Anaval drifter is a boat built along the lines of a commercialfishing drifter but fitted out for naval purposes. The use of naval drifters is paralleled by the use ofnaval trawlers.
Fishing trawlers were designed to tow heavy trawls, so they were easily adapted to tow minesweepers, with the crew and layout already suited to the task. Drifters were robust boats built, like trawlers, to work in most weather conditions, but designed to deploy and retrievedrift nets. They were generally smaller and slower than trawlers. If requisitioned by navies, they were typically armed with an anti-submarine gun and depth charges and used to maintain and patrol anti-submarine nets.


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Like fishing trawlers, theRoyal Navy requisitioned many fishing drifters for conversion to naval use duringWorld War I.
In addition, 362 naval drifters were ordered toAdmiralty specifications (and thus are often referred to as "Admiralty drifters").[1] Shipyards used to building fishing trawlers or drifters could easily switch to constructing naval versions. As a bonus these drifters could be sold to commercial fishing interests when the war ended.
There were two basic types of Admiralty-built drifters, wooden hulled and steel hulled.
Royal Navy drifters were named like the trawlers were, except for the Canadian-built vessels which were numbered CD 1 to CD 100.[1]
During 1917, a fleet of British drifters, escorted by destroyers and light cruisers, maintained a blockade of the 72 km (45 mi) wideStrait of Otranto, denying theAustro-Hungarian Navy access to the Mediterranean. On 15 May 1917, the Austro-Hungarian Navyraided the barrage.[2] The Austro-Hungarians gave most drifter crews warning to abandon ship before opening fire.[2] Some drifter crews chose to fight, and theGowan Lee returned fire on the Austro-Hungarian ships. The drifter was heavily damaged, but remained afloat.SkipperJoseph Watt was later awarded theVictoria Cross for his actions during the battle.[3] Of the 47 drifters in the barrage at the time, 14 were sunk and 4 were damaged.[3] The lack of sufficient Allied escorts forced the withdrawal of the remaining blockading ships, although only for a short time.[4]