with King George V in foggy conditions. King George V took part in Operation Husky (the allied landings in Sicily) and bombarded the island of Levanzo and the port of Trapani. She also escorted part of the surrendered Italian Fleet, which included the battleships Andrea Doria and Duilio, to Malta. In 1945 King George V took part in operations against the Japanese in the Pacific.
King George V was made flagship of the British Home Fleet on 1 April 1941, she remained so during the rest of the war.

HMS Prince of Wales:
Despite being sunk less than a year after she was commissioned, Prince of Wales had an extensive battle history, first seeing action in August 1940 while still being outfitted in her drydock when she was attacked and damaged by German aircraft. In her brief career, she was involved in several key actions of the Second World War, including the May 1941 Battle of the Denmark Strait where she scored three hits on the German battleship Bismarck, forcing Bismarck to abandon her raiding mission and head to port for repairs. Prince of Wales later escorted one of the Malta convoys in the Mediterranean, during which she was attacked by Italian aircraft. In her final action, she attempted to intercept Japanese troop convoys off the coast of Malaya as part of Force Z when she was sunk by Japanese aircraft on 10 December 1941, two days after the attack on Pearl Harbor.
She was sunk alongside her consort, the battlecruiser HMS Repulse, in an attack by 85 Mitsubishi G3M and G4M bombers of the Japanese navy air service.

HMS Duke of York:
In mid-December 1941, Duke of York transported Prime Minister Winston Churchill to the United States to meet President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Between March and September 1942 Duke of York was involved with convoy escort duties. In October she was dispatched to Gibraltar where she became the flagship of Force H.
In October 1942, Duke of York was involved in the Allied invasion of North Africa. After the invasion, Duke of York was involved in Operations Camera and Governor, which were diversionary operations designed to draw the Germans' attention away from Operation Husky, the invasion of Sicily. On 4 October, Duke of York operated with her sister ship Anson in covering a force of Allied cruisers and destroyers and the American carrier Ranger, during Operation Leader, which raided German shipping off Norway. On 26 December 1943 Duke of York was part of a task force which encountered the German battleship Scharnhorst off the North Cape of Norway. During the engagement that followed, Scharnhorst hit Duke of York twice with little effect, but was herself hit by several of Duke of York's 14-inch shells, silencing one of her turrets and hitting a boiler room. Scharnhorst was struck several times by torpedoes, allowing Duke of York to again open fire, contributing to the eventual sinking of Scharnhorst after a running action lasting ten-and-a-half hours. In 1945, Duke of York was assigned to the British Pacific Fleet as its flagship, but arrived too late to see any action before Japan surrendered.

HMS Anson:
Her completion was delayed to allow the fitting of fire-control radar and additional anti-aircraft weapons. She was originally to have been named Jellicoe, but was renamed Anson in February 1940.
Anson saw service in the Second World War, escorting nine Russian convoys in the Arctic by December 1943. She took part in diversionary moves to draw attention away from Operation Husky in July 1943. In October the same year she took part in Operation Leader. In February 1944 she provided cover for Operation Tungsten, the successful air strike against the German battleship Tirpitz. Rear Admiral Cecil Harcourt accepted the surrender of Japanese forces occupying Hong Kong on board Anson in August 1945, and after the end of the war the vessel became the flagship of the 1st Battle Squadron of the British Pacific Fleet.

HMS Howe:
She was completed on 29 August 1942 after her building time was extended, as supplies were diverted to work of a higher priority such as the construction and repair of merchant ships and escort ships. Like her sister-ship HMS Anson, Howe spent most of her career in the Arctic providing cover for Russian convoys.
In 1943, Howe took part in Operation Husky and bombarded Trapani naval base and Favignana in support of the Allied landings. Along with King George V, Howe escorted two surrendered Italian battleships to Alexandria. Howe was also sent to the Pacific and attached to the British Pacific Fleet (Task Force 113), where she provided naval bombardments for the Allied landings at Okinawa on 1 April 1945.


Royal Navy: Battleship - Richelieu
Richelieu-class (French BB)
=1 (Vichy France control: 1940–1942; sister ship Jean Bart was badly damaged by allied forces.)
MN Richelieu

11 February 1943 repairs and minor upgrades in USA, New York.
October 1943 transfered to the Royal Navy Mediterranean Fleet.
January 1944 transfered to the Royal Navy Home Fleet at Scapa Flow,
where she received a better radar system.
She joined the British Eastern Fleet 10 April 1944.


Royal Navy: Battlecruisers
Renown-class (CC)
= 2

group 1:
HMS Renown (commissioned 1916)

group 2:
HMS Repulse (1916)

HMS Renown:
During the Second World War, Renown was involved in the search for the Admiral Graf Spee in 1939, participated in the Norwegian Campaign of April–June 1940 and the search for the Bismarck in 1941. She spent much of 1940 and 1941 assigned to Force H at Gibraltar, escorting convoys and she participated in the inconclusive Battle of Cape Spartivento. Renown was briefly assigned to the Home Fleet and provided cover to several Arctic convoys in early 1942. The ship was transferred back to Force H for Operation Torch and spent much of 1943 refitting or transporting Winston Churchill and his staff to and from various conferences with various Allied leaders. In early 1944, Renown was transferred to the Eastern Fleet in the Indian Ocean.

HMS Repulse:
The ship spent the first months of the Second World War hunting for German raiders and blockade runners. She participated in the Norwegian Campaign of April to June 1940 and searched for the Bismarck in 1941. Repulse escorted a troop convoy around the Cape of Good Hope from August to October 1941 and was transferred to the East Indies Command. She was assigned in November to Force Z, which was supposed to deter Japanese aggression against British possessions in the Far East. Repulse and her consort, the battleship Prince of Wales, were sunk by Japanese aircraft on 10 December 1941 when they attempted to intercept landings in British Malaya.



Hood-class (CC)
= 1
HMS Hood (commissioned 1920)

HMS Hood:
When war with Germany was declared, Hood was operating in the area around Iceland, and she spent the next several months hunting for German commerce raiders and blockade runners between Iceland and the Norwegian Sea. After a brief overhaul of her propulsion system, she sailed as the flagship of Force H, and participated in the destruction of the French fleet at Mers-el-Kebir. Transferred to the Home Fleet shortly afterwards, Hood was dispatched to Scapa Flow, and operated in the area as a convoy escort and later as a defence against a potential German invasion fleet.
In May 1941, Hood and the battleship Prince of Wales were ordered to intercept the German battleship Bismarck and the heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen, which were en route to the Atlantic, where they were to attack convoys. On 24 May 1941, early in the Battle of the Denmark Strait, HMS Hood was struck by several German shells, exploded, and sank with the loss of all but 3 of her crew of 1,418. Due to her publicly perceived invincibility, the loss affected British morale


Royal Navy: Aircraft Carriers
Illustrious-class (CV)
= 3 (excl. HMS Indomitable)
HMS Illustrious (commissioned 25 May 1940)
HMS Formidable (24 November 1940)
HMS Victorious (14 May 1941)



Ark Royal-class (CV)
= 1

HMS Ark Royal (commissioned 1938)


Royal Navy: Escort Carriers (lend-lease)
* research can be started after the USA entered the war.

