Category Archives: military history

Yippee!

Some 80 years ago this month, May 1944, we see a great period Kodachrome of Lockheed P-38J-20-LO SN 44-23296, carrying a special vermillion red paint scheme and the moniker “Yippee” as she was the 5,000th P-38 produced.

She even made the cover of the August 1944 edition of Flying Magazine, for good reason. 

While the P-51 and P-47 get lots of love when it comes to USAAF fighters in WWII, and I think the P-40 is tragically unloved, people forget the twin-engine P-38 and how much of a bruiser it was in all the theatres it flew in.

Among the pages of aces that it produced were Col. Charles MacDonald (27 kills), Maj. Tom McGuire (38) and Maj. Dick Bong, who holds the title of the most proflic American ace of the war with 40 kills. It was the P-38 that was given the task of splashing Yamamoto, after all.

Sadly, Yippee was a working girl and, with her red and white scheme covered under standard military markings, shipped out to the Pacific in late 1944 to join the 475th Fighter Group’s 431st FS and was lost in a ground accident in the Philippines on 20 January 1945.

Farewell, HMAS Anzac (for now)

With her replacement– the planned first general-purpose frigate– still at least six years down the road, the Royal Australian Navy decommissioned the lead ship of its license-built Blohm & Voss MEKO 200 design, HMAS Anzac (FFH 150), completing 28 years of service on 18 May.

Ten 4,000-ton Anzac-class frigates (eight Australian, two for the Royal New Zealand Navy) were built by Tenix Defence Systems (now BAE Systems) at the company’s Williamstown yard in Melbourne between 1993 and 2006.

HMAS Anzac operating in the Persian Gulf region in 2002, one of her three extensive tours to the region. Note her original layout

Subsequent Phase 2A/2B and 4B upgrades saw her SPS-49 radar replaced with a distinctive CEAFAR phased-array radar mast which gave the ”First Lady of the Fleet” a very peculiar appearance.

HMAS Anzac returns to Fleet Base West in September 2023 after her final deployment. Note her phased array retrofit mast

She was the third such ship to carry the name of the famed Australian and New Zealand Army Corps in the RAN, after a Great War-era Parker-class destroyer leader that served under the Australian flag in the 1920s and a Battle-class destroyer that served in the 1950s and 60s.

For sure, the name will return.

Confusing Frigate Developments

Thursday’s contracts included an order for two more Constellation class frigates. Emphasis mine:

Marinette Marine Corp., Marinette, Wisconsin, is awarded a $1,044,529,113 fixed-price incentive (firm-target) modification to previously awarded contract (N00024-20-C-2300) to exercise options for detail design and construction of two Constellation-class guided-missile frigates, FFG 66 and FFG 67. Work will be performed in Marinette, Wisconsin (51%); Camden, New Jersey (17%); Chicago, Illinois (7%); Green Bay, Wisconsin (4%); Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (3%); Hauppauge, New York (3%); Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin (3%); Cincinnati, Ohio (3%); Kaukauna, Wisconsin (2%); Charlotte, North Carolina (2%); Bethesda, Maryland (2%); Millersville, Maryland (2%); and Atlanta, Georgia (1%), and is expected to be completed by April 2030. Fiscal 2024 shipbuilding and conversion (Navy) funds in the amount of $1,044,529,113 will be obligated at time of award and will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year. Naval Sea Systems Command, Washington, D.C., is the contracting activity.

So far, we have the USS Constellation (FFG 62), USS Congress (FFG 63), USS Chesapeake (FFG 64), and USS Lafayette (FFG 65), all echoing traditional early Navy names.

This comes as our beloved SECNAV (here comes the Navy ship naming convention soapbox) announced that the future FFG 66 will be named…USS Hamilton.

Now don’t get me wrong, there have been a couple of Hamiltons on the Navy List in the past, both named for the Madison’s SECNAV that served during the first part of the War of 1812: the current Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Paul Hamilton (DDG 60) and the Wickes-class destroyer/fast minesweeper USS Hamilton (DD-141/DMS-18/AG-111) that served from 1919 through 1945.

USS Paul Hamilton DDG-60

However, this will not be for Paul Hamilton, but instead for Alexander Hamilton, the Army artillerist who was the first Secretary of the Navy and the guy generally seen as the father of today’s Coast Guard.

The reason this hoses me off is because of the Coast Guard’s long history with the name including a brand-new National Security class cutter USCGC Hamilton (WMSL-753) that was commissioned in 2014, the Vietnam/Cold War era 378-foot class leader USCGC Hamilton (WHEC-715) that served from 1967 to 2011, the Treasury class 327-foot cutter (WPG-34) which was sunk by a U-boat in WWII, as well as circa 1921, 1871, and 1830 cutters that carried the name.

