From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
HMCS Cayuga
Canada, Department of National Defence |
| Career |
 |
| Ordered: |
1942 |
| Laid down: |
October 7 , 1943 |
| Launched: |
July 28, 1945 |
| Commissioned: |
October 20, 1947 |
| Fate: |
Scrapped, Faslane, February 27, 1964 |
| Struck: |
|
| General characteristics |
| Displacement: |
|
| Length: |
|
| Beam: |
|
| Draught: |
|
| Propulsion: |
|
| Speed: |
|
| Range: |
|
| Complement: |
|
| Armament: |
|
| Aircraft: |
|
| Motto: |
Onenh owa den dya (Now let us proceed) |
| Battle Honours: |
Korea 1950-53 |
| Colours |
Gold and scarlet |
| Badge: |
Blazon Or, an Indian of the Cayuga tribe, facing dexter, in kneeling posture, right knee on the ground, left leg bent and forward, two feathers in hair, lower part of body clad, upper bare, a quiver of arrows pendant from the left shoulder, the base resting on ground beside the right knee, the Indian holding a bow and arrow in the "ready "position all gules. |
HMCS Cayuga R04/218 was a Destroyer of the Tribal class built in the Halifax Shipyards, Halifax, Nova Scotia and served in the Royal Canadian Navy. She served in the Korean War. This is the vessel that Ferdinand Demara, "the great impostor" served on while impersonating a Canadian medical officer.
Wearing pennant R04, then 218, she served a total of three tours of Korea, the last in 1954 after the conflict had ended. She was paid off in February 1964.
[edit] References
- The Great Imposter by Robert Crichton, New York: Random House, 1959
[edit] See also
List of ships of the Canadian Navy