Rahul Sharma (Editor)

LÉ Macha (01)

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Name
  
HMS Borage

Completed
  
29 April 1942

Maiden voyage
  
1942

Launched
  
6 November 1941

Laid down
  
21 November 1940

Decommissioned
  
15 November 1946

Construction started
  
21 November 1940

Length
  
62 m


Builder
  
George Brown of Greenock

Macha was a ship in the Irish Naval Service. Built as a Flower-class corvette of the Royal Navy named HMS Borage, she was transferred on 15 November 1946 to the Irish Naval Service and renamed LÉ Macha after Macha, an ancient Irish goddess of war.

Contents

HMS Borage

She served as escort for the Arctic convoys from 1942-1945 before being sold to Ireland.

LÉ Macha

In September 1948, she had the honour of carrying the remains of William Butler Yeats from France to Drumcliffe, County Sligo, for reburial. The voyage took 17 days. LÉ Macha stopped en route at Gibraltar and in France. The remains were received at Rocquebrune near Nice by Sean Murphy, the Irish Ambassador to France. There was a funeral march from Nice to the ship with band, trumpeters and military honours from a company of French alpine troops. It was the first time that France rendered military honours to a civilian. The ship returned to Galway, whence the remains were carried by hearse to their final resting place in County Sligo.

Macha was sold for scrap on 22 November 1970.

References

LÉ Macha (01) Wikipedia