BLACK SEA (April 30, 2021) U.S. Coast Guard members conduct boat and flight procedures on the USCGC Hamilton (WMSL 753) with Turkish naval members aboard the TCG Turgutreis (F 241) in the Black Sea, April 30, 2021

USCGC Hamilton (WHEC-715)

USCGC Alexander Hamilton (WPG-34) departs Boston for a Neutrality Patrol off the Grand Banks in November of 1939

The Hamilton at sea, 1978 painting at USCG Museum

Once the future USS Hamilton (FFG 66) joins the fleet, it will cause tactical confusion in the respect that there is already a San Diego-based destroyer USS Paul Hamilton (DDG 60), and the frigate-sized USCGC Hamilton (WMSL-753).

Surely, there is no shortage of traditional early U.S. Navy names that can be recycled without both ripping off the Coast Guard and causing confusion down the line. Perhaps there could be an 11th USS Ranger, ninth USS Hornet or USS Dolphin, eighth USS Lexington, seventh USS Shark, sixth USS Franklin, USS Ticonderoga, USS Hancock, or USS Concord, or fourth USS Valley Forge? Just saying.

Or, how about this: the USS Benjamin Stoddert, after the first SECNAV? Only two ships have carried it in the past– DD-302 and DDG-22– and it has been missing from the Navy List since 1991?

But then again, ole Ben Stoddart doesn’t have a hit Broadway musical to his credit.

Just a ciggy break and a Schmeisser

80 Years Ago today. 24 May 1944. Here we see an S&W Victory .38 revolver-armed and cigarette-equipped LT W. Smith, along with platoon Sergeant F.G. White, armed with a captured German MP40 SMG– often incorrectly dubbed a “Schmeisser”– of the Royal Canadian Regiment (RCR), taking a breather in Pontecorvo, Italy. The two are clad in denim cotton battledress.

Note the good sergeant also has a Mills bomb at the ready while the fact that both men have field glasses count point to them being members of a recon element. The Canadian troops had entered the Liri Valley city that morning, after the breakthrough of the Hitler Line, and found it completely in ruins.

Canadian Army Photo by LT C.E. Nye, who has some 275 images digitized in the Library and Archives Canada. The above is MIKAN 3202714, PA-144722

Pontecorvo May 24, 1944, Canadian troops enter the ruins of the city after hard fighting. (Canadian Army Overseas Photo)

With a lineage that goes back to the War of 1812 and the Fenian Raids but a name that was only bestowed in 1902 after service in the Boer Wars, the RCR was bled white at the Somme, Arras, Vimy Ridge, and Passchendaele during the Grear War.

At the outbreak of WWII, the RCR was deployed as part of the 1st Canadian Division, garrisoned England for four years, then finally hit the beach in Sicily (Operation Husky) followed by the amphibious action at Reggio di Calabria on the Italian mainland. The RCR fought up the Italian boot, including key battles around the Moro River valley near Ortona in December 1943, and the battles on the Hitler and Gothic lines in 1944.

Sent in February 1945 to join the First Canadian Army in Northwest Europe for Operation Goldflake, they ended the war in Holland, where they inherited lots more German hardware. 

Privates J.A. Taylor and J.D. Villeneuve of the Royal Canadian Regiment stacking rifles turned in by surrendering German soldiers, IJmuiden, Netherlands, 11 May 1945. LAC 3211669

A common theme that would follow them to Korea in 1951. 

Soldiers of the 2nd Battalion, the Royal Canadian Regiment, with assorted captured DP-28 and PPS 43s in Korea.

The Royal Canadian Regiment has been awarded a total of 61 battle honours since 1812, including 27 for its WWII service.

Comprising three active and one reserve battalion today, their headquarters is at Garrison Petawawa in Ontario.

 

Cape Jellison, is that you?

It seems a used– but not too abused– Cold War-era former Cape class cutter/patrol boat is up for sale– cheap.

One of the nine 95-foot Type B Capes completed in the 1950s (there were 36 of the vessels, which were intended to be coastal subchasers in time of war, constructed between 1953 and 1959), USCGC Cape Jellison (WPB-95317) patrolled first the waters of San Diego (1956-73), and then Seward, Alaska (1973-November 1986), primarily Search and Rescue and Law Enforcement missions.

In her SAR role, she rescued the power craft El Gusto (1969), sailboat Siestar, power craft Cleff, and power craft Dowager Jones (1970), along with the FV Kathy Joanne (1982), while her LE patrols yielded a couple of large pot busts. Hey it was the 80s. 

