HMCS Cape Breton (ARE 100)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/HMCS_Cape_Breton_(ARE_100) an entity of type: Thing

HMCS Cape Breton was a Royal Canadian Navy Cape-class maintenance ship. Originally built for the Royal Navy as HMS Flamborough Head in 1944, she was transferred in 1952. Upon her commissioning she was the second ship to bear the name Cape Breton. She served operationally from 1953–1964, when she was laid up. She was used as a floating machine shop until the late-1990s, before being sold for use as an artificial reef off the coast of British Columbia. rdf:langString
rdf:langString HMCS Cape Breton (ARE 100)
rdf:langString Cape Breton
rdf:langString Flamborough Head
xsd:float 49.21466827392578
xsd:float -123.8844528198242
xsd:integer 2262725
xsd:integer 1092915128
xsd:date 1953-01-31
rdf:langString helicopter pad
rdf:langString Azure, a spur gear argent charged with a device consisting of three ermine spots conjoined in the center, one pointing to the chief, once to the dexter base and once to the sinister base in trefoil fashion sable, and between them issuing from the center, three thistle blooms coloured proper.
xsd:date 1964-02-10
rdf:langString *Arctic, 1944 *Normandy, 1944 *Atlantic, 1944–45
rdf:langString "Le chance ne change pas la course"
xsd:date 1945-05-02
xsd:date 1959-11-16
xsd:integer 16
xsd:integer 270
rdf:langString Canada
rdf:langString United Kingdom
xsd:gMonthDay --10-20
rdf:langString Sold to Canadian Government, 1952
xsd:date 1944-07-05
xsd:date 1944-10-07
rdf:langString Cape Breton
rdf:langString Flamborough Head
xsd:integer 1952
rdf:langString Oil-fired triple expansion steam engines, 2 Foster Wheeler boilers, 1 shaft,
xsd:string 49.214666666666666 -123.88445
rdf:langString can handle Sikorsky HO4S
rdf:langString HMCS Cape Breton was a Royal Canadian Navy Cape-class maintenance ship. Originally built for the Royal Navy as HMS Flamborough Head in 1944, she was transferred in 1952. Upon her commissioning she was the second ship to bear the name Cape Breton. She served operationally from 1953–1964, when she was laid up. She was used as a floating machine shop until the late-1990s, before being sold for use as an artificial reef off the coast of British Columbia.
rdf:langString title
<millimetre> 134600.0
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 13427
xsd:date 1944-07-05
xsd:double 134.6
xsd:string "Le chance ne change pas la course" (Chance changes not our course)
xsd:double 17.4
xsd:date 1944-10-07
xsd:string Sold to Canadian Government, 1952
xsd:string Sunk as artificial reef, 20 October 2001, nearNanaimo, Vancouver Island
xsd:double 20.372
xsd:date 1953-01-31
xsd:date 1945-05-02
xsd:date 1959-11-16
xsd:date 1964-02-10
<Geometry> POINT(-123.88445281982 49.214668273926)

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