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CCGS D'Iberville
Career Coastguard Flag of Canada
Name: CGS D'Iberville
CCGS D'Iberville
Namesake: Pierre Le Moyne d'Iberville, adventurer in New France
Operator: Department of Transport Marine Service
Canadian Coast Guard
Builder: Davie Shipbuilding, Lauzon, Quebec
Completed: 1952
Commissioned: 1953
Decommissioned: 1983
In service: 1952-1983
Renamed: Phillip O'Hara 1983, D'Iberville 1988
Struck: 1983
Homeport: CCG Base Quebec, QC
Fate: Scrapped 1989
General characteristics
Type: Medium icebreaker
Displacement: 5,678 tonnes (6,258.92 short tons)
Length: 310 ft (94 m)
Beam: 67 ft (20 m)
Draft: 30.0 ft (9.1 m)
Ice class: 100A (under Arctic Class 1)
Propulsion: twin screw Diesel Uniflow steam engines @ 10600 hp

CCGS D'Iberville was a Canadian Coast Guard Gulf icebreaker.[1]

Commissioned as the CGS D'Iberville for the Department of Transport's Marine Service, using the prefix "Canadian Government Ship", D'Iberville was transferred into the newly created Canadian Coast Guard in 1962. When launched, she was the largest icebreaker of the post-World War II in Canada until the CCGS John A. MacDonald was put in service.

She saw service in the St. Lawrence River and Gulf of St. Lawrence (1st ship in the canal and transporting Queen Elizabeth II[2]) and was decommissioned in 1983. Renamed Phillip O'Hara 1983 in and back to D'Iberville 1988 before finally being scrapped in 1989.[3]

CCGS N.B. McLean left the same time with D'Iberville to scrap in 1988-1989.

CGS Base Quebec[]

Current vessels in Quebec:

References[]


External links[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at CCGS D'Iberville and the edit history here.
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