Bogue-class USA - Attacker-class UK (CVE)
= 11

HMS Battler (commissioned 31 October 1942)
HMS Attacker (7 October 1942)
HMS Hunter (11 January 1943)
HMS Chaser (9 April 1943)
HMS Fencer (1 March 1943)
HMS Stalker (21 December 1942)
HMS Pursuer (14 June 1943)
HMS Striker (18 May 1943)
HMS Searcher (7 April 1943)
HMS Ravager (25 April 1943)
HMS Tracker (31 January 1943)



Bogue-class USA - Ruler/Ameer-class UK (CVE)
= 23
* As built they were intended for three types of operations, "Assault" or strike, convoy escort, or aircraft ferry.

1st group:
HMS Patroller (commissioned 25 October 1943)
HMS Puncher (5 February 1944) - crewed by the Royal Canadian Navy
HMS Reaper (18 February 1944)
HMS Slinger (11 August 1943)
HMS Smiter (20 January 1944) - ASW
HMS Speaker (20 November 1943) - strike-operations
HMS Trouncer (31 January 1944)
HMS Trumpeter (4 August 1943) - ASW

2nd group:
HMS Arbiter (31 December 1943)
HMS Ameer (20 July 1943) - strike-operations
HMS Atheling (28 October 1943) - ASW
HMS Begum (2 August 1943) - ASW
HMS Emperor (6 August 1943) - strike-operations
HMS Empress (12 August 1943)
HMS Khedive (25 August 1943) - ASW
HMS Nabob (7 September 1943) - ASW - crewed by the Royal Canadian Navy
HMS Premier (3 November 1943) - ASW
HMS Queen (7 December 1943) - ASW
HMS Rajah (17 January 1944)
HMS Ranee (8 November 1943)
HMS Ruler (22 December 1943) - strike-operations
HMS Shah (27 September 1943) - ASW
HMS Thane (19 November 1943)


Royal Navy: Heavy Cruisers
County-class (CA)
the only UK advanced radar CA IG
= 9 (+ 2 for the Royal Australian Navy)

HMS Berwick (commissioned 1928)
HMS Cumberland (1928)
HMS Suffolk (1928)
HMS Kent (1928)
HMS Cornwall (1928)
HMS London (1929)
HMS Devonshire (1929)
HMS Sussex (1929)
HMS Shropshire (1929)
+
HMAS Australia (1928)
HMAS Canberra (1928)



Norfolk-class (CA)
= 2 (these are modified County-class heavy cruisers)
HMS Norfolk (commissioned 1930)
HMS Dorsetshire (1930)



York-class (CA)
= 2
HMS York (commissioned 1930)
HMS Exeter (1931)


Royal Navy: Light Cruisers
Danae-class (CL)
= 8
HMS Danae (commissioned 1918)
HMS Dauntless (1918)
HMS Dragon (1918)
HMS Delhi (1919)
HMS Dunedin (1919)
HMS Durban (1921)
HMS Despatch (1922)
HMS Diomede (1922)



Leander-class (CL)
= 5 (incl. 2 vessels for the Royal New zealand Navy - not incl. the 3 modified Leander-class ships: HMAS Perth, HMAS Hobart, HMAS Sydney for the Royal Australian Navy)

Royal Navy:
HMS Orion (commissioned 18 January 1934)
HMS Ajax (12 April 1935)
HMS Neptune (23 February 1934) - New Zealand crew, but was not part of the RNZN.

Royal New Zealand Navy:
HMNZS Leander (30 April 1937)
HMNZS Achilles (10 October 1933)



Town-class (CL)
= 10 in 3 different sub-classes
= 5 (Southampton)
HMS Newcastle (commissioned 1937)
HMS Southampton (1937)
HMS Sheffield (1937)
HMS Glasgow (1937)
HMS Birmingham (1937)

= 3 (Gloucester)
HMS Liverpool (1938)
HMS Manchester (1938)
HMS Gloucester (1939)

= 2 (Edinburgh)
HMS Belfast (1939)
HMS Edinburgh (1939)



Dido-class (CL)
= 11 (without 5x Bellona-class AACL)

HMS Dido (commissioned 30 September 1940)
HMS Argonaut (8 August 1942)
HMS Charybdis (3 December 1941)
HMS Phoebe (27 September 1940)
HMS Hermione (25 March 1941)
HMS Bonaventure (24 May 1940)
HMS Scylla (12 June 1942)
HMS Naiad (24 July 1940)
HMS Cleopatra (5 December 1941)
HMS Sirius (6 May 1942)
HMS Euryalus (30 June 1941)


Royal Navy: French Cruisers
Algérie-class (CA)
= 1 (Vichy France ship, scuttled at Toulon on 27 November 1942)

Algérie (commissioned 1934)


Duguay-Trouin class (CL)
= 1 (not incl. MN Lamotte-Picquet = sunk in the Pacific 12 January 1945 and MN Primauguet = sunk on 8 November 1942 during the Naval Battle of Casablanca
Duguay-Trouin (refitted August 1943)



Émile Bertin-class (CL/DL)
= 1
Émile Bertin (refitted in the USA, Philadelphia until June 1943)



La Galissonnière-class (large CL)
= 3 (not incl. MN La Galissonnière, MN Jean de Vienne, MN Marseillaise based at Toulon, scuttled 27 Nov 1942)
Georges Leygues (refitted in the USA, Philadelphia until October 1943)
Montcalm (refitted in the USA, Philadelphia until August 1943)
Gloire (refitted in the USA, Brooklyn NY until November 1943)



Royal Navy: Destroyers
I-class (DD)
= 9 (not incl. 4x DDs for the Turkish Navy)
HMS Icarus (commissioned 1937)
HMS Ilex (1937)
HMS Imogen (1937)
HMS Imperial (1937)
HMS Impulsive (1938)
HMS Inglefield (1937)
HMS Intrepid (1937)
HMS Isis (1937)
HMS Ivanhoe (1937)



