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- HMS_Saker abstract "HMS Saker, also known as HMS Saker I, HMS Saker II and HMS Saker III, has historically been the ship to which Royal Naval personnel serving in the United States of America are assigned. Consequently, it is a stone frigate, and has existed at several different locations since the Second World War.The first mention of the ship is at Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, as a Royal Naval Air Station. Prior to the war, it was a Royal Canadian Air Force station known as HMS Canada. It was commissioned under the name Saker (or possibly Saker II) on 1 October 1941, and paid off on 1 August 1942, being relieved by HMS Canada once more.Saker II was commissioned as an accounting base at Connecticut Avenue, Washington D.C., on 1 December 1941, and became Saker on 1 November 1942. It had a satellite unit - known originally as HMS Asbury - which acted as shore based transit accommodation of the Royal Navy located just outside New York City. It was used by crews picking up ships allocated to the Royal Navy under the provisions of Lend-Lease and by crews sent to collect ships that had been undergoing long term repair, refitting or construction at United States dockyards, and was also used as a base for 'unattached' personnel.In 1943 it was recorded at Lewiston, Maine, where until 1945 it used the facilities at Naval Auxiliary Air Facility Lewiston for operations. From September 1943 through to July 1944, Saker was also used as the name for British personnel at NAS Squantum, and as the name for personnel at NAS Brunswick from August 1943 to August 1945.The Chaplain of Saker in 1945 was K. Boulton Jones, who performed an all-British memorial ceremony for President Roosevelt at St Mark's Church, Adelaide, Brooklyn, on 15 April of that year.From October 1945, it was based in New York City - and in March 1946 moved to 37 Wall Street. In December 1946, it was combined with the British Admiralty Delegation to the US, and was moved to Washington, D.C., then Crystal City, Arlington, Virginia. The last building known as Saker closed in 1976, and all the personnel moved back to Washington.HMS Saker went on to become the collective title for Royal Navy personnel serving in the United States of America, the current commander of HMS Saker - technically Saker III is the Assistant Naval Attaché of the British Defence Staff – US at the British Embassy in Washington, D.C.".
- HMS_Saker commissioningDate "1942-11-01".
- HMS_Saker thumbnail 37_Wall_Street,_New_York,_by_Nathan_Schneider.jpg?width=300.
- HMS_Saker type Stone_frigate.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageExternalLink ana.html.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageID "12766253".
- HMS_Saker wikiPageLength "4821".
- HMS_Saker wikiPageOutDegree "23".
- HMS_Saker wikiPageRevisionID "697638305".
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink 37_Wall_Street.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink Lewiston_Municipal_Airport.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink British_Defence_Staff_–_US.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink Category:Royal_Navy_shore_establishments.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink Connecticut_Avenue.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink Crystal_City,_Arlington,_Virginia.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink Dartmouth,_Nova_Scotia.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink Fleet_Air_Arm.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink Franklin_D._Roosevelt.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink Lend-Lease.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink Lewiston,_Maine.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink List_of_Royal_Navy_shore_establishments.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink Naval_Air_Station_Brunswick.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink Naval_Air_Station_Squantum.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink New_York_City.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink Royal_Navy.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink Saker_falcon.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink Stone_frigate.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink United_States.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink Washington,_D.C..
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLink File:37_Wall_Street,_New_York,_by_Nathan_Schneider.jpg.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLinkText "HMS ''Saker''".
- HMS_Saker wikiPageWikiLinkText "HMS Saker".
- HMS_Saker shipCommissioned "1942-11-01".
- HMS_Saker shipCountry "United Kingdom".
- HMS_Saker shipName "HMS Saker".
- HMS_Saker shipNamesake Saker_falcon.
- HMS_Saker shipType Stone_frigate.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:HMS.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_ship_career.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_ship_characteristics.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- HMS_Saker wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Shipboxflag.
- HMS_Saker subject Category:Royal_Navy_shore_establishments.
- HMS_Saker type MeanOfTransportation.
- HMS_Saker type Ship.
- HMS_Saker type Establishment.
- HMS_Saker type Installation.
- HMS_Saker type Unit.
- HMS_Saker type Product.
- HMS_Saker type DesignedArtifact.
- HMS_Saker type Thing.
- HMS_Saker type Q11446.
- HMS_Saker comment "HMS Saker, also known as HMS Saker I, HMS Saker II and HMS Saker III, has historically been the ship to which Royal Naval personnel serving in the United States of America are assigned. Consequently, it is a stone frigate, and has existed at several different locations since the Second World War.The first mention of the ship is at Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, as a Royal Naval Air Station. Prior to the war, it was a Royal Canadian Air Force station known as HMS Canada.".
- HMS_Saker label "HMS Saker".
- HMS_Saker sameAs Q5634168.
- HMS_Saker sameAs اچاماس_ساکر.
- HMS_Saker sameAs m.02x3yqc.
- HMS_Saker sameAs Q5634168.
- HMS_Saker wasDerivedFrom HMS_Saker?oldid=697638305.
- HMS_Saker depiction 37_Wall_Street,_New_York,_by_Nathan_Schneider.jpg.
- HMS_Saker isPrimaryTopicOf HMS_Saker.
- HMS_Saker name "HMS Saker".