She carried the curious Coast Guard-invented piggyback Mk 2 Mod 0 and Mod 1 .50 BMG/81mm mortar forward, seen above while in Alaskan waters.

Post decommissioning in December 1986, she was transferred to the Navy for use as a range control and dive support boat at San Clemente Island/Naval Base Coronado, then donated in turn to the Boys and Girls Club of South San Francisco as the Cape Hurricane and then later to the Sea Scouts where she operated as SSS Challenger until at least 2020.

She has seen better days but still looks great, and could easily be preserved as a small museum ship.

Spotted in the Redwood City, California Craigslist “boat” section, listed since 15 April and repeated here for posterity:

95’ RETIRED CAPE CLASS USCG CUTTER
FORMERLY USCGC CAPE JELLISON (WPB-95317)

Builder: US Coast Guard Yard – Curtis Bay, MD
Year Built: 1955
Length Overall: 95’
Beam: 19’
Draft: 6.5’
Displacement: ~90 tons
Last yard period: 2019

HULL, STRUCTURE, INTERIOR
Keel, bottom, topsides & decks: Steel
Superstructure: Aluminum
Deck Hardware: One single boat davit with 110 VAC electric winch, one electric smooth-drum vertical capstan with wildcat for anchor chain, Danforth anchor in hawsepipe with all-chain rode, eight mooring bitts with closed chocks
Berthing: Accommodations for 25 as follows: One Single berth commanding officer’s stateroom, two two-berth staterooms, two forward berthing spaces with six and three berths respectively. One aft berthing space with 11 berths
Heads: Three heads, each with shower and sink. One forward, one amidships, one aft.
Galley: Equipped with four-burner full size electric range with oven, two-basin sink with hot/cold water, full size refrigerator with top freezer, dry goods storage
Mess Deck: Two mess tables with seating for 16
Wheelhouse: Wheel steering with pneumatic engine controls. Furuno radar, Furuno depth sounder, two Uniden VHF radios. Em-Trak AIS Class A with GPS, Nav center with full size chart table

SYSTEMS
Main Engines: Four Cummins VT-12, 12-cylinder Turbo-Diesels, tandem installation (two engines per shaft). Fresh water cooled with sea water heat exchangers. Pneumatic start, pneumatic controls. Three engines operational, one disassembled (many parts on hand). Vessel normally operated on two engines.
Gears: Capitol Gears ~3:1 reduction with selectable engine engagement (enables 1 or 2 engines per side to drive the propeller)
Propellers: Two five-blade bronze construction propellers
Generators: Two Detroit Diesel, model 2-71, 24-volt DC electric start, 20 kw, 440 volts three-phase AC generators
Electrical System: DC System: One 12-volt 8D battery for wheelhouse electronics, two 2-volt 8D batteries series wired for 24 VDC generator starting. AC system: 50 amp 440 volts three phase, 220 volts for galley range, 117 volts three phase house power. Shore power: 50 amp 440 volts three phase primary shore power. Also equipped to accept 110 volts shore power to supply house loads, configurable for 110 or 220 volts input.
Fuel System: Three integral storage tanks, ~3,100 gallon total capacity. One integral day tank, ~150 gallon capacity. Electric transfer pump (storage tanks to day tank) with triplex fuel filter/water separator. Duplex fuel filler/water separator at each main engine, single fuel filter/water separator at each generator.
Fresh Water System: Two integral storage tanks, ~1,100 gallon total capacity, electric water heater.
Pneumatics: Two electric air compressors, two storage tanks for starting air, one storage tank for control and service air.
Steering System: Manual wheel steering, cable-driven with hydraulic assist, two rudders, emergency hand operation
Ventilation: Natural and blowers. Two-speed supply and exhaust fans forward and aft. Two Two-speed supply fans for engine room
Black Water System: ~150-gal steel holding tank with electric discharge pump and hand backup. Thru-hull (locked secure) and main deck discharge

Old Crow Flies Onward

The last American “Triple Ace,” Brig. Gen Clarence Emil “Bud” Anderson passed away yesterday at the ripe old age of 102.

Born in Oakland in 1922, he enlisted as an aviation cadet with the USAAF right after Pearl Harbor and earned both his butter bar and lead wings by September 1942.

After cutting teeth on the P-39, he joined the 363rd FS, in England flying early model P-51Bs in January 1944 and bagged his first (of six) Messerschmitt Fb 109s on 3 March and, upgraded to a bubble canopy P-51D, by the end of the war would add a He 111 bomber and five Fw 190s to his scorecard, ending the war with 16.25 aerial victories spanning 116 sorties.