J-class (+ K-class + N-class) (DD)
= 8 (+ 8 K-class + 3 N-class incl. 2 Royal Netherlands Navy - 5 Royal Australian Navy + 1 Polish Navy ships)
J-class:
HMS Jervis (commissioned 1939)
HMS Jackal (1939)
HMS Jaguar (1939)
HMS Juno (1939)
HMS Janus (1939)
HMS Javelin (1939)
HMS Jersey (1939)
HMS Jupiter (1939)

K-class:
HMS Kelly (1939)
HMS Kandahar (1939)
HMS Kashmir (1939)
HMS Kelvin (1939)
HMS Khartoum (1939)
HMS Kimberley (21 February 1940)
HMS Kingston (1939)
HMS Kipling (1939)

N-class:
HNLMS Van Galen (20 February 1942)
HNLMS Tjerk Hiddes (30 October 1942)
HMAS Napier (11 December 1940)
HMAS Nestor (12 February 1941)
HMAS Nizam (19 December 1940)
HMAS Norman (29 September 1941)
HMAS Nepal (29 May 1942)
ORP Piorun (4 November 1940)



L-class (+ M-class) (DD)
=8 (+8 M-class incl. 1 Polish Navy ship)
L-class:
HMS Laforey (commissioned 26 August 1941)
HMS Lance (13 May 1941)
HMS Gurkha (18 February 1941) - ex HMS Larne
HMS Lively (20 July 1941)
HMS Legion (19 December 1940)
HMS Lightning (28 May 1941)
HMS Lookout (30 January 1942)
HMS Loyal (31 October 1942)

M-class:
HMS Milne (6 August 1942)
HMS Mahratta (8 April 1943) - ex HMS Marksman
HMS Musketeer (5 December 1942)
HMS Matchless (26 February 1942)
HMS Meteor (12 August 1942)
HMS Marne (2 December 1941)
HMS Martin (4 August 1942)
ORP Orkan (18 November 1942)



O-class (+ P-class) (DD)
= 8 (+ 8 P-class)
O-class 4,7 inch:
HMS Onslow (commissioned 8 October 1941)
HMS Offa (20 September 1941)
HMS Onslaught (19 June 1942)
HMS Oribi (5 July 1941)
O-class 4 inch:
HMS Obdurate (3 September 1942)
HMS Obedient (30 October 1942)
HMS Opportune (14 August 1942)
HMS Orwell (17 October 1942)

P-class:
HMS Pakenham (4 February 1942)
HMS Paladin (December 1941)
HMS Panther (12 December 1941)
HMS Partridge (22 February 1942)
HMS Pathfinder (13 April 1942)
HMS Penn (10 February 1942)
HMS Petard (15 June 1942)
HMS Porcupine (31 August 1942)



S-class (+ T-class) (DD)
=8 (incl. 2 Royal Norwegian Navy ships + 8 T-class)
S-class:
HMS Saumarez (commissioned 1 July 1943)
HMS Savage (8 June 1943)
HMS Scorpion (11 May 1943)
HMS Scourge (14 July 1943)
HMS Serapis (23 December 1943)
HMS Swift (12 December 1943)
HNoMS Svenner (11 March 1944)
HNoMS Stord (26 August 1943)

T-class:
HMS Teazer (13 September 1943)
HMS Tenacious (30 October 1943)
HMS Termagant (8 October 1943)
HMS Terpsichore (20 January 1944)
HMS Troubridge (8 March 1943)
HMS Tumult (2 April 1943)
HMS Tuscan (11 March 1943)
HMS Tyrian (8 April 1943)



U-class (+ V-class) (DD)
= 8 (+ 8 V-class incl. 2 Royal Canadian Navy ships)
U-class:
HMS Grenville (commissioned 27 May 1943)
HMS Ulster (30 June 1943)
HMS Ulysses (23 December 1943)
HMS Undaunted (3 March 1944)
HMS Undine (23 December 1943)
HMS Ursa (1 March 1944)
HMS Urchin (24 September 1943)
HMS Urania (18 January 1944)

V-class:
HMS Venus (28 August 1943)
HMS Verulam (10 December 1943)
HMS Vigilant (10 September 1943)
HMS Virago (5 November 1943)
HMS Hardy (14 August 1943)
HMS Volage (26 May 1944)
HMCS Algonquin (28 February 1944)
HMCS Sioux (21 February 1944)


Royal Navy: Destroyers (lend-lease)
* will be found in your ship-building menu after the USA entered the war.

* Prime Minister Winston Churchill appealed to President Roosevelt for assistance; and, during the summer of 1940, an agreement was worked out between the United States and Great Britain. In return for 50 "overage" American destroyers transferred to the Royal Navy, the United States received leases, for a duration of 99 years, on strategic base sites stretching from Newfoundland to British Guiana.

Wickes-class (DD)
= 27

lend-lease Royal Navy:
HMS Montgomery - ex USS Wickes (commissioned 23 October 1940)
HMS Lancaster - ex USS Philip (23 October 1940)
HMS Mansfield - ex USS Evans (23 October 1940)
HMS Newport - ex USS Sigourney (5 December 1940)
HMS Newmarket - ex USS Robinson (5 December 1940)
HMS Newark - ex USS Ringgold (26 November 1940) - Royal Canadian Navy crew
HMS Richmond - ex USS Fairfax (5 December 1940)
HMS Campbeltown - ex USS Buchanan (9 September 1940)
HMS Castleton - ex USS Aaron Ward (September 1940)
HMS Wells - ex USS Tillman (5 December 1940)
HMS Brighton - ex USS Cowell (23 September 1940)
HMS Roxborough - ex USS Foote (23 September 1940)
HMS Charlestown - ex USS Abbot (23 September 1940)
HMS St. Mary's - ex USS Doran (ex-Bagley) (22 September 1940)
HNoMS Lincoln - ex USS Yarnall (23 October 1940) - ex HMS Lincoln (February 1942)
HNoMS Bath - ex USS Hopewell (23 September 1940) - ex HMS Bath (9 April 1941)
HNoMS St Albans - ex USS Thomas (23 September 1940) - ex HMS St Albans (14 April 1941)

lend-lease Royal Canadian Navy:
HMCS St. Clair - ex USS Williams (commissioned 24 September 1940)
HMCS Leamington - ex USS Twiggs (October 1940) - ex HMS Leamington (October 1942)
HMCS Caldwell - ex USS Hale (June 1940) - ex HMS Caldwell (September 1942)
HMCS Chelsea - ex USS Crowninshield (9 September 1940)- ex HMS Chelsea (November 1942)
HMCS Salisbury - ex USS Claxton (5 December 1940) - ex HMS Salisbury (September 1942)
HMCS Niagara - ex USS Thatcher (24 September 1940)
HMCS Georgetown - ex USS Maddox (23 Sep. '40) - ex HMS Georgetown (Sep. '42)
HMCS Hamilton - ex USS Kalk (ex-Rodgers) (23 Sep. '40) - ex HMS Hamilton (June '41)
HMCS Annapolis - ex USS MacKenzie (24 September 1940)
HMCS Columbia - ex USS Haraden (24 September 1940)



