HMAS Anzac (G90)

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Template:Short description Template:Other ships Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use Australian English Template:Infobox ship

HMAS Anzac was a Parker-class destroyer leader that served in the Royal Navy (as HMS Anzac) and the Royal Australian Navy (RAN). Launched in early 1917 and commissioned into the Royal Navy, Anzac led the 14th Destroyer Flotilla of the Grand Fleet during the First World War. In 1919, she and five other destroyers were transferred to the RAN, with Anzac commissioning as an Australian warship in 1920. Except for three visits to New Guinea and one to the Solomon Islands, Anzac remained in southern and eastern Australian waters for her entire career. The destroyer was decommissioned in 1931, sold for scrapping four years later, stripped for parts, then towed outside Sydney Heads and sunk as a target ship in 1936.

Design and construction

Anzac was a Parker-class destroyer leader, based on the Marksman or Lightfoot class. The ship had a displacement of 1,660 tons, was Template:Convert long overall and Template:Convert long between perpendiculars, had a beam of Template:Convert, and a draught of Template:Convert at maximum load.<ref name=Cassells5>Cassells, The Destroyers, p. 5</ref> Propulsion was provided by four Yarrow boilers providing steam to Brown-Curtis geared turbines, which delivered 37,060 shaft horsepower to the destroyer's three propellers.<ref name=Cassells6>Cassells, The Destroyers p. 6</ref> The ship was designed to reach Template:Convert, but could only achieve an average of Template:Convert during full-power trials.<ref name=Cassells5/> Maximum range was Template:Convert at Template:Convert.<ref name=Cassells6/> The ship's company consisted of 8 officers and 114 sailors.<ref name=Cassells6/>

The primary armament for Anzac consisted of four single QF 4-inch Mark IV guns.<ref name=Cassells5/> This was supplemented by two 2-pounder "pom-pom" guns for air defence, a single .303-inch Maxim machine gun, four .303-inch Lewis machine guns (two single guns and a twin-mount), two twin 21 inch (533 mm) torpedo tube sets, two depth charge throwers, and four depth charge chutes.<ref name=Cassells5.6>Cassells, The Destroyers, pp. 5–6</ref>

The order to build Anzac was placed with William Denny and Brothers in December 1915, and the ship was laid down at their shipyard in Dumbarton, Scotland on 31 January 1916.<ref name=Cassells6/> The destroyer was launched on 11 January 1917, and commissioned into the Royal Navy on 24 April 1917, the day of her completion.<ref name=Cassells6/> The ship's name is in recognition of the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps and their service during the early years of the First World War.<ref name=PerrymanDjokovic/> The destroyer went through a rapid succession of penant numbers during her British service; although assigned the pennant F6 during construction, this was changed three days before launch to G80, then became G50 at the start of 1918, before changing again to G70 in April.<ref name=Cassells5/>

Operational history

Royal Navy

On entering service, Anzac was assigned to lead the 14th Destroyer Flotilla of the Grand Fleet, based at Scapa Flow.<ref name=Cassells6/> Anzac served in the North Sea and the English Channel during the First World War.<ref name=PerrymanDjokovic>Perryman & Djokovic, Ships Named Anzac</ref> On 26 June 1917, Anzac went to the assistance of the submarine Template:HMS, which had run aground.<ref name="Engp21">English 2019, p. 21.</ref> In August 1918, Anzac was damaged in a heavy storm, requiring the replacement of her exhaust funnels and several of the ship's boats.<ref name=PerrymanDjokovic/>

After the war ended, Anzac was placed into reserve at Portsmouth.<ref name=PerrymanDjokovic/> On 21 March 1919, Anzac and five S-class destroyers were transferred to the RAN as a gift.<ref name=Cassells6/> Anzac was commissioned into RAN service on 27 January 1920, and departed from Plymouth on 26 February for the voyage to Australia.<ref name=PerrymanDjokovic/> Early in the voyage, a propeller blade was damaged, so the destroyer had to return to Plymouth for repairs.<ref name=PerrymanDjokovic/> Anzac departed again on 10 March, and arrived in Sydney on 29 April, having visited Gibraltar, Suez, Aden, Bombay, Colombo, Singapore, Surabaya, and Thursday Island en route.<ref name=PerrymanDjokovic/>

Royal Australian Navy

Anzac spent most of her early RAN career operating off the southern and eastern coasts of Australia.<ref name=PerrymanDjokovic/> In December 1922, the change of commanding officer aboard the ship saw the captain relieved by his twin brother.<ref name=PerrymanDjokovic/> Visits were made to New Guinea in June and July 1924, and in May 1926.<ref name=PerrymanDjokovic/>

The destroyer was decommissioned on 4 August 1926, then recommissioned on 10 January 1928.<ref name=PerrymanDjokovic/> During 1928, Anzac was on standby as a rescue ship for two of Charles Kingsford Smith's pioneering flights: in June as Southern Cross approached Brisbane on the last leg of the first trans-Pacific flight, then in September off Sydney for Kingsford Smith's departure on the first successful trans-Tasman flight.<ref name=PerrymanDjokovic/> The ship continued operating in Australian waters, except for a visit to New Guinea and the Solomon Islands in September 1930.<ref name=PerrymanDjokovic/>

Decommissioning and fate

Anzac paid off for disposal on 30 July 1931.<ref name=Cassells6/> The ship was sold to Messrs. Abraham and Wilson of Redfern, New South Wales on 8 August 1935 for scrapping.<ref name=Cassells6/><ref name=PerrymanDjokovic/> Anzac was stripped down to a hulk, then towed outside Sydney Heads on 7 May 1936 and sunk as a target ship.<ref name=Cassells6/>

Citations

Template:Reflist

References

|_exclude=case, year, _debug
| last1 = Colledge
| first1 = J. J. 
| author-link1= J. J. Colledge
| last2 = Warlow
| first2 = Ben
| date = 2006
| orig-date = 1969
| title = Ships of the Royal Navy: The Complete Record of All Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy from the 15th Century to the Present
| edition = Rev.
| location = London
| publisher = Chatham Publishing
| isbn = 978-1-86176-281-8
| OCLC = 67375475

}}

Further reading

Template:Sister project

  • Bastock, John. Australia’s Ships of War, Angus and Robertson, Sydney, 1975. Template:ISBN
  • Dittmar, F.J & Colledge, J.J. British Warships 1914–1919, Ian Allan, London, 1972. Template:ISBN
  • Straczek, John. The Royal Australian Navy: Ships, Aircraft and Shore Establishments, Navy Public Affairs, Sydney, 1996. Template:ISBN

Template:Parker class flotilla leaders Template:1936 shipwrecks Template:Navbox shipwrecks of New South Wales