Fundy was ordered on 23 August 1937 as the lead ship of her class of four minesweepers built in Canada. The ship's
keel was
laid down on 24 January 1938 by
Collingwood Shipyards Ltd. at
Collingwood, Ontario. The warship was
launched on 18 June later that year.
Fundy was
commissioned into the Royal Canadian Navy on 1 September 1938 at Collingwood.
Fundy saw continuous service in the Second World War as a minesweeper and harbour defence vessel for
Halifax Harbour. In July 1942 she escorted a
convoy to
Boston and one back to Halifax. Along with her
sister ship ,
Fundy rescued 66 survivors of the torpedoed
Liberty ship SS
Martin Van Buren on 15 January 1945.
Fundy was
decommissioned on 27 July 1945 and laid up. The ship was refitted with a
diesel engine giving the vessel a maximum speed of . The ship was initially renamed
Aigle Marin in 1967, owned by Les Chargeurs Unis Inc. The merchant vessel was sold to Niquelay Incorporated and renamed
Anne R.D. in 1977. The vessel was
broken up at
La Malbaie, Quebec in July 1987. Her bell is preserved at the
Maritime Museum of the Atlantic in Halifax. ==References==