Clemson-class (DD)
= 20

lend-lease Royal Navy:
HMS Belmont - ex USS Satterlee (8 October 1940)
HMS Broadwater - ex USS Mason (9 October 1940)
HMS Clare - ex USS Abel P. Upshur (9 September 1940)
HMS Broadway - ex USS Hunt (8 October 1940)
HMS Chesterfield - ex USS Welborn C. Wood (9 September 1940)
HMS Beverley - ex USS Branch (8 October 1940)
HMS Churchill - ex USS Herndon ( 9 September 1940)
HMS Stanley - ex USS McCalla (23 October 1940)
HMS Sherwood - ex USS Rodgers (23 October 1940)
HMS Cameron - ex USS Welles (9 September 1940)
HMS Burnham - ex USS Aulick (8 October 1940)
HMS Burwell - ex USS Laub (8 October 1940)
HMS Bradford - ex USS McLanahan (8 October 1940)
HMS Buxton - ex USS Edwards (8 October 1940)
HMS Ripley - ex USS Shubrick (26 November 1940)
HMS Reading - ex USS Bailey (26 November 1940)
HMS Rockingham - ex USS Swasey (26 November 1940)
HMS Ramsey - ex USS Meade (26 November 1940)

lend-lease Royal Canadian Navy:
HMCS St. Croix - ex USS McCook (24 September 1940)
HMCS St. Francis - ex USS Bancroft (24 September 1940)


Royal Navy: French Destroyers

Bourrasque-class (DD)
= 5 (out of 12)
HMS Mistral - was scuttled 3 July 1940, later salvaged and recommissioned as HMS Mistral
OF Ouragan - com. by Polish Navy 17 July '40 - com. by Free France 30 April '41
MN Simoun - no references found, only about decommissioning 1950
MN Tempête - no references found, only about decommissioning 1950
MN Trombe - Vichy France: scuttled 27 Nov '42 - recom. by Free France 28 Oct '43

lost ships:
Bourrasque - sunk 30 May 1940
Cyclone - scuttled at Brest 18 June 1940
Orage - sunk 23 May 1940
Sirocco - sunk 31 May 1940
Tornade - sunk 8 Nov 1942
Tramontane - Vichy France, lost 8 Nov 1942
Typhon - Vichy France, scuttled 10 Nov 1942



Le Fantasque-class (large DD - reclassified as CL 28 Sep 1943)
= 3 + 1 (out of 5)
MN Le Fantasque - until late '42 Vichy France - refitted in the USA in early '43
MN Le Malin - until late '42 Vichy France - refitted in the USA until 19 December '42
MN Le Terrible - until late '42 Vichy France - refitted in the USA until 22 May '43
+
MN Le Triomphant - transfered to the Royal Navy June '40 - com. by Free France - served in the Pacific

lost ships:
L'Audacieux - damaged by HMAS Australia - captured by Germany Dec '42 - sunk 7 May 1943


Royal Navy: DE - Hunt
Hunt-class Type 1 (DE = Destroyer Escort)
= 20
HMS Atherstone (commissioned 23 March 1940)
HMS Berkley (6 June 1940)
HMS Casttistock (22 July 1940)
HMS Cleveland (18 September 1940)
HMS Eglinton (28 August 1940)
HMS Exmoor (1 November 1940)
HMS Fernie (29 May 1940)
HMS Garth (1 July 1940)
HMS Hambledon (8 June 1940)
HMS Holderness (10 August 1940)
HMS Cotswold (16 November 1940)
HMS Cottesmore (29 December 1940)
HMS Mendip (12 October 1940)
HMS Meynell (30 December 1940)
HMS Pytchley (23 October 1940)
HMS Quantock (6 February 1941)
HMS Quorn (21 September 1940)
HMS Southdown (8 November 1940)
HMS Tynedale (2 December 1940)
HMS Whaddon (28 February 1941)


Royal Navy: Corvettes - Flower
Flower-class (K)

https://www.naval-history.net/xDKEscorts20Cor-Flower03.htm


Below you'll find only the ships which operated in the Atlantic ocean

Flower-class (Group 1)

Free France (6 ships)
FFL Mimosa (K 11) - commissioned 11 May 1941 - Sunk on 9 Jun 1942 by U-124
FFL Alysse (K 100) - 17 Jun 1941 - Sunk on 9 Feb 1942 by U-654
FFL Lobelia (K 04) - 16 Jul 1941
FFL Aconit (K 58) - 19 Jul 1941
FFL Commandant Détroyat (K 183) - 16 Sep 1941
FFL Commandant d'Estienne d'Orves (K 93) - 1942