Both of Bud Anderson’s Mustangs were dubbed “Old Crow” after the rock gut whisky, the later, P-51D-10-NA Mustang, AAF Ser. No. 44-14450 B6-S, seen here.

Post-war, Anderson continued on active service with the USAF as a test pilot, squadron, and wing commander, ultimately logging over 7,000 hours in over 100 types and retired in 1972 as a full bird colonel, later upgraded to a star in 2022.

He earned two Legion of Merits, five Distinguished Flying Crosses, the Bronze Star, 16 Air Medals, the French Legion of Honor, and the French Croix de Guerre, among other decorations.

He passed in his sleep at his home in Auburn, California last Friday.

Via the CAF

London Irish at Cassino

80 years ago today. Official caption: 17 May 1944. “Italy, Fighting around Cassino. A 17-pounder anti-tank gun with part of its protection troop entrenched under the barrel. The men are left to right, L/Cpl McCluskey of Belfast, Rfn Nelson of County Down, and LCpl Kerr of County Tyrone. 2nd Battalion, London Irish Rifles.”

Taken by Capt. Richard Felix Gade, No. 2 Army Film and Photo Section, Army Film and Photographic Unit. IWM NA 15075

Note the M4 Sherman medium tank as well as the Bren gun at the ready in addition to the Ordnance QF 17-pounder.

First fielded in 1943 on the push towards Tunisia to dispatch the Afrika Korps, the 3-inch gun was rushed to serve under the codename Phesant to counter the armor on increasingly heavy German panzers. As such, it replaced the woefully inadequate 57mm QF 6-pounder. However, as it was only able to penetrate 163mm of armor at 500 meters, the 17 pdr was soon replaced after the war by the 120mm BAT recoilless rifle in its anti-tank role.

As for 2 Bn, LIR, the unit dates back to 1916 and landed in France for the Great War as part of the 60th (London) Division, formed from London Irish. Disbanded after WWI, it was stood back up in 1939 initially as part of 6th Armoured Division and later within the 78th (Battleaxe) Division, seeing much combat in Italy including battle honors earned at “Lentini, Simeto Bridgehead, Adrano, Centuripe, Salso Crossing, Simeto Crossing, Malleto, Pursuit to Messina, Sicily 1943, Termoli, Trigno, Sangro, Fossacesia, Teano, Monte Camino, Calabritto, Carigliano Crossing, Damiano, Anzio, Carroceto, Cassino II, Casa Sinagogga, Liri Valley, Trasimene Line, Sanfatucchio, Coriano, Croce, Senio Floodbank, Rimini Line, Ceriano Ridge, Monte Spaduro, Monte Grande, Valli di Commacchio, and Argenta Gap,” then serving as a garrison in occupied Austria postwar.

The British Army in Italy 1945 Infantry of 17 Platoon, ‘H’ Company, 2nd London Irish Rifles move forward through barbed wire defenses on their way to attack a German strongpoint on the southern bank of the River Senio, 22 March 1945. Menzies (Sgt), No 2 Army Film & Photographic Unit IWM NA 23238

Late 20th Century amalgamations saw the LIR folded into the Royal Ulster Rifles, then the Royal Irish Rangers, and finally to The London Regiment, based in Camberwell since 2000 and has seen much recent service in Bosnia, Kosovo, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Cyprus in the past quarter century.

Sea Orbit at 60

Some 60 years ago this week, the world’s ocean saw a novel naval squadron take to sea. On 13 May 1964, the first all-nuclear-powered task group, “Task Force One,” was organized and deployed to the Fleet as Carrier Division 2.

Comprising the brand new 93,000-ton supercarrier USS Enterprise (CVAN 65), the sleek and enigmatic 15,000-ton cruiser USS Long Beach (CGN 9), and the 9,000-ton destroyer leader USS Bainbridge (DLGN 25), the group, thanks to their dozen installed nuclear reactors (8 A2Ws on Enterprise, on 2 C1Ws on Long Beach, and 2 D2Gs on Bainbridge) could make 30+ knots non-stop for years, with their endurance limited generally to the amount of food aboard for their combined 7,600 sailors and Marines, and the finite quantity of lubricants and spare parts to keep things in motion.

U.S. Navy National Naval Aviation Museum photo NNAM.1996.488.125.008

They weren’t just showboats and had serious combat potential as well.

The “Big E,” whose radio callsign was “Climax,” had the newly redesignated Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 6 embarked (F-4B Phantoms of VF-102, F-8E Crusaders of VF-33, A-4C Skyhawks of VA-64, VA-66 and VA-76; A-1H Skyraiders of VA-65, A-5A Vigilantes of VAH-7, and smaller dets of E-1Bs, EA-1Fs, RF-8As, UH-As, and C-1As) while the two escorts brought a combined four twin Terrier launchers (with 200 missiles), a Talos twin (52 missiles), two ASROC matchboxes (16 missiles), two 5″/38s, two 3″/50s, and 4 triple ASW tubes along to keep the flattop safe.

