'HMAS ''Australia'' (D84)', launched in
1927, was a
County-class heavy cruiser built for the
Royal Australian Navy (RAN). The ship is believed to have been the first ship damaged by a
kamikaze attack, and to be the ship hit the most times by kamikazes.
''Australia'' was laid down by
John Brown and Company of
Clydebank at
Glasgow,
Scotland on
August 26 1925. She was launched on
March 17 1927 and commissioned on
April 24 1928, two months before sister ship
HMAS ''Canberra''.
[Royal Australian Navy, "HMAS CANBERRA (I)" (official history)]
Operational History
World War II
After
World War II began, "The Aussie" (as the ship was affectionately known within the RAN), first fired her main armament of eight 8 inch guns in anger off the coast of
Dakar, in late 1940, when it took part in
Operation Menace. ''Australia'' damaged the
Vichy French destroyer ''L'Audacieux'', which as a result was beached on
September 23–
September 24. ''Australia'' received hits from
shore batteries and her
Supermarine Seagull V reconnaissance plane, detached from
No. 9 Squadron Royal Australian Air Force, was shot down.
During 1941, ''Australia'' escorted convoys and patrolled the
Atlantic and
Indian Oceans. Following the onset of the
Pacific War, ''Australia'' was re-deployed to the
South West Pacific Area. In May 1942, during the
Battle of the Coral Sea, the ship survived a brief but intense attack from
Japanese
torpedo bombers. From August 1942 until mid-1944, ''Australia'' provided supporting fire and surface protection for
Allied land forces at land battles including the
invasion of Guadalcanal and the
New Guinea campaign, including the Allied
landings in New Britain.
On
October 21 1944, in the lead-up to the
Battle of Leyte Gulf, ''Australia'' was hit by a
Japanese plane carrying a 200 kg (441 lb) bomb, in the first-ever
kamikaze attack. The plane struck the superstructure, above the bridge, spewing burning fuel and debris over a large area. However, the bomb failed to explode; if it had, the ship might have been effectively destroyed. At least 30 crew members died as a result of the attack, including the commanding officer, Captain
Emile Dechaineux; among the wounded was Commodore
John Collins, the Australian force commander.
On
October 25, ''Australia'' was hit again and was forced to retire to the
New Hebrides for repairs. The ship returned to combat in January 1945; by the end of the war, she had survived being hit by kamikazes on six separate occasions, which had resulted in the loss of 86 lives. This was ''Australia's'' last action, as she was still undergoing repairs when the war ended.
1945-1956
Following the end of the war, ''Australia'' served as a training ship. She was paid off for disposal on
August 31 1954 and sold for scrap to the British Iron and Steel Corporation (Salvage) on
January 25 1955, left Sydney under tow on
March 26 1955, and was broken up at the Thomas W. Ward Shipbreaking Yard at
Barrow-in-Furness in 1956.
Gallery
References
External links
HMAS Australia history and images, U. S. Naval Historical Center