Royal Canadian Navy (72 ships)
HMCS Windflower (K155) - 20 Oct 1940 - 7 Dec 1941 rammed and sunk by the freighter Zypenberg
HMCS Trillium (K 172) - 31 Oct 1940
HMCS Collingwood (K 180) - 19 Nov 1940
HMCS Arrowhead (K 145) - 22 Nov 1940
HMCS Cobalt (K 124) - 25 Nov 1940
HMCS Orillia (K 119) - 25 Nov 1940
HMCS Eyebright (K 150) - 26 Nov 1940
HMCS Spikenard (K 198) - 6 Dec 1940 - Sunk on 11 Feb 1942 by U-136
HMCS Wetaskiwin (K 175) - 17 Dec 1940
HMCS Chambly (K 116) - 18 Dec 1940 - first U-boat kill of the war together with K 164
HMCS Agassiz (K 129) - 23 Jan 1941
HMCS Bittersweet (K 182) - 23 Jan 1941
HMCS Alberni (K 103) - 4 Feb 1941 - Sunk on 21 Aug 1944 by U-480
HMCS Kamloops (K 176) - 17 Mar 1941
HMCS Chilliwack (K 131) - 8 Apr 1941
HMCS Nanaimo (K 101) - 26 Apr 1941 - served as patrol on both Canadian coasts
HMCS Napanee (K 118) - 26 Apr 1941
HMCS Pictou (K 146) - 29 April 1941
HMCS Algoma (K 127) - 11 Jul 1941
HMCS Amherst (K 148) - 5 Aug 1941
HMCS Arvida (K 113) - 22 May 1941
HMCS Baddeck (K 147) - 18 May 1941
HMCS Barrie (K 138) - 12 May 1941
HMCS Brandon (K 149) - 22 Jul 1941
HMCS Buctouche (K 179) - 5 Jun 1941
HMCS Calgary (K 231) - 16 Dec 1941
HMCS Camrose (K 154) - 30 Jun 1941
HMCS Chicoutimi (K 156) - 12 May 1941
HMCS Dauphin (K 157) - 17 May 1941
HMCS Drumheller (K 167) - 13 Sep 1941
HMCS Dunvegan (K 177) - 9 Sep 1941
HMCS Fennel (K 194) - 15 May 1941
HMCS Fredericton (K 245) - 8 Dec 1941
HMCS Galt (K 163) - 15 May 1941
HMCS Halifax (K 237) - 26 Nov 1941
HMCS Hepatica (K 159) - 15 May 1941
HMCS Kamsack (K 171) - 4 Oct 1941
HMCS Kenogami (K 125) - 29 Jun 1941
HMCS Kitchener (K 225) - 28 Jun 1942
HMCS La Malbaie (K 273) - 28 Apr 1942
HMCS Lethbridge (K 160) - 25 Jun 1941
HMCS Levis (K 115) - 16 May 1941 - Sunk on 19 Sep 1941 by U-74
HMCS Louisburg (K 143) - 2 Oct 1941 - Sunk on 6 February 1943 by a He-111 bomber
HMCS Lunenburg (K 151) - 4 Dec 1941
HMCS Matapedia (K 112) - 9 May 1941
HMCS Mayflower (K 191) - 15 May 1941
HMCS Midland (K 220) - 17 Nov 1941
HMCS Moncton (K 139) - 24 Apr 1942 - served as patrol on both Canadian coasts
HMCS Moose Jaw (K 164) - 19 Jun 1941 - first U-boat kill of the war together with K 116
HMCS Morden (K 170) - 6 Sep 1941
HMCS New Westminster (K 228) - 31 Jan 1942
HMCS Oakville (K 178) - 18 Nov 1941
HMCS Port Arthur (K 233) - 26 May 1942
HMCS Prescott (K 161) - 26 Jun 1941
HMCS Quesnel (K 133) - 23 May 1941
HMCS Regina (K 234) - 22 Jan 1942 - Sunk on 8 Aug 1944 by U-667
HMCS Rimouski (K 121) - 26 Apr 1941
HMCS Rosthern (K 169) - 17 Jun 1941
HMCS Sackville (K 181) - 30 Dec 1941 - museum ship located in Halifax, Nova Scotia
HMCS Saskatoon (K 158) - 9 June 1941
HMCS Shawinigan (K 136) - 19 Sep 1941 - Sunk on 25 Nov 1944 by U-1228
HMCS Shediac (K 110) - 8 Jul 1941
HMCS Sherbrooke (K 152) - 5 June 1941
HMCS Snowberry (K 166) - 15 May 1941
HMCS Sorel (K 153) - 19 Aug 1941
HMCS Sudbury (K 162) - 15 Oct 1941
HMCS Summerside (K 141) - 11 Sep 1941
HMCS The Pas (K 168) - 21 Oct 1941
HMCS Timmins (K 223) - 10 Feb 1942
HMCS Trail (K 174) - 30 Apr 1941
HMCS Vancouver (K 240) - 20 Mar 1942
HMCS Ville de Quebec (K 242) - 24 May 1942
HMCS Weyburn (K 173) - 26 Nov 1941 - Sunk on 22 Feb 1943 by U-118
HMCS Woodstock (K 238) - 1 May 1942

Royal Norwegian Navy
KNM

Royal Navy
HMS


Royal Navy: Corvettes - Castle
Castle-class (K)
= 44 (incl. 5 convoy rescue ships for the USN + 12 RCN + 1 RNN)

Royal Navy:
HMS Hadleigh Castle (Commissioned 18 Sep 1943)
HMS Kenilworth Castle (22 Nov 1943)
HMS Allington Castle (19 June 1944)
HMS Bamborough Castle (30 May 1944)
HMS Caistor Castle (29 September 1944)
HMS Denbigh Castle (30 December 1944)
HMS Farnham Castle (31 Jan 1945)
HMS Hedingham Castle (12 May 1945)
HMS Lancaster Castle (15 Sep 1944)
HMS Oakham Castle (10 Dec 1944)
HMS Alnwick Castle (11 November 1944)
HMS Flint Castle (31 Dec 1943)
HMS Knaresborough Castle (5 April 1944)
HMS Launceston Castle (20 June 1944)
HMS Leeds Castle (15 Feb 1944)
HMS Morpeth Castle (13 Jul 1944)
HMS Oxford Castle (10 Mar 1944)
HMS Pevensey Castle (10 Jun 1944)
HMS Tintagel Castle (7 Apr 1944)
HMS Amberley Castle (24 Nov 1944)
HMS Berkeley Castle (18 Nov 1944)
HMS Carisbrooke Castle (17 Nov 1943)
HMS Dumbarton Castle (25 Feb 1944)
HMS Hurst Castle (9 Jun 1944)
HMS Portchester Castle (8 Nov 1943)
HMS Rushen Castle (24 Feb 1944)

chartered ships by the US Navy:
SS Empire Lifeguard (November 1944) ex HMS Maiden Castle
SS Empire Rest (Oct 1944) ex HMS Rayleigh Castle
SS Empire Shelter (17 April 1945) ex HMS Barnard Castle
SS Empire Comfort (December 1944) ex HMS York Castle
SS Empire Peacemaker (Jan 1945) ex HMS Scarborough Castle

Royal Canadian Navy:
HMCS Arnprior (commissioned 8 June 1944)
HMCS Bowmanville (28 September 1944)
HMCS Copper Cliff (25 February 1944)
HMCS Hespeler (28 February 1944)
HMCS Humberstone (6 September 1944)
HMCS Huntsville (6 June 1944)
HMCS Kincardine (19 June 1944)
HMCS Leaside (21 August 1944)
HMCS Orangeville (24 April 1944)
HMCS Petrolia (29 June 1944)
HMCS St. Thomas (4 May 1944)
HMCS Tillsonburg (29 June 1944)

Royal Norwegian Navy:
HNoMS Tunsberg Castle (24 Apr 1944) ex HMS Shrewsbury Castle


Royal Navy: Sloop - Black Swan
Black Swan-class (unmodified) (sloop)

The Black Swan class and Modified Black Swan class were two classes of sloop of the Royal Navy and Royal Indian Navy. Twelve Black Swans were launched between 1939 and 1943, including four for the Royal Indian Navy; twenty-five Modified Black Swans were launched between 1942 and 1945, including two for the Royal Indian Navy; several other ships were cancelled.