Operation Sea Orbit, 1964. A formation of A4 Skyhawk jet aircraft flies over nuclear Task Force One, on whose return to the United States on October 3, 1964, concluded a sixty-five-day unreplenished world cruise. The three ships, USS Enterprise (CVAN-65); USS Long Beach (CLGN-9), and USS Bainbridge (DLGN-25), are under the command of Rear Admiral Bernard M. Strean, aboard the carrier. Photograph released October 2, 1964. Accession #: 330-PSA-211-64 (KN 29719)

The force was under the command of RADM (later VADM) Bernard M. Strean (USNA 1929)– an Oklahoma-born naval aviator who earned the Navy Cross for personally scoring a direct bomb hit on a Japanese aircraft carrier in the Battle of the Philippine Sea.

Task Force One’s Mediterranean deployment turned into a high-speed circumnavigation, dubbed Operation Sea Orbit. In all, they traveled 34,732 statute miles without refueling or taking on supplies in just 65 days (57 steaming), covering 600 miles each steaming day on average.

Nonetheless, they made time to make six non-replenishing port calls (Karachi, Fremantle, Melbourne, Sydney, Wellington, and Rio De Janeiro) and “fly-by” visits in which local dignitaries were flown in from 10 other far-lung ports (Rabat, Dakar, Monrovia, Freetown, Abidjan, Cape Town, Nairobi, Montevideo, Buenos Aries, and Sao Paulo).

Operation Sea Orbit, 1964. Officials at Dakar, Senegal, were flown to Enterprise for an air demonstration as the nuclear task force sailed down the coast of Africa in the first phase of the global cruise. Captain E.W. Hassel, Chief of Staff for the Commander of the Task Force escorts Senegalese cabinet officials. Photograph released August 22, 1964. Official U.S. Navy Photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives. (2015/11/03). Accession #: 330-PSA-178-64 (USN 11042204)

As noted by the Navy:

The World Cruise has a dual mission. It offers practical experience in the operation of nuclear-powered warships independent of support ships, a fast impractical for conventionally powered ships. Equally important, and immediately evident is the opportunity to win friends in areas not frequently visited by U.S. Navy ships, and to show the world an all-nuclear element of the world’s great power for peace.

Of note, several men of TF1 were descendants of Great White Fleet sailors, Teddy Roosevelt’s slow battleship force that had taken 14 months to cover its 42,000 mile/20 port call circumnavigation a half-century prior.

The Navy men who had relatives aboard ships in the Great White Fleet, 1907-09, are, (left to right): Aerographer’s Mate Third Class William C. Longstreet, USN, whose grandfather made the cruise in 1907; Chief Electrician’s Mate J.E. Norton, USN, whose uncle Joseph Starr was a Quartermaster with the Great White Fleet; Boatswain’s Mate Third Class Henry Lopez, who had an uncle, Eddie Romers, in the Great White Fleet, and Fireman William C. Stock, whose father sailed with the 16 battleships on their history-making voyage. 330-PSA-208-64 (USN 1105502)

Of course, the above is a rarity that could never occur today, as the Navy has long ago put its nuclear-powered escorts to pasture as part of the Great Clinton-era Cruiser Slaughter. Speaking of which, all of the ships of TF1 have long been retired, with Enterprise the last leaving the fleet, decommissioned on 3 February 2017 (although her hulk remains).

VADM Strean passed in 2002, aged 91, and, besides Task Force One, he went on to be the technical adviser for the 1976 film “Midway” and helped establish the Naval Air Museum. His papers are in the NHHC Collection.

Warship Wednesday, May 15, 2024: The Great Grey Raider

Here at LSOZI, we take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1833-1954 period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places.- Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday, May 15, 2024: The Great Grey Raider

Royal Australian Navy image

Above we see HMAS Kanimbla (C78), her crew, and embarked soldiers crowding her decks, as she pulls into Brisbane after her deployment to Borneo, in September 1945. LCVP K16 (Coxswain Able Seaman William Winkle B/4301) can be seen in the foreground, other landing craft at the ready in their davits, and 20mm Oerlikon cannons facing skyward.

You wouldn’t know it to look at her, but by this point in the war, this Australian LSI(L) had captured 22 ships, a train, and a floating dock in addition to her service as one of the country’s first amphibs.

Meet Kanimbla

Our subject, named for the Kanimbla Valley in New South Wales, was ordered by the Australian McIlwraith, McEacharn & Co from the famed shipyard of Harland & Wolff, Belfast– the same people that built the Titanic— in 1933.

