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settlement in 1788 to 1859, Australia depended on units detached from
the Royal Navy based in Sydney to provide Naval defence. In 1859,
Australia was established as a separate British Naval Station and until
1913, a squadron of the Royal Navy was maintained in Australian waters.
This Australian unit was to be paid for and controlled by the Australian
Commonwealth and was to be eventually manned by Australian personnel.
At an Imperial Conference held in
1909, it was decided to deploy to Australian waters a naval unit
consisting of at least a battle cruiser, three second class cruisers,
six destroyers, three submarines and a number of auxiliaries. Detailed
discussions were held on 19 August 1909 between representatives of the
British Admiralty and the Australian Government that resulted in a
decision to proceed with the establishment of an Australian Fleet
Unit.
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The first units of this Navy, the
destroyers, HMA Ships Yarra and Parramatta, reached Australian
waters in November 1910 and in the following year on 10 July 1911,
His Majesty King George V granted the title of 'Royal Australian
Navy' to the Commonwealth Naval Forces.
In June 1912, a third destroyer, HMAS
Warrego was commissioned at Sydney and in 1913 the battle cruiser, HMAS
Australia and the light cruisers, HMA Ships Melbourne and Sydney arrived
in Australian waters. On the 4 October 1913, the Australian Fleet
entered Sydney harbour for the first time and in October of the same
year formal control of these units passed to the Commonwealth Naval
Board. Thus, direct Imperial control came to a conclusion. During the
same period the Royal Australian Naval College for the training of
officers was opened at Geelong, Victoria. This facility was subsequently
moved to Jervis Bay in 1915.
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At the outbreak of hostilities in
1914, the Australian Fleet comprised a battle cruiser, six light
cruisers, six destroyers, two submarines and numerous support and
ancillary craft. The ships and men of the RAN operated as an integral
part of the Royal Navy and served in all operational areas. The
Australian Naval and Military Expeditionary Force carried in HMAS
Berrima and supported by units of the Australian Fleet captured German
New Guinea colonies in Australia's only national joint warfare operation
to date. The total number serving in the Permanent Naval Forces at the
outbreak of hostilities was 3800 all ranks. At the close of hostilities,
5263 personnel were serving. The Reserves provided a further 76 officers
and 2380 for home service, and 51 officers and 1775 ratings (sailors)
for service overseas.
The Royal Australian Navy's first task
was to protect Australia's ports, shipping and trade routes. As part of
securing Australia's maritime frontiers the RAN took part in the first
amphibious assault of the war when it played a major role in the capture
of the German colonies in the Pacific. After this operation the ships of
the RAN began the vital role of convoy escort. It was whilst escorting a
convoy that the light cruiser HMAS SYDNEY was detached to investigate
the sighting of a strange warship. This ship turned out to be the German
light cruiser EMDEN. In the ensuing battle SYDNEY destroyed the EMDEN
and thus won the RAN's first battle.
The RAN also played a supporting role in the Gallipoli campaign. HMAS
AE2 became the first allied warship to penetrate the Dardanelles, but
was eventually sunk by the Turkish navy in the Sea of Mamora. On the
peninsular the RAN Bridging Train provided vital service to the troops
as well as being the last Australians to leave Gallipoli.
The submarines AE1 and AE2 were the
only losses suffered by the RAN during this conflict. The first named
was lost with all hands off New Britain on the 14 September 1914, and
AE2 was scuttled by her crew in the Sea of Marmora on the 30 April 1915,
after she had forced a passage through the dangerous waters of the
Dardenelles in support of the Gallipoli campaign.
With the cessation of hostilities and
the signing of the Armistice in 1918, a world-wide period of naval
retrenchment began, while subsequent disarmament conferences,
culminating in the Washington Treaty of 1922 brought drastic changes to
naval planning. Under the terms of the treaty, the battle cruiser
AUSTRALIA was scuttled off Sydney Heads in 1924. However, additions to
the battle order of the early post-war RAN included six submarines, five
destroyers, an additional destroyer and a number of sloops. All these
vessels were acquired from the Royal Navy.