= 8 (+4 for the Royal Indian Navy)

Royal Navy:
HMS Flamingo (L18 later U18) - com. 3 Nov. 1939 - Transferred to West Germany as Graf Spee
HMS Black Swan (L57 later U57) - 27 January 1940
HMS Erne (U03) - 26 April 1941
HMS Ibis (U99) - 30 August 1941
HMS Whimbrel (U29) - 13 January 1943
HMS Wild Goose (U45) - 11 March 1943
HMS Woodpecker (U08) - 14 December 1942
HMS Wren (U28) - 4 February 1943

Royal Indian Navy:
HMIS Sutlej (U95) - 23 April 1941
HMIS Jumna (U21) - 13 May 1941
HMIS Narbada (U40) - 29 April 1943
HMIS Godavari (U52) - 28 June 1943

The most famous ASW vessel is a modified Black Swan sloop = HMS Starling (U066) under the command of Captain "Johnnie" Frederic John Walker.
Walker was the most successful anti-submarine commander of the Second World War, being credited with 20 U boats destroyed, from various ships.
His sloop "HMS Starling" became one of the most successful submarine hunters, taking part in the sinking of eleven U-boats.
Royal Navy: Frigates - River
River-class (FF)
? = served in the Atlantic (under research... American vessels first)
* Two hundred and forty-three frigates were built in Britain, Canada and Australia for seven navies during World War II.
Commissioning 1942 - 1944
Completed 151


Royal Navy:
HMS Adur
HMS Aire
HMS Annan (K297)
HMS Annan (K404)
HMS Avon
HMS Awe
HMS Ballinderry
HMS Bann
HMS Barle (ex-PG-103)
HMS Braid
HMS Cam
HMS Chelmer
HMS Cuckmere (ex-PG-104)
HMS Dart
HMS Derg
HMS Deveron
HMS Duddon / Ribble (K525)
HMS Ettrick
HMS Evenlode (ex-Danville)
HMS Exe
HMS Fal
HMS Findhorn (ex-PG-106)
HMS Frome
HMS Glenarm / Strule
HMS Halladale
HMS Helford
HMS HelmsdaleInver (ex-PG-107)
HMS Itchen
HMS Jed
HMS Kale
HMS Lagan
HMS Lambourne / Dovey
HMS Lochy
HMS Lossie (ex-PG-108)
HMS Meon
HMS Monnow
HMS Mourne
HMS Moyola
HMS Nadder
HMS Nene
HMS Ness
HMS Nith
HMS Odzani
HMS Parret (ex-PG-109)
HMS Plym
HMS Ribble (K251)
HMS Rother
HMS Shiel (ex-PG-110)
HMS Spey
HMS Swale
HMS Taff
HMS Tavy
HMS Tay
HMS Tees
HMS Teme
HMS Test
HMS Teviot
HMS Torridge
HMS Towy
HMS Trent
HMS Tweed
HMS Usk
HMS Waveney
HMS Wear
HMS Windrush
HMS Wye

Royal Canadian Navy:
HMCS Adur
HMCS Alvington (K677) / Royal Mount (K677)
HMCS Annan (K297) / HMCS Annan (K404)
HMCS Antigonish
HMCS Beacon Hill
HMCS Beauharnois / Prestonian
HMCS Cap de la Madeleine
HMCS Cape Breton
HMCS Capilano
HMCS Carlplace
HMCS Charlottetown
HMCS Chebogue
HMCS Coaticook
HMCS Eastview
HMCS Ettrick
HMCS Giffard / Toronto
HMCS Grou
HMCS Hallowell
HMCS Inch Arran
HMCS Joliette
HMCS Jonquiere
HMCS Kokanee
HMCS La Hulloise
HMCS La Tuque / Fort Erie (K670)
HMCS Lanark
HMCS Lasalle
HMCS Lauzon (K371) / Lauzon (K414) / Glace BayLeamington / Mégantic (K344) / Sea Cliff
HMCS Lévis
HMCS Longueuil
HMCS Magog
HMCS Meon
HMCS Monnow
HMCS Montreal
HMCS Nene
HMCS New Glasgow
HMCS New Waterford
HMCS Orkney
HMCS Outremont
HMCS Port Colborne
HMCS Poundmaker
HMCS Prince Rupert
HMCS Ribble
HMCS Rouyn (K676) / Penetang
HMCS Royal Mount (K685) / Buckingham
HMCS Runnymede
HMCS Saint John
HMCS Springhill
HMCS St. Catharines
HMCS St. Jerome / Kirkland Lake
HMCS St. Pierre
HMCS St. Stephen
HMCS Ste. Therese
HMCS Stettler
HMCS Stone Town
HMCS Stormont (K327) / Stormont (K444) / Matane
HMCS Strathadam
HMCS Swansea
HMCS Teme
HMCS Thetford Mines
HMCS Valdorian / Sussexvale (K683)
HMCS Valleyfield
HMCS Verdun / Dunver
HMCS Victoriaville
HMCS Waskesiu
HMCS Wentworth

Free French Naval Forces:
L'Aventure (ex-Braid)
Croix de Lorraine (ex-Strule)
La Découverte / Lucifer (ex-Windrush)
L'Escarmouche / L'Ailette (ex-Frome)
La Surprise (ex-Torridge)
Tonkinois / La Confiance (ex-Moyola)

Royal Netherlands Navy:
HNLMS Johan Maurits van Nassau (ex-Ribble (K251)

chartered ships of the United States Navy as Asheville-class:
USS Asheville (ex-Adur)
USS Natchez (ex-Annan (K297))
USS PG-103
USS PG-104
USS Danville
USS PG-106
USS PG-107
USS PG-108
USS PG-109
USS PG-110


Royal Navy: Frigates - Loch
Loch-class (FF)
= 30 (22 + 2 coastal depot ships + 3 RCN ships + 3 SAN ships)
Royal Navy:
HMS Loch Fada (commissioned 14 April 1944)
HMS Loch Dunvegan (30 June 1944)
HMS Loch Eck (7 November 1944)
HMS Loch Achray (1 February 1945)
HMS Loch Arkaig (17 November 1945)
HMS Loch Craggie (23 October 1944)
HMS Loch Fyne (9 November 1944)
HMS Loch Glendhu (24 February 1945)
HMS Loch Gorm (18 December 1944)
HMS Loch Insh (20 October 1944)
HMS Loch Katrine (29 December 1944)
HMS Loch Killin (12 April 1944)
HMS Loch Killisport (9 July 1945)
HMS Loch Lomond (16 November 1944)
HMS Loch More (24 February 1945)
HMS Loch Quoich (11 January 1945)
HMS Loch Ruthven (6 October 1944)
HMS Loch Scavaig (22 December 1944)
HMS Loch Shin (10 October 1944)
HMS Loch Tarbert (22 February 1945)
HMS Loch Tralaig (4 July 1945)
HMS Loch Veyatie (13 July 1946)