Intended for passenger service between Cairns and Fremantle with 203 First Class and 198 Cabin Cass passengers, she was delivered in 1936.

She was constructed complete with a fully operational radio broadcasting station that would broadcast ashore as she moved around the continent. The equipment was manufactured by AWA in Australia and had been shipped to Ireland for installation while the ship was still under construction.

As detailed by Australian Old Time Radio, “Regular broadcasts commenced on 6,010 KHz., with one-hour programs several evenings each week, with their announcer and singer Eileen Foley. They also had a female orchestra with a pianist, violinist, and cellist performing on air, and at nightly on-board dances.”

Armed Merchant Cruiser

Then, with the outbreak of war, MV Kanimbla became HMS Kanimbla (F23), requisitioned on 5 September 1939 and so commissioned the following month. Her role– outfitted with seven 6-inch guns, two 3-inch high-angle AA guns, a pair of Lewis guns, and some depth charge launchers (but no sound gear or radar)– would be that of an armed merchant cruiser.

While officially a Royal Navy warship, she had an almost exclusively Australian crew of 342, commanded by the redoubtable CDR Frank E. Getting, RAN. Following the installation of her armament at Garden Island Dockyard, she left Sydney on 13 December 1939 for Hong Kong where she took up station, tasked with looking for Axis blockade runners and raiders.

Curiously, at this early stage of the war, she still carried her peacetime McIlwraith McEachern livery, despite her serious armament.

Aerial starboard side view of the armed merchant cruiser HMS Kanimbla by No 2 Squadron RAAF. She is armed with seven 6-inch guns of which four can be seen forward on the forecastle and in the well deck. The portside guns are trained on the broadside. Two of the three after guns can also be seen, immediately behind the superstructure and on the poop. Unlike the forward guns the after guns are not shielded. A covered 3-inch AA gun is mounted abreast the funnel. Windows at the corner and sides of her bridge structure have been plated in. She remains painted in her owners’ colors. (Naval Historical Collection, AWM 300845)

One of her primary roles in this period was that of convoy escort.

In all, in the 20 months between WS 002S, which Kanimbla joined on 8 August 1940, and when she left OW 005/1 on 18 March 1943, our big auxiliary cruiser rode shotgun on no less than 22 convoys. These were primarily slow Indian Ocean troop and material convoys of the WS (Suez Canal to Bombay), BP (Bombay to the Persian Gulf), BA/AB (Bombay to Aden/Aden to Bombay), OW (Australia to Ceylon), and US/SU (Australia to Colombo and the Suez/vice versa) variety.

The most important of these was the Schooner convoy which carried two brigades of irreplicable combat-experienced Australian troops back home from the Middle East on 23 June-7 August 1942, during the height of the invasion scare from Japan– while Port Moresby’s harbor was under Japanese air raids and the Imperial Navy was celebrating sinking four Allied cruisers at the Battle of Savo Island, to include HMAS Canberra with our good Capt. Getting, Kanimbla’s plankowning skipper, in command.

Nonetheless, our subject took two important breaks from her convoy duties during this era.

Rounding up Scandinavians

While steaming near Japan in March 1940, Kanimbla came across the SS Vladimir Mayakovsky, a 3,972-ton Soviet ChGMP steamer out of Odesa that was originally built as the Bela Kun. Smelling something off about the vessel as it A) tried to run for it, (B) was loaded with 4,582 tons of copper and 215 tons of molybdenite, and C) the Soviets at the time at war with the Finns and in occupation of half of Poland and the entirety of the Baltic States, Kanimbla seized the ship and, five days later, was ordered to hand it over to French cruiser Lamotte Picque who forcibly interned it and its 40 member crew at Saigon.

Mayakovsky and her crew sweated it out at Saigon under French guns for six months then was allowed to leave after the local administration relieved its cargo of coffee and ore. The ship somehow survived WWII and was only removed from Soviet service in 1967.

Following the April 1940 German invasion and occupation of the kingdoms of Denmark and Norway, Kanimbla was ordered to the coastal waters of China to intercept merchant ships flying those flags and send them, with polite yet armed detachments aboard, to Hong Kong so they would come under Allied control.

The captured ships, most scooped up at the mouth of the Yangtse River (near Shanghai), included 10 Norwegians: freighters D/S Agnes (1311 grt), D/S Hafthor (1,594 grt), D/S Corona (3264 grt), D/S Talisman (4,765 tons), D/S Wilford (2158 grt), D/S Tonjer (3268 gt), D/S Sheng Hwa (5492 grt), D/S Norwegian, D/S Sygna (3881 gt), and D/S Gabon (4651 grt); as well as one Dane: the beautiful 1,462-ton cable ship SS Store Nordiske of the Great Northern Telegraph Company.

