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HMS Rifleman (J299)

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Name
  
HMS Rifleman

Completed
  
11 February 1944

Identification
  
Pennant number J299

Length
  
69 m

Displacement
  
771,100 kg

Yard number
  
1205

Commissioned
  
11 February 1944

Launched
  
25 November 1943

Weight
  
863.6 tons

Builder
  
Harland and Wolff

HMS Rifleman (J299) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Honours and awards
  
Normandy 1944, Burma 1945

HMS Rifleman was an Algerine-class minesweeper of the Royal Navy. She was launched in 1943 and saw active service during World War II, both in the European and Far East theatres. After the war she served in the Mediterranean and was used as an accommodation ship in Barrow before being sold for breaking in 1972.

Contents

Construction

The ship was launched from the Harland and Wolff yard in Belfast on 25 November 1943 and commissioned on 11 February 1944.

World War II

From June to August 1944 Rifleman was engaged in minesweeping and escort duties for Operation Neptune, the Allied invasion of Normandy. In September she was nominated for Air Sea Rescue duties during the Arnhem airborne assault, and in October she carried out mine clearance operations in the Scheldt estuary and escorted a military convoy to Antwerp.

She was transferred to the South West Approaches with the rest of her Flotilla and was employed in anti-submarine patrols out of Falmouth until December, when she was refitted for service in the Far East.

In February 1945 Rifleman rejoined her Flotilla and together they formed the escort for a convoy of Landing Ships (Tank) from Falmouth to Gibraltar. On 22 February she rescued some of the 41 survivors from the German submarine U-900 which had been attacked by sister ship Pincher. Rifleman arrived at Colombo on 14 April and on 1 May she began minesweeping the approaches to Rangoon for the assault ships. In June she was at Trincomalee to prepare for planned minesweeping off Phuket Island and during July she and her sisters came under sustained air attack, with Squirrel and Vestal being sunk. This operation was named Livery.

At the end of August Rifleman carried out minesweeping operations to clear the approaches to Penang for the entry of the battleship Nelson, and the cruisers Cleopatra and Sussex. In September, the minesweeper performed the same task in the Malacca Straits prior to the entry into Singapore.

Post-war

The minesweeper remained in the Far East with her Flotilla to remove mines for the safety of navigation, returning of the UK in July 1946. She was paid off at Sheerness in September 1946, reduced to Reserve and laid up.

Rifleman was recommissioned into the 2nd Minesweeping Flotilla of the Mediterranean Fleet after refit in 1947. In 1953 the vessel took part in the Fleet Review to celebrate the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II. At the end of 1954 she returned to the UK and was again reduced to Reserve and laid up. During 1958 and 1959 she was refitted. In 1970 the ship was sent to Barrow and used to provide accommodation, including for personnel standing by submarines under construction by Vickers-Armstrong.

Fate

She was placed on the Disposal List in 1972 and sold to BISCO for breaking by W H Arnott Young at Dalmuir.

Publications

Colledge, J. J.; Warlow, Ben (2006) [1969]. Ships of the Royal Navy: The Complete Record of all Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy (Rev. ed.). London: Chatham Publishing. ISBN 978-1-86176-281-8. OCLC 67375475. 

References

HMS Rifleman (J299) Wikipedia