Remains of merchant ship sunk off SE Australia by Japanese submarine found.
Long-lost shipwreck found off Victorian coast, 77 years after being torpedoed by Japanese submarine in WWII
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Remains of merchant ship sunk off SE Australia by Japanese submarine found.
Long-lost shipwreck found off Victorian coast, 77 years after being torpedoed by Japanese submarine in WWII
Ah ha, things now start to fall into place. I have wondered about these circumstances.
EDIT.About that time HMS Warspite was on her way back to UK/Europe the long way around etc after being repaired in the USA.Quote:
After Cape Matapan, Warspite was sent to the United States for repairs and to receive upgraded anti-aircraft guns. She arrived at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in Washington state and was under repair when the Japanese Navy attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7th, 1941 - thrusting America into the war. Warspite was completed at the end of December and joined the British Eastern Fleet in the Indian Ocean
A Nip Sub warning was current & she apparently moored off Victor Harbor/Coorong/Kangaroo Island until the threat subsided, then she proceeded on.
It seems possible this Ore Carrier event was the reason she hung about Victor Harbor in 1942.
HMS Warspite (03) Dreadnought Battleship - United Kingdom
Talking of finding shipwrecks - low water in the Barwon River has revealed the remains of the "Wandering Jew" riverboat, which reportedly caught fire (for the third time) and burnt to the waterline in 1914.
" I've had enough of big ships " A stoker, a Titanic survivor, after being torpedoed whilst serving on Lusitania. Must say I don't blame him.
Incredible story of only man to survive Titanic disaster AND the sinking of the Lusitania before telling his family 'I've had enough of large ships' is revealed nearly 75 years on
Merchant ship losses in Australian waters in WW2. I had a friend who used to attend Anzac Day services at Sandgate, an ex Merchant seaman who survived a sinking of a torpedoed ship off the East coast. Haven't seen him for a while, must check up on him. Also have a friend who is a post war merchant sailor, a card carrying member of the communist party. Conscripted during the Vietnam War, he had an interesting time in the Army. Refused to go to Vietnam, spent more time in detention than any where else, the Army didn't know what to do with him. In the end he was quietly asked to leave, services no longer required. An interesting man.
Merchant Ship Losses in Australian Waters in WW2 | Naval Historical Society of Australia
The loss of HMAS ARROW, Darwin 1974.
HMAS Arrow | Royal Australian Navy
EDIT. found the story on the Wessex and Vampire. Wessex N7-211
Wessex N7-211 was lost on 13 November 1969 in dramatic circumstances east of Jervis Bay. While conducted a stores transfer to the destroyer HMASVampirethe helicopter winch cable snagged on a projection on the destroyer’s upper deck. Moments later the ship rolled, and the cable snapped and rebounded into the helicopter’s rotor head, causing the Wessex to ditch. The aircrew were all rescued.
The oldest Dutch shipwreck, found by accident. An important discovery in the history of Holland.
That makes the ship representative of three major elements of Dutch history—the transition to Golden Age shipbuilding, the expansion of the economy in the 1500s, and the introduction of copper coinage. All things they were able to confirm, Manders tells Tom Metcalfe at LiveScience, “without having dived on the ship yet.”
Salvagers Accidentally Found the Netherlands' Oldest Shipwreck
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Smart News
| Smithsonian
Two years after this incident, I was Divisional Officer to three of the Arrow survivors - all suffered major PTSD and had major issues sleeping - unfortunately while in theory recognised as a condition at the time, in reality it wasn't. Thankfully they gained a lot of understanding and support from their shipmates that was missing from the system.
A lot of bad memories returned when we went to Darwin 3 years after the incident to take over HMAS ATTACK which was the second boat badly damaged - still having the wreck of the Arrow on the mudflats didn't help matters - it should have been taken to a suitable place, left in the condition as it is in the pics and turned into a memorial.
This story did not end well as one of the three when posted to another vessel later took his own life.
While PTSD is now treated better, we still need to do far better and look after our ex servicemen and women better.
Garry
Yes, I served with survivors of the Voyager, they were told just to get on with it. Not many marriages survived. My time in patrol boats was about the best time in the navy. We swung at the cyclone buoys once, for cyclone MAX. Just a little wind, compared to Tracy.