From the collection of the Australian National Maritime Museum:

SS AGNES, Norwegian cargo steamship, from HMAS KANIMBLA, April 1940

SS CORONA, Norwegian cargo steamship, from HMAS KANIMBLA, April 1940

SS HAFTHOR, Norwegian cargo steamship, from HMAS KANIMBLA, April 1940

SS SHENG WHA, Norwegian cargo steamship, from HMAS KANIMBLA, April 1940

SS STORE NORDISKE, Danish cable ship, from HMAS KANIMBLA, April 1940

SS SYGNA, Norwegian cargo steamship, from HMAS KANIMBLA, April 1940

SS TALISMAN, Norwegian cargo steamship, from HMAS KANIMBLA, April 1940

SS TONJER, Norwegian cargo steamship, from HMAS KANIMBLA, April 1940

SS WILFORD, Norwegian cargo steamship, from HMAS KANIMBLA, April 1940

To this was later added the Norwegian flagged Wallam & Co freighter D/S Dah Pu (1974 grt).

True to form, most went on to sail for the Allied cause– typically on charter to the Ministry of War Transport, managed by British India SN Co. Ltd.– with many subsequently lost to enemy action.

Iran

Operation Countenance, the Allied effort to invade and rapidly occupy the neutral nation of Iran, with the Soviets taking the north and the British the south, kicked off on 25 August 1941.

The Persian Gulf side of the operation, led by Commodore Cosmo Graham, aimed to seize the ports of Bandar Shahpur, Abadan, and Khorramshahr with a force that consisted simply of Kanimbla— which was the largest warship in the squadron– assisted by seven light escorts (sloops, corvettes, armed yachts, trawlers, et. al).

Up the river Khar Musa, the Gulf railway terminus port of Bandar Shahpur (now Bandar-e Emam Khomeyni) had a pair of Iranian gunboats watching over eight German and Italian merchant ships that had been sheltering there in large part since 1939. This was tasked to Force B (Bishop) under the command of Captain (later RADM) W. L. G. Adams, OBE, RN.

In an operation overnight on 24/25 August codenamed Bishop, Kanimbla, with Capt. Adams and 300 men of two companies the Indian 3/10th Baluch Regiment embarked on the 11th, and accompanied by HM Indian Sloop Lawrence (L83) and the HM Armed Trawler Arthur Kavanagh, crept up the river and made their surprise entrance just before dawn. Two small tugs and several local dhows which had been “requisitioned” to shuttle around groups of Baluch troopers and armed Australian Jack Tars, disguised in local mufti, preceded the group.

At sea off Bandar Shapur, Iran. 1941-08. Dhow 8 manned by RAN personnel from HMS Kanimbla who were visible on deck, but during the operation to capture German and Italian shipping and occupy Bandar Shapur were dressed as Arabs. AWM 134373

The German and Italian merchies were still in their full-color peacetime livery, and their crews enjoyed themselves in the backwaters of old Persia.

Captured outright were the 331-ton Italian-built Iranian gunboats Chahbaaz (Shahbaaz) and Karkas, slow Fiat diesel-powered 169-footers that mounted 3-inch guns. Likewise, the Commonwealth force easily seized the government railway jetty complete with a train and floating dock that were the property of the Iranian navy. That night, the surrendered Iranian officers, led by the local port captain, dined aboard Kanimbla and were treated to whisky and cheroots afterward.

Iranian patrol boat KARKAS at Bandar-e Šāhpūr 1941

Bandar Shapur, Iran. 1941-08. Port side view of a captured Iranian gunboat Karkas manned by Australians alongside Railway Jetty in the harbor.

The gunboats would spend the rest of the war (dubbed Hira and Moti) as training and patrol ships at Bombay with the Royal Indian Navy then were later repatriated to the Shah in 1946.

Scuttled were five German Deutsche Dampfshiffahrts Gesellschaft (Hansa Line) freighters: MS Weißenfels (7866 grt), MS Wildenfels (6224 grt) — which was later refloated, repaired, and entered British service as SS Empire RajaMS Marienfels (7575 grt) which was repaired and turned into SS Empire Rani, and MS Sturmfels (6,288 tons) likewise repaired to British service as SS Empire Kumari.

Attack on Bandar Shapur, enemy ships on fire

Attack on Bandar Shapur, Iran, enemy ships on fire, August 1941

One ship in particular, the German freighter MS Hohenfels (7,862 grt) was involved in a spectacular save by Kanimbla’s crew.

