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HMS Duncan (F80)
Career RN Ensign
Name: HMS Duncan
Namesake: Adam Duncan
Builder: John I. Thornycroft & Company
Laid down: 17 December 1953
Launched: 30 May 1957
Acquired: October 1958
Commissioned: 21 October 1958
Decommissioned: 1984
Identification: Pennant number: F80
Motto: Secundis dubusque rectus
("Upright in prosperity and peril")
Fate: Broken up February 1985
General characteristics
Class & type: Blackwood-class frigate

HMS Duncan was the fifth RN ship named after Admiral Adam Duncan. She was a Blackwood-class frigate of the Royal Navy that served in the Cod Wars.

Service[]

From her first commissioning in 1958 until 1965 Duncan was the leader of the Fishery Protection Squadron.She was involved in the First Cod War between United Kingdom and Iceland over fishing rights, intervening between the Icelandic coastguard and British trawlers.

She was an escort to HMY Britannia in August 1960. In 1964 she fired the salute at the opening of the new Forth Road Bridge. She also visited Nantes in 1961 and Copenhagen in 1965. She was given the Freedom of the city of Hull for the part she played in the Cod Wars. In 1966 she completed an extensive modernisation at Rosyth Naval Dockyard and in the following year attended Portsmouth Navy Days.[1]

In 1970 she was again present at Portsmouth Navy Days, by this time she was part of the Portland Training Squadron.[2]

During the early 1980s, HMS Duncan served alongside HMS Eastbourne as harbour training ship at Rosyth Dockyard for the marine engineering artificer apprentices from the shore base HMS Caledonia.

Commanding officers[]

From To Captain
1962 1964 Captain Richard Trowbridge RN
1967 1967 Lieutenant Commander Peter A Pinkster RN
1970 1970 Lieutenant-Commander M F Nalder RN

References[]

  1. Programme, Navy Days Portsmouth, 26th-28th August 1967, HMSO, p15.
  2. Programme, Navy Days Portsmouth, 29th-31st August 1970, HMSO, p23.

Publications[]



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