CCGS Bartlett is a formerly operated by the Canadian Coast Guard. The vessel entered service in 1969 and was modernized in 1988. In 1982, the ship commanded the recovery efforts following the sinking off the coast of Newfoundland. The vessel was assigned to the Pacific Region and was based at Victoria, British Columbia, in the latter half of her career. The ship was taken out of service in 2021.
Bartlett is the second ship of the Provo Wallis-class buoy tenders and was tasked with monitoring navigational aids along the West Coast of Canada. Her twin vessel, was modified after undergoing a refit in 1990 that saw her hull lengthened by as well as improved equipment and accommodation. Bartlett is long overall with a beam of and a draught of . The ship has a fully loaded displacement of and has a gross register tonnage (GRT) of 1,317 and a .
The buoy tender is propelled by two controllable pitch propellers powered by two Mirrlees National KLSDM6 geared diesel engines creating . This gives Bartlett a maximum speed of . The vessel can carry of diesel fuel and has a range of at a cruising speed of . The vessel is ice-strengthened and carried a complement of 24, with 9 officers and 15 crew in Canadian Coast Guard service The vessel has 11 spare berths.
The buoy tender was constructed by Marine Industries at their yard in Sorel, Quebec with the yard number 388. The vessel was completed in December 1969 and entered service with the Canadian Coast Guard. Bartlett is named after Captain Robert Bartlett who made over 40 expeditions to the Arctic. The vessel was initially assigned to serve in the Newfoundland and Great Lakes regions before transferring to the West Coast. The vessel was based at Victoria, British Columbia.
On 15 February 1982, the mobile offshore drilling unit capsized and sank in bad weather east of Newfoundland in the worst naval disaster in Canadian waters since World War II. Bartlett was among the vessels sent to the site and directed the surface search for the crew. Only debris, life rafts and the bodies of 22 of the 84 crew of Ocean Ranger were recovered. Bartlett was modernized in 1988 at Halifax Shipyards, Halifax, Nova Scotia which saw new propulsion and navigation equipment installed.
The ship underwent a $16.9 million vessel-life extension at the Allied Shipbuilders yard in North Vancouver in 2010. The refit extended the buoy tender's life by ten years, revamping the vessel's electric systems. In October 2016, after the tugboat Nathan E. Stewart sank near Bella Bella, British Columbia and began to leak oil, and Bartlett were deployed to help contain the spill. The ship was taken out of service in 2021.