HMS Derby Haven (depot ship; 2 August 1945)
HMS Woodbridge Haven (depot ship; 19 October 1945)

Royal Canadian Navy:
HMCS Loch Achanalt (11 August 1944)
HMCS Loch Alvie (21 August 1944)
HMCS Loch Morlich (2 August 1944)

South African Navy:
HMSAS Good Hope (1 December 1944)
HMSAS Transvaal (21 May 1945)
HMSAS Natal (8 March 1945)



Royal Navy: Frigates - Bay
Bay-class (FF)
They were based on the hulls of incomplete Loch class anti-submarine (A/S) frigates

= 19 (not included: 2x admiralty yachts + 4x survey vessels + 1x cancelled order: HMS Hollesley Bay (K614) (ex- Loch Fannich))

HMS Bigbury Bay (ex-Loch Carloway) - commissioned 10 July 1945 (K606)
HMS Burghead Bay (ex-Loch Harport) - 20 September 1945 (K622)
HMS Cardigan Bay (ex-Loch Laxford) - 25 June 1945 (K630)
HMS Carnarvon Bay (ex-Loch Maddy) - September 1945 (K636)
HMS Cawsand Bay (ex-Loch Roan) - 13 November 1945 (K644)
HMS Enard Bay (ex-Loch Brachdale) - 4 January 1946 (K435)
HMS Largo Bay (ex-Loch Foin) - 26 January 1946 (K423)
HMS Morecambe Bay (ex-Loch Heilen) - 22 February 1949 (K624)
HMS Mounts Bay (ex-Loch Kilbernie) - 11 April 1949 (K627)
HMS Padstow Bay (ex-Loch Coulside) - June 1946 (K608)
HMS Porlock Bay (ex-Loch Seaforth, ex-Loch Muick (K650)) - 14 February 1946 (K650)
HMS St Austell Bay (ex-Loch Lyddoch) - 29 May 1945 (K634)
HMS St Brides Bay (ex-Loch Achility) - June 1945 (K600)
HMS Start Bay (ex-Loch Arklet) - September 1945 (K604)
HMS Tremadoc Bay (ex-Loch Amish) - 11 October 1945 (K605)
HMS Veryan Bay (ex-Loch Swannay) - 15 May 1945 (K651)
HMS Whitesand Bay (ex-Loch Lubnaig) - July 1945 (K633)
HMS Widemouth Bay (ex-Loch Frisa) - 13 April 1945 (K615)
HMS Wigtown Bay (ex-Loch Garasdale) - November 1945 (K616)


Royal Navy: Submarines
S-class (SS)
= 12 (1st group = 4; 2nd group = 8)

1st group:
HMS Swordfish (commissioned 1939)
HMS Sturgeon (1939)
HMS Seahorse (1939)
HMS Starfish (1939)

2nd group:
HMS Sealion (1939)
HMS Shark (1939)
HMS Snapper (1939)
HMS Salmon (1939)
HMS Seawolf (1939)
HMS Spearfish (1939)
HMS Sunfish (1939)
HMS Sterlet (1939)



T-class (SS)
= 53 (1st group = 15; 2nd group = 7; 3rd group = 31 incl. 2 boats for the Royal Netherlands Navy)

1st group:
HMS Triton (comissioned 1939)
HMS Thunderbolt (ex Thetis; recommissioned 26 October 1940)
HMS Tribune (1939)
HMS Trident (1939)
HMS Triumph (1939)
HMS Taku (3 October 1940)
HMS Tarpon (8 March 1940)
HMS Thistle (1939)
HMS Tigris (20 June 1940)
HMS Triad (1939)
HMS Truant (1939)
HMS Tuna (1 August 1940)
HMS Talisman (29 June 1940)
HMS Tetrarch (15 February 1940)
HMS Torbay (14 January 1941)

2nd group:
HMS Tempest (6 December 1941)
HMS Thorn (26 August 1941)
HMS Thrasher (14 May 1941)
HMS Traveller (10 April 1942)
HMS Trooper (29 August 1942)
HMS Trusty (30 July 1941)
HMS Turbulent (2 December 1941)

3rd group:
HMS Tutankhamen (7 August 1942)
HMS Trespasser (25 September 1942)
HMS Taurus (3 November 1942)
HMS Tactician (29 November 1942)
HMS Truculent (31 December 1942)
HMS Templar (15 February 1943)
HMS Tally-Ho (12 April 1943)
HMS Tantalus (2 June 1943)
HMS Tantivy (25 July 1943)
HMS Telemachus (25 October 1943)
HMS Terrapin (22 January 1944)
HMS Thorough (1 March 1944)
HMS Thule (13 May 1944)
HMS Tudor (16 January 1944)
HMS Tireless (18 April 1945)
HMS Token (15 December 1945)
HMS Tradewind (18 October 1943)
HMS Trenchant (26 February 1944)
HMS Tiptoe (10 May 1944)
HMS Trump (8 July 1944)
HMS Taciturn (8 October 1944)
HMS Tapir (30 December 1944)
HMS Talent (27 July 1945)
HMS Teredo (13 April 1946)
HMS Tabard (25 June 1946)
HMS Totem (9 January 1945)
HMS Truncheon (25 May 1945)
HMS Turpin (18 December 1944)
HMS Thermopylae (5 December 1945)
+
HNLMS Zwaardvisch (23 March 1943 to the Pacific)
HNLMS Tijgerhaai (28 March 1945)



U-class or Undine-class (SS)
= 3 group 1
HMS Undine (1939)
HMS Unity (1939)
HMS Ursula (1939)
Royal Navy: Motor Launcher
Fairmile A-class (ML)
= 12
ML-100 (completed 19 May 1940) - prototype
ML-101 (28 May 1940)
ML-102 (15 June 1940)
ML-103 (28 June 1940)
ML-104 (28 June 1940)
ML-105 (8 July 1940)
ML-106 (5 July 1940)
ML-107 (30 June 1940)
ML-108 (4 July 1940)
ML-109 (1 August 1940)
ML-110 (24 July 1940)
ML-111 (27 July 1940)



