HMS Teme (K458)

HMS Teme was a of the Royal Navy that was built during the Second World War. The frigate was named for the River Teme, a river that flows along the English-Welsh border. She was transferred to the Royal Canadian Navy and served as HMCS Teme. She was torpedoed by a German submarine on 29 March 1945 and subsequently declared a constructive total loss. The ship was broken up in Wales in 1946.

Design and description
The River-class frigate were an improved version of the design, intended as ocean-going anti-submarine escorts. They were 100 ft longer and had two screws, intended to replace the corvettes that were at the time, performing the convoy escort missions.

The River-class design had a displacement of 1460 LT and 2180 LT at deep load. They were 283 ft long between perpendiculars and 301 ft long overall. The frigates had a beam of 36 ft and a draught of 11 ft, 12 ft at deep load.

The frigates were powered by a two-shaft vertical triple expansion engine, using steam from two Admiralty 3-drum boilers. This generated 5500 ihp and gave the ships a maximum speed of 20 kn. They carried 646 tons of oil.

The ships main armament was two single-mounted QF 4 in/40 Mk.XIX guns. For anti-air defence they had up to ten QF 20 mm Oerlikon anti-aircraft guns on twin and single mounts. For anti-submarine warfare they were equipped with one Hedgehog 24 spigot projector and up to 150 depth charges.

Construction and career
Teme was laid down by Smiths Dock Company at their shipyard in South Bank-on-Tees and launched on 11 November 1943. In 1943, as part of the Royal Navy's intent to reduce its production of escorts, an agreement was reached between the United Kingdom and Canada that would see the Royal Canadian Navy take over seven River-class frigates building in the United Kingdom. The ship was commissioned into the Royal Canadian Navy on 28 February 1944 at Middlesbrough.

After working up, Teme was assigned to the convoy escort group EG 6, based out of Derry. For the rest of her active career, the ship remained with this unit.

On 6 June 1944, Teme was among the forces arrayed for Operation Overlord, the naval component of the Invasion of Normandy. Teme was among the ships deployed to combat the U-boat threat to the invasion fleet. Escort Group 6 was among the groups assigned to Operation CA, which swept the area of the Atlantic extending from southern Ireland to the Bay of Biscay. The escort group, normally operating out of Derry, transferred to their operating base at Moelfre Bay in Wales on 31 May. On 10 June at roughly 0200, Teme picked up an ASDIC contact and moved to intercept. The escort carrier HMS Tracker (D24), operating with the group, maneuvered at the same time, and both ships put themselves on a collision course. Tracker rammed Teme and nearly cut the ship in half. Teme was towed by sister ship HMCS Outremont (K322) to Cardiff where she underwent repairs until December 1944.

Teme traveled to Tobermory for work ups following her repairs and became operational again on 9 February 1945. On 29 March, while escorting the coastal convoy BTC 111 in the English Channel, Teme was hit by a torpedo from a German submarine, blowing off 60 ft of her stern. In company with sister ship HMCS New Waterford (K321), the two ships were sweeping for submarines when Teme picked up a contact on her sonar. After failing to find the source of the contact, the ships were returning to the convoy when a torpedo was spotted. The resulting explosion killed four men. The sources disagree on which submarine fired the torpedo, with Macpherson and Barrie stating it was GS U-246 and Rohwer claiming it was GS U-315 on page 397, then on page 400, it was U-246.

Towed to Falmouth, the frigate was declared a constructive total loss. The ship was paid off by the Royal Canadian Navy on 4 May 1945 and returned to the Royal Navy. The ship was towed to Llanelly, Wales and broken up in 1946.