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  • Current Location

    London

    09:41 GMT - 19 May 2012

    Royal Navy at London 2012

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  • Current Location

    London

    14:17 GMT - 21 May 2012

    The Queen's Diamond Jubilee

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  • Current Location

    Indian Ocean

    15:17 GMT - 16 May 2012

    East of Suez

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  • Current Location

    RNAS Yeovilton

    15:54 GMT - 17 May 2012

    Home waters

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  • Current Location

    Afghanistan

    02:48 GMT - 16 May 2012

    Operation Herrick

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        HMS Montrose

        Having made her mark as the Royal Navy’s pirate-buster par excellence during the 2010 deployment off Somalia, HMS Montrose has now embarked on another operational deployment.  With a different focus to last year, she has been deployed to provide a continous presence in the South Atlantic, protecting British interests in the region.

        mare ditat rosa decorat - The sea enriches, the rose adorns

        Ship's Motto
        HMS Montrose

        That’s the most recent chapter in a history going back to the mid-1990s when we were commissioned in our home port of Devonport, the eighth of 16 Duke-class frigates to join the Fleet.

        Last year HMS Montrose completed a successful OP Ocean Shield deployment with the NATO Task Group. Working closely with other Coalition task groups to combat piracy in the Indian Ocean, Montrose had a number of successful interdictions, which were reported in the media.

        COMMANDING OFFICER

        Jonathan Lett

        Jonathan Lett
        RANK:
        Commander
        JOINED:
        1989
        SPECIALISATION:
        Warfare
        PREVIOUS UNITS:
        HMS Mersey, HMS Clyde
        Military experience

        Cdr Jonathan Lett joined the RN as a midshipman in January 1989. After initial training at BRNC and sea training in Leander-class frigates in the Baltic, Gulf and Adriatic, he undertook the first in-Service degree at the RN Engineering College Manadon.

        Apart from his initial appointment in the Island-class patrol vessel HMS Lindisfarne, the majority of his sea time has been spent in Type 23 frigates.

        In appointments to HM ships Westminster, Lancaster, Norfolk, Kent and Iron Duke he has travelled extensively and taken part in a range of tasking including Falkland Island guardship in the South Atlantic, volcano relief and counter-drug operations in the Caribbean, enforcement of UN embargoes in the Gulf and a UK joint operation in Sierra Leone.

        In between these sea appointments he has also served ashore as a Navigation Instructor at Britannia Royal Naval College and as a Staff Officer to the UK Maritime Battlestaff, conducting operations in the Gulf and exercises in the Mediterranean, Oman, South Africa, Gibraltar, the USA and Italy. In addition he served for 12 months as a Staff Officer to the Spanish Commander of the Standing NATO Readiness Force Maritime Group 2, conducting anti-terrorist operations and multi-national exercises in the Mediterranean.

        His first Command was the River Class Offshore Patrol Vessel HMS Mersey in which he conducted Fishery Protection Patrols of UK Waters. He subsequently commanded the Falkland Islands Patrol Vessel HMS Clyde undertaking her first Austral Winter patrol to South Georgia and first visit to Chile.

        Most recently he undertook the Joint Services Command and Staff Course at the UK Defence Academy, graduating with an MA in Defence Studies. Commander Lett assumed Command of HMS Montrose in December 2009.


        OPERATIONS

        Operation Atlantic Patrol South

        CURRENT STATUS: active
        image
        MISSION SUMMARY

        The Atlantic Patrol Task (South) ship provides reassurance to UK overseas territories, Commonwealth countries and other friendly nations in the South Atlantic, and acts as a deterrent to potential aggressors who may wish to threaten UK nations, territory or interests.

        Maritime security

        CURRENT STATUS: active
        image
        MISSION SUMMARY

        British ships and units are committed to operations around the world. Operations focus on maritime security, reassurance and wider regional engagement to build regional maritime capability.

        UNIT DIARY

        Surface Fleet
        HMS Montrose
        • A Tale of Two Statues19/03/12

          During her recent period of maintenance in Simon’s Town, South Africa, HMS Montrose’s crew were frequently reminded of the Ship’s affiliated town of Montrose in Angus.