Fairmile B-class (ML)
= 120
37 were delivered by the end of 1940 and the other 83 during the first half of 1941
ML 125 to ML 244 (completed between 19 Sep 1940 and 12 Dec 1941)


Royal Navy: Motor Gun Boats
Fairmile C-class (MGB)
= 24

MGB 312 (completed 16 June 1941)
MGB 313 (12 June 1941)
MGB 314 (26 June 1941)
MGB 315 (10 July 1941)
MGB 316 (19 May 1941)
MGB 317 (3 September 1941)
MGB 318 (6 July 1941)
MGB 319 (4 September 1941)
MGB 320 (23 August 1941)
MGB 321 (9 July 1941)
MGB 322 (29 July 1941)
MGB 323 (11 July 1941)
MGB 324 (4 September 1941)
MGB 325 (9 September 1941)
MGB 326 (18 August 1941)
MGB 327 (22 August 1941)
MGB 328 (13 October 1941)
MGB 329 (25 September 1941)
MGB 330 (25 July 1941)
MGB 331 (13 August 1941)
MGB 332 (8 October 1941)
MGB 333 (16 October 1941)
MGB 334 (9 October 1941)
MGB 335 (30 October 1941)



Fairmile D-class (MGB)
= 228 (incl. 35 for the Royal Air Force + 23 for the Royal Norwegian Navy + 10 Royal Canadian Navy)
Prefix changed 1943 from "MGB" to "MTB"

Nicknamed "Dog-Boats"
completed between March 1941 and December 1945

Royal Air Force LRCC (Long Range Rescue Craft):
MGB 650
MTB 664
MTB 673
MTB 675
MTB 676
MTB 677
MTB 678
MTB 679
MTB 680
MTB 682
MTB 683
MTB 684
MTB 689
MTB 691
MTB 692
MTB 693
MTB 694
MTB 695
MTB 799
MTB 800
MTB 5004
MTB 5006
MTB 5011
MTB 5012
MTB 5014
MTB 5016
MTB 5017
MTB 5018
MTB 5019
MTB 5021
MTB 5022
MTB 5023
MTB 5024
MTB 5025
MTB 5026

Royal Norwegian Navy:
MGB 618
MGB 619
MGB 620
MGB 623
MGB 625
MGB 626
MGB 627
MGB 631
MGB 653
MTB 688
MTB 704
MTB 709
MTB 711
MTB 712
MTB 713
MTB 715
MTB 716
MTB 717
MTB 719
MTB 720
MTB 721
MTB 722
MTB 723

Royal Canadian Navy:
MTB 726
MTB 727
MTB 735
MTB 736
MTB 743
MTB 744
MTB 745
MTB 746
MTB 748
MTB 797


Royal Navy:
MGB 601
MGB 602
MGB 603
MGB 604
MGB 605
MGB 606
MGB 607
MGB 608
MGB 609
MGB 610
MGB 611
MGB 612
MGB 613
MGB 614
MGB 615
MGB 616
MGB 617
MGB 621
MGB 622
MGB 624
MGB 628
MGB 629
MGB 630
MGB 632
MGB 633
MGB 634
MGB 635
MGB 636
MGB 637
MGB 638
MGB 639
MGB 640
MGB 641
MGB 642
MGB 643
MGB 644
MGB 645
MGB 646
MGB 647
MGB 648
MGB 649
MGB 650
MGB 651
MGB 652
MGB 654
MGB 655
MGB 656
MGB 657
MGB 658
MGB 659
MGB 660
MGB 661
MGB 662
MGB 663
MGB 664
MGB 665
MTB 666
MTB 667
MTB 668
MTB 669
MTB 670
MTB 671
MTB 672
MTB 673
MGB 674
MTB 681
MTB 685
MTB 686
MTB 687
MTB 690
MTB 696
MTB 697
MTB 698
MTB 699
MTB 700
MTB 701
MTB 702
MTB 703
MTB 705
MTB 706
MTB 707
MTB 708
MTB 710
MTB 724
MTB 725
MTB 728 <up to> MTB 734
MTB 737 <up to> MTB 742
MTB 747
MTB 749 <up to> MTB 796
MTB 798

cancelled ships:
MTB 5027


Royal Australian Navy: Corvettes - Bathurst
Bathurst-class (K)
= 60 Made in Australia
Built 1940–1942
In commission 1940–1960 (RAN)

service in the Pacific by the Royal Australian Navy:
HMAS Ararat (K34)
HMAS Townsville (A124)
HMAS Lismore (K145)
HMAS Whyalla (K153)
HMAS Toowoomba (K157)
HMAS Bathurst (K158)
HMAS Goulburn (K167)
HMAS Wollongong (K172)
HMAS Cessnock (K175)
HMAS Geraldton (K178)
HMAS Launceston (K179)
HMAS Cairns (K183)
HMAS Ballarat (K184)
HMAS Ipswich (K186)
HMAS Bendigo (K187)
HMAS Gawler (K188)
HMAS Pirie (K189)
HMAS Broome (K191)
HMAS Kalgoorlie (K192)
HMAS Maryborough (K195)
HMAS Burnie (K198)
HMAS Geelong (K201)
HMAS Warrnambool (K202)
HMAS Rockhampton (K203)
HMAS Katoomba (K204)
HMAS Townsville (K205)
HMAS Lithgow (K206)
HMAS Mildura (K207)
HMAS Kapunda (K218)
HMAS Wallaroo (K222)
HMAS Bundaberg (K231)
HMAS Deloraine (K232)
HMAS Inverell (K233)
HMAS Latrobe (K234)
HMAS Horsham (K235)
HMAS Glenelg (K236)
HMAS Gympie (K238)
HMAS Armidale (K240)
HMAS Bunbury (K241)
HMAS Colac (K242)
HMAS Castlemaine (K244) - turned into museum ship in 1973.
HMAS Fremantle (K246)
HMAS Shepparton (K248)
HMAS Tamworth (K250)
HMAS Dubbo (K251)
HMAS Echuca (K252)
HMAS Bowen (K285)
HMAS Wagga (K315)
HMAS Cootamundra (K316)
HMAS Benalla (K323)
HMAS Gladstone (K324)
HMAS Stawell (K348)
HMAS Cowra (K351)
HMAS Kiama (K353)
HMAS Mudgee (K357)
HMAS Parkes (K361)
HMAS Junee (K362)
HMAS Strahan (K363)

service in the Indian Ocean by the Royal Indian Navy:
HMIS Madras (K237)
HMIS Punjab (K239)
HMIS Bengal (K247)
HMIS Bombay (K249)