HMCS Sherbrooke was a Flower-class corvette that served with the Royal Canadian Navy during the Second World War.
[3][4][5] The "corvette" designation was created by the French for classes of small warships; the Royal Navy borrowed the term for a period but discontinued its use in 1877.
The second major overhaul took place at Liverpool, Nova Scotia beginning in May 1944 and lasting until 22 August 1944.
In September 1941 she transferred to Newfoundland Command and escorted her first convoy from St. John's to Iceland at the end of that month.
In February 1942 Sherbrooke picked up 15 survivors from the Greek merchant Meropi that had been torpedoed and sunk off Halifax.
[11] On 10 September 1942 she picked up 39 survivors from the Norwegian tanker Sveve that had been torpedoed and sunk in the North Atlantic.