| Following the outbreak of
the First World War in August 1914, Encounter was part of the force
which occupied German New Guinea. In the course of these operations she
captured the steamer Zambezi on 12 August and, on 14 September,
bombarded Toma Ridge to support the Australian Military and Naval
Expeditionary Force. She covered the landing at Madang on 24 December.
In October, Encounter patrolled the
Fiji-Samoa area, capturing the German schooner Elfrede. After a refit,
she continued patrol duties in the Pacific, landing troops to protect
the cable station on Fanning Island in July 1915. After grounding on a
coral reef at Johnson Island, Encounter had to put-in at Hong Kong for
repairs.
From January 1916, Encounter patrolled
East Indies waters, returning to Australia the next month. She remained
in Australian waters for the rest of the war. During this period she
attended to the stricken Cumberland, which had struck a mine off Gabo
Island on 6 July 1917, and searched the wreck of the raider Seeadler at
Mopelia Island in September 1917.
After the war, Encounter served as
training ship, and, from 1923, disarmed and renamed Penguin, as an
accommodation vessel. In 1932 her hulk was scuttled off Bondi.
Casualties
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