Predecessor The Royal Navy had previously operated
flotillas of small
torpedo- and
depth-charge-armed craft (
coastal motor boats) during
World War I (1914–1918). They operated as often in action against the enemy coast as in defence of British coastal areas.
Establishment The first post WWI motor torpedo boats built for the Royal Navy were built by the
British Powerboat Company at Hythe, Southampton. MTBs 01-19 were built between 1935 and 1938, following the hard chine
planing hull design. During World War II (1939–1945), the first Coastal Forces headquarters was set up at in 1940 under
Rear Admiral Piers Kekewich, Flag Officer Coastal Forces. The chief staff officer to the admiral was
Augustus Agar,
VC, who had commanded coastal motor boats during World War I and in
British operations in the
Baltic Sea in 1918 and 1919 in support of
White Russian forces during the
Russian Civil War.
World War II operations Royal Navy Coastal Forces craft operated mainly in the
English Channel and
North Sea waters. They were also based in Malta, The 1st & 3rd MTB Flotillas, Numbers 01-06 & 14-19, and , Hong Kong, the 2nd MTB Flotilla, numbers 07-12, 26 & 27. On 19 December 1941 MTB 07 led the attack on Japanese landing craft in
Kowloon Harbour, Hong Kong, taking fire from land, sea and air. The operation was arguably the most daring daylight MTB raid of all time losing over 40% of the flotilla. MTB 07 was hit 97 times losing two crew dead and all three engines. It was hailed as the "
Balaclava of the sea". They were also used in the Mediterranean and off the Norwegian coastline. They were used at the
St. Nazaire Raid and the
Dieppe Raid. They were used to attack German convoys and their S-boat (known to the
Allies as "
E-Boat") escorts, carry out clandestine raids and landings, and pick up secret agents in
Norway and
Brittany. Alongside British officers and sailors, the coastal craft were crewed by various Allied nationalities including
Dutch, Norwegian,
Canadian,
Australian, and
New Zealanders. A number of
Captain-class frigates were configured to operate as "coastal forces control frigates" (CFCF). Operating with Coastal Forces officers embarked and responsible for controlling and providing
radar support to groups of Coastal Forces' motor torpedo boats intercepting German motor torpedo boats in the
North Sea, these frigates were involved in the destruction of at least 26 E-Boats. By 1944 Coastal Forces numbered 3,000 officers and 22,000 ratings. Altogether there were 2,000 British Coastal Forces craft. Affectionately known as the Royal Navy's "little ships", they fought over 900 actions and sank around 400 enemy vessels, including 48 E-boats and 32
midget submarines. They fired 1,169 torpedoes, shot down 32 enemy aircraft and carried out many
mine laying operations. 170 of the "little ships" were sunk or otherwise destroyed.
Post-World War II After World War II, the Royal Navy re-designated all its motor torpedo boats (MTBs) and motor gun boats (MGBs) as "fast
patrol boats." The
Brave-class fast patrol boats were the last craft to be built for the Coastal Forces, and the Coastal Forces were disbanded as a separate unit. A memorial to those lost was erected in 1954 at their last base, (), which was decommissioned in 1956. In 1960, a question was asked in the
House of Lords why Coastal Forces had been reduced to a skeleton of three patrol boats and three ships operated by two crews, based at
HMS Dolphin in
Gosport, when considerable expenditure was made in the 1950s but not followed up, and thus wasted. In addition, Coastal Forces was invaluable as a means of training young officers, and the development of small ships, often to the benefit of the navies of Britain's allies.
Lord Carrington, then
First Lord of the Admiralty, responded that limited resources and changing threats were the reason, and that keeping the Coastal Forces at a low level would at least enable it to be rapidly expanded should the need arise. He added that nine boats were in operational reserve to maintain Britain's
NATO commitment. The last sailors to wear the "HM Coastal Forces" cap tally were the ship's companies of the inshore
minesweepers and on being taken out of reserve in 1968, before individual cap tallies for the minesweepers had been manufactured and issued. The memorial at
Hornet was re-dedicated in 2019 in a ceremony to mark the D-Day 75 Commemorations, which was attended by a WWII craft and two modern vessels. == Craft types used ==