In 1924 it was decided to purchase two
10 000 ton cruisers, two additional submarines and a further decision
was made to build a seaplane carrier at Cockatoo Dockyard, Sydney. HMAS
MORESBY was acquired on loan from the Royal Navy in 1925 for surveying
duties. The two cruisers commissioned as HMA Ships AUSTRALIA and
CANBERRA in 1928, and in the following year the submarines OXLEY and
OTWAY reached Australian waters. The seaplane carrier commissioned as
HMAS ALBATROSS at Sydney in 1929.
In the early thirties, lack of funds
forced many economies in naval activity, one being the transfer of the
Naval College from Jervis Bay to Flinders Naval Depot in Victoria.
Strength of the RAN fell to 3117 personnel plus 131 members of the Naval
Auxiliary Services. In 1932 the strength of the Reserves stood at 5446.
At about this time, the submarines OXLEY and OTWAY reverted to the Royal
Navy.
In 1933, the RAN added 5 additional
destroyers to the Fleet to replace the ageing vessels that were at that
time due for scrapping. These vessels (which later became famous during
World War II as the 'Scrap Iron Flotilla') were not new, like their
predecessors they were built during World War 1. In the remaining years
of peace, three light cruisers were added to the Fleet, ALBATROSS was
transferred to the Royal Navy and two additional sloops were constructed
in Sydney.
During the inter-war years the
fortunes of the RAN fluctuated and reflected the general economic and
social trends. The monotony of peace-time exercises was only broken by a
punitive expedition to the Solomon Islands in 1927
In 1939 the men of the RAN once again
answered their nation's call. The role of the RAN during the Second
World War was much as it was in the First, securing Australia's sea
lines of communication and assisting Allied naval forces.
At the onset of war in 1939, the RAN
numbered two heavy cruisers, four light cruisers, five destroyers, three
sloops and a variety of support and ancillary craft. During the 27
months that ensued from the declaration of war against Germany and the
Japanese attack on the American Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbour, units of
the RAN were engaged in operations against the enemy as far afield as
the North, West and South Atlantic, the Caribbean, the Mediterranean,
the Indian Ocean, Persian Gulf and Red Sea.
The RAN distinguished itself in the Mediterranean through the exploits
of the Scrap Iron Flotilla and the cruisers, most notably by HMAS SYDNEY
with her destruction of the Italian cruiser BARTOLOMEO COLLEONI.
Unfortunately, SYDNEY was later to be lost with all hands.
A new dimension was added when war broke out in the Pacific in December
1941 with the Japanese attacking Pearl Harbor. Australia, herself come
under threat of direct attack and the ships of the RAN formed
Australia's first line of defence. With Allied navies the RAN took part
in the battles of Java Sea, Sunda Strait, Coral Sea, Savo Island and
Lingayen Gulf. The road to Tokyo was to cost the RAN dearly with the
heaviest losses resulting from the sinking of the cruisers PERTH and
CANBERRA.
The total number of personnel serving
in the Permanent Forces at the outbreak of war was 5010. By July 1945,
the heavy demands of war had increased this number to nearly 37000 all
ranks. Ship losses and personnel casualties suffered by the RAN during
the conflict were substantial. The heavy cruiser CANBERRA, the light
cruisers SYDNEY (sunk with the loss of all hands) and PERTH the
destroyers NESTER, VAMPIRE, VOYAGER and WATERHEN, the sloops PARRAMATTA
and YARRA and nearly thirty other RAN vessels of all types were lost as
a result of wartime service. Nearly 2170 members of the RAN lost their
lives during World War II.
The Royal Australian Navy paid a high
price indeed, in terms of sacrifice, in the quest for victory and a
lasting peace.
Since the end of the Second World War,
units of the RAN have engaged in operations in the Korean Theatre,
during the Indonesian Confrontation, the Vietnam War and more recently
the Gulf War. The Royal Australian Navy plays an active role in
supporting United Nations peacekeeping operations throughout the world.
Members of the Navy have been deployed in recent United Nations missions
to Somalia, Cambodia Rwanda and East Timor. |