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HMT Amethyst


FieldValue
section1{{Infobox ship/image
imageHMT Amethyst.jpg
image_captionHMT Amethyst in her earlier guise as the Phyllis Rosalie
section2{{Infobox ship/career
countryUnited Kingdom
flag[[File:Naval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg60pxRN Ensign]]
nameHMT Amethyst
builderSmith's Dock Co., South Bank-on-Tees
yard_number963
launched15 January 1934
completedFebruary 1934
acquiredNovember 1935
renamedLaunched as the Phyllis Rosalie*
fateSunk by mine on 24 November 1940
section3{{Infobox ship/characteristics
displacement443 tons
length157 feet 3 inches
beam26 feet 4 inches
sensorsASDIC
armament1 × 4 in gun
notesPennant number T12
  • Renamed Amethyst 21 November 1935

'*HMT *Amethyst''''' was a naval trawler requisitioned by the Admiralty prior to the Second World War. She was sunk in the second year of the war.

Amethyst was built as the commercial trawler Phyllis Rosalie by Smiths Dock Company, South Bank-on-Tees and was launched on 15 January 1934. Her first owners were the Boston Deep Sea Fishing & Ice Co Ltd, based at Fleetwood. In 1935 she set a number of records for catches landed at Fleetwood, and was present at King George V's Silver Jubilee Spithead Review, representing the port of Fleetwood. Her Skipper, Walter Holmes (DSC) was presented to King George V. She was sold later that year to the Admiralty, who had her converted into an anti-submarine warfare trawler with the addition of ASDIC and a four-inch gun. They classed her and a number of other trawlers as the Gem group, and the name Amethyst was selected.

She continued to serve during the Second World War, but on 24 November 1940, whilst under the command of T/Lt. the W.K. Rous, RNVR, she struck a mine in Barrow Deep in the Thames Estuary and sank. There were no casualties, and the survivors were landed at Southend, where they were briefly arrested under suspicion of being survivors from a sunken German craft.

References

References

  1. (18 September 2025). "S. T. Phillys Rosalie FD24". fleetwood-trawlers.
  2. (18 September 2025). "S. T. Phillys Rosalie FD24". fleetwood-trawlers.
  3. [http://www.fleetwood-trawlers.info/index.php/2009/01/st-phyllis-rosalie-fd24/ History of ''Phyllis Rosalie'']
  4. (18 September 2025). "S. T. Phillys Rosalie FD24". fleetwood-trawlers.
  5. "Record of trawlers lost".
  6. (18 September 2025). "S. T. Phillys Rosalie FD24". fleetwood-trawlers.
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