          Read more

        LATEST NEWS

         

        TOP STORIES

        HMS Montrose home coming
        Tears and cheers as magnificent Montrose returns
        11 May 2012

        More than 700 people cheered HMS Montrose into Plymouth today...

        Lasting reminder of Montrose’s visit to Bermuda as frigate heads for home
        Lasting reminder of Montrose’s visit to Bermuda as frigate heads for home
        08 May 2012

        Sailors from HMS Montrose left their mark in Bermuda –...

        Louisiana Seafood Cook-Off
        Montrose Enjoys Bayou Tapestry in New Orleans
        30 April 2012

        HMS Montrose spent an unforgettable six days in New Orleans...

        Montrose 100M Dash
        Ready Jetty Go!
        30 April 2012

        The countdown to the London Olympics 2012 has begun, and...

        WEAPONS SYSTEM

        Weapons System

        type 23
        • 4.5Mk8 Gun
          medium calibre weapon system
          Mk8 4.5 Gun

          If you're looking for punch and firepower, then the 4.5in main gun, found on the forecastle of all the Royal Navy's destroyer's frigates and destroyers, is the most obvious provider. Even in an age of missiles, there's still a need for a weapon to pulverise enemy positions and demoralise the foe - and the 4.5in gun has done so in the Falklands and Iraq. The gun can fire up to two dozen high explosive shells weighing more than 40kg (80lbs) at targets more than a dozen miles away - and nearly 18 miles if special extended-range shells are used. In various forms, the 4.5in has been the Navy's standard medium gun since before World War 2, embodied today by the Mk8 which has been in service since the early 1970s. There are two types of Mk8 used by the Fleet. The older Mod 0 (with its curved turret), which is gradually being replaced, and the angular Mod 1 (nicknamed Kryten after the robot on the sci-fi sitcom Red Dwarf) which is harder for enemy radar to pick up. The main purpose of the gun is Naval Gunfire Support – artillery bombardment of shore targets. In this role the gun is capable of firing the equivalent of a six-gun shore battery. The Mk8 can also be used effectively against surface targets at sea.

        • Harpoon
          Anti-ship missile System
          Harpoon

          Harpoon is the long-range lance of the Type 23 frigate, capable of destroying enemy ships far beyond the horizon. Fitted to all Type 23 Frigates, the Boeing (formerly McDonnell Douglas) Harpoon is a sophisticated anti-ship missile capable of striking at targets more than 80 miles away. Harpoon uses a combination of inertial guidance and active radar homing to attack its prey. Cruising at Mach 0.9 and carrying a large high explosive warhead it is powered by a lightweight turbojet, but is accelerated at launch by a booster rocket.

        • Helicopter
          Airbourne weapons System
          Merlin

          The Merlin Mk1 have been in service with the Fleet Air Arm since the late 1990s and, after thorough testing and evaluation, the helicopters have been on the front line since 2000. Our job is to find – and if necessary destroy – enemy submarines using our state-of-the-art sonar bouys which we drop into the ocean and Sting Ray torpedoes. Beyond searching for submarines, we carry out traditional maritime helicopter duties: anti-piracy/drug-running patrols, surveillance and reconnaissance, search and rescue, and passenger and load transfers

        • Sea Wolf
          Surface to Air Missile system
          Sea wolf

          Seawolf is the shield of Britain’s frigate fleet against air attack. Defending Britain's frigate fleet against air attack, the Seawolf missile has been in service for more than 30 years and has proven itself in action in the Falklands. Unlike Sea Viper and Sea Dart, Seawolf is intended to defend an individual ship rather than a task group, engaging aircraft or sea-skimming missiles. It is fired either from a vertical silo on Type 23 frigates, and guided on to its target courtesy of a tracking system on the ship. The original Seawolf had a very limited range of just six miles, but the frigate fleet is in the middle of receiving the latest, more potent version of the missile system. It means that Seawolf can track – and destroy – a target the size of a cricket ball travelling at three times the speed of sound well beyond the limit of the original missile. If the system was placed in the middle of London, it could track its target over the M25 and knock it out of the sky over the North Circular - and the whole action would last under 20 seconds. Each Type 23 frigate carries out at least two Seawolf firings on ranges off the UK coast before each deployment.

