Irish patrol vessel Muirchú

History
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
Name: Helga II
Builder: Dublin Liffey Dockyard
Launched: 1908
Christened: 1908
Completed: 1908
Commissioned: 1915
Renamed: Helga 1915
Fate: passed to Irish Free State
Ireland
Name: Muirchú[1]
Namesake: Irish: Hound of the Sea
Builder: Dublin Liffey Dockyard
Acquired: 1923
Commissioned: August 1923
Decommissioned: 1947
Renamed: August 1923
Reclassified: 1923
Fate: Sold to Hammond Lane Scrap Merchants Dublin, sank on delivery voyage.[1]
General characteristics
Type: Steam yacht
Displacement: 323 tons
Length: 155 ft (47 m)
Armament:
Notes: [2]

Public Armed Ship Muirchú was a ship in the Irish Naval Service. She was the former Royal Navy ship HMY Helga and was involved in shelling Liberty Hall in Dublin from the River Liffey with her pair of 12-pounder naval guns[3] during the Easter Rising of 1916.

Helga was purchased by the Irish Free State in 1923 and renamed Muirchú (Irish: Hound of the Sea).

She sank off the Wexford coast after disposal in 1947. The wheel was recovered from the wreck by local divers and can now be seen in Kehoes Pub in Kilmore Quay.

The prefix LÉ is sometimes mistakenly used as LÉ Muirchú. The prefix was introduced in December 1946 when the Irish Naval Service was established with the purchase of three corvettes from the Royal Navy replacing Muirchú.

Career

UK career

She was built in Liffey Dockyard in 1908[4] as a fishery research and protection cruiser and was named Helga II. Such was interest in her design that Canada ordered two ships to the same specification (Galliano and Misalpina).[5]

She was then under control of the Department of Agriculture and Technical Instruction (Ireland) until she was taken over by the Admiralty in March 1915 when she became officially described as His Majesty's Yacht Helga, an armed steam yacht - officially an "Armed Auxiliary Patrol Yacht". At this time the "II" was dropped from her name and she served as an anti-submarine patrol vessel as well as undertaking escort duty in the Irish Sea.[6]

Helga was involved in the Easter Rising when the British forces used her to shell Dublin starting with Liberty Hall in April 1916.[7]

In April 1918 she was credited with the sinking of a submarine off the Isle of Man and for the remainder of her career she carried a star on her funnel as an award for this achievement.[6]

In October of the same year RMS Leinster was torpedoed off the Kish and 517 were lost. Helga was fuelling in Dun Laoghaire[6] at the time. She rescued ninety of the passengers.

Helga was released from the navy in March 1919 and returned to fisheries work. She was later used to transport the British auxiliary troops known as Black and Tans around the coast when many of the roads in Ireland were rendered impassable by Irish forces in the War of Independence.

Irish service

Helga was handed over to the Irish Free State in August 1923 and was renamed Muirchú. She thus became one of the first ships in the newly established Irish Navy. She was commandeered in July 1922 by the government and used against Anti-treaty forces in Munster.

However, in the following year the vessel was returned to the Department of Agriculture and Fisheries to carry on her task of fishery protection. It was not until the actual day on which the Second World War was declared that the Marine and Coastwatching Service was again established and on 12 December 1939 Muirchú was taken over by this Service from the Department of Agriculture and Fisheries.

Muirchú was sold to Hammond Lane Foundry by Marine Service, and while on passage to Dublin on 8 May 1947 she sank off the Saltee Islands- though not before her crew safely evacuated.

Notes

  1. 1 2 Naval Association - Homepage - Ships
  2. Collins p145
  3. Google Books - Send a Gunboat: The Victorian Navy and Supremacy at Sea, 1854-1904
  4. Timothy Collins (2002), The "Helga / Muirchu:" Her Contribution to Galway Maritime History, Galway Archaeological & Historical Society (registration required)
  5. Collins p147
  6. 1 2 3 IrishShips.com - Helga II / Muirchu
  7. Townshend, Charles. Easter 1916: The Irish Rebellion.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, February 25, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.