        • DLH Decoy Launch System
          active decoy system
          Chaff

          The DLH system is carried by the Navy's frigates and is designed to lure attacking anti-ship missiles away from the unit.

        • Torpedo
          Magazine torpedo launch System (MTLS)
          Torpedo

          Dropped by Lynx and Merlin helicopters, and launched from the MTLS, Sting Ray is a small lightweight torpedo designed to destroy enemy submarines. It weighs seven times less than torpedoes fired by submarines, racing through the water at more than 50mph at targets half a dozen miles away, delivering a 100lb explosive charge powerful enough to punch through the double hulls of modern submarines. Once Sting Ray is fired it uses the information provided initially by the helicopter and gathers fresh intelligence on its target using its sonar and onboard software which is designed not to be fooled by the enemy submarine’s decoys.

        • Towed Array
          Sub Surface detection system
          towed array

        • 30mm Gun
          Medium Calibre gun system
          30mm Gun

        ABOUT THE UNIT

        KEY STATISTICS


        Pennant

        F236

        Displacement

        4,900tonnes

        Complement

        185personnel

        Length

        133Metres

        Beam

        16.1metres

        Draught

        7.3metres

        Top Speed

        28knots

        Range (Nautical)

        7,800miles

        Launch Date

        31/07/92

        Commissioned date

        02/06/94

        Economical Speed

        15Knots

        TAKE A LOOK

        PHOTO GALLERY

        Montrose

        UNITS IN TIME


        HMS Montrose HISTORY

        TRACK THE HISTORY OF SHIPS NAMED HMS Montrose
        • Ship History

          Only one previous ship in the Royal Navy has carried the name Montrose, built for one war, but who distinguished herself in another. The Admiralty-type destroyer leader – sometimes known as the Scott-class – was designed as a command ship for a World War 1 destroyer flotilla.The war had ended before Montrose was ready to join the Fleet. When she was commissioned in 1919, she was sent to the Mediterranean, where she spent the next decade, helping to evacuate White Russian troops from Novorossisk in March 1920 during the Russian Civil War.

        • Ship Duties

          When her Mediterranean duties were done, Montrose returned to UK waters and spent most of the 1930s in reserve.

        • Battle Honours

          Atlantic 1939-40

        • Dunkirk

          Refitted on the eve of war, she was reactivated and charged with hunting U-boats in the Atlantic initially, until she was ordered to Dunkirk to support the evacuation of Allied troops from the Continent. She managed to bring more than 900 men home before bomb damage prevented any further trips to France. Battle Honours: Dunkirk 1940

        • Escort Duties

          Once repaired, Montrose resumed more typical escort duties, including the bitter Arctic Convoys, before supporting the liberation of France by joining the Normandy invasion fleet. Battle Honours : Arctic 1942-43, North Sea 1942-44

        • Battle Honours

          English Channel 1943-44

        • Damaged

          The destroyer was badly damaged one day after D-Day in a collision with a US merchant ship. She never put to sea again and was broken up in 1946.

        Current Jobs

        Marine Engineering Grad Entry

        The Engineering Branch includes weapons, marine and air engineering. Marine Engineers manage the repair and maintenance of the ships mechanical and hydraulic systems alongside and at sea. Later in your career you will become involved in the procurement and building of...
        More info

        Logistics Officer

        As a Logistics Officer, you’ll be responsible for making sure your ship has everything it needs, when it needs it, to stay effective on operations. Leading a team of highlytrained specialists, you’ll apply your organisational skills to stock your ship...
        More info

        Medical Officer

        As a Medical Officer, you’re a member of our senior management team as well as a doctor, making this one of the most wide-ranging, challenging and rewarding environments in which to practise medicine. You can specialise in a major discipline,...
        More info