Sydney Morning Herald, 20 September 1941 reported the event:

R.A.N. MEN SAVE NAZI SHIPS Daring in Iran LONDON, Sept. 19 (A.A.P.). Australian naval ratings, assisted by Indians, carried out a daring exploit when seven of eight Axis ships were saved from scuttling at Bandar Shahpur (Iran) after the British landing, reports the Tehran correspondent of the “Daily Telegraph.”

The Navy prepared an expeditionary force consisting of dhows, tugs, and launches. The Australians and Indians had been practicing old-time tactics of boarding, including the use of grappling irons. The little fleet set out before dawn, and when it stole in, the lookout in the nearest Axis ship, the Hohenfels (7,862 tons) did not suspect anything until it was too late.

The Australians and Indians scrambled aboard the ships, and groping in the dark holds, turned off the sea cocks, plugged the holes, cut the wires to gelignite charges, and dowsed deliberately-lit fires. All this was done so quickly that there were no British casualties. Six of the seven ships saved are at present being repaired in India. The seventh is being salvaged. The eighth was burnt out.”

Hohenfels aground off Bandur Shapur in August 1941, with her pre-war colors intact. Captured and salvaged by HMS Kanimbla, she went to work for the Admiralty as Empire Kamal 1941, then Van Ruisdael 1944, and Ridderkerk 1947, before she was scrapped in Hong Kong in 1962.

Bandar Shapur, Iran, 1941-08. HMS Kanimbla, manned by an Australian crew, flanked by small boats and tugs

German ship, most likely HOHENFELS, under tow in the Persian Gulf after capture at Bandar Shapur

Also put on the bottom by its crew at Bandur Shapur was the 5,225-ton Italian Società Anonima di Navigazione freighter Caboto (raised and dubbed SS Empire Kohinoor), a fate shared by the handsome American-built Enrico Insom tanker Barbara (3,065 grt) which was rebuilt as SS Empire Taj. The SAN Garibaldi tanker Bronte (4769 gt) was wrecked.

Bandar Shapur, Iran. 1941-08-25. Italian merchant ships were set on fire by the ships’ crews as seen from HMS Kanimbla, manned by RAN personnel. The ships identified are HMIS Lawrence; Caboto; Bronte; HMS Arthur Cavanagh; Barbara and Dhow 8. AWM 134380

Besides the assembled crews of the eight Axis vessels, a battalion-sized force of German civilians was scooped up ashore. As noted by Christopher Buckley, the Commonwealth troops and sailors “had the satisfaction of rounding up more than 300 German tourists, all clad in the sports coats and the grey flannel trousers of conscientious holidaymakers, all by the curious coincidence attracted to this little port ‘by the excellence of the bathing and the purity of the air.'”

Looking down from HMS Kanimbla to where 72 Germans, so-called “tourists”, wait beside a train to travel to a prisoner of war camp after being captured by the Baluchs and shore party of the Kanimbla.

LSI Blues

The Australian military’s first amphibious warfare ships were the three Landing Ship, Infantry (large), or LSI(L)s: HMAS Kanimbla, HMAS Manoora, and HMAS Westralia. Whereas these liners had given great service (as seen above) as armed merchant cruisers, by 1943 the war in the Pacific had shifted to an island-hopping campaign in which the Ozzies would need troop carriers that could put infantry ashore in the littoral.

This led to the above cruisers being shifted to the RAN directly (hence the HMAS rather than the HMS), repainted in a camo scheme, given room for 800 to 1,200 embarked troops, and a way to land them in the form of 24 landing craft, vehicle, personnel, (LCVP)s carried in large double davits, each capable of carrying a platoon to the beach. These craft were hull numbered to the ship, for instance, with Kanimbla’s listed as K1 through K24.

LCVP being swung aboard HMAS Westralia during the landing of the 2/4 Infantry Battalion on Morotai, 18 April 1945.

LCAs leave HMS Rocksand, a landing ship, infantry, for the island of Nancowry in the British occupation of the Nicobar Islands, October 1945

The Admiralty loved LSIs, and converted some 40 of them by the end of the war including several operated by Canada (HMCS Prince David and HMCS Prince Henry) and even one by the Royal New Zealand Navy (HMNZS Monowai). As in the case of the trio of Australian LSI(L)s, most were former passenger liners.

In April 1943, our subject began her conversion and recommissioned as HMAS Kanimbla on 1 July 1943.

Group portrait of the crew of HMAS Kanimbla. Note that most of the Officers in the front rows are members of the RAN Reserve (RANR) or RAN Volunteer Reserve (RANVR). AWM P02303.001

With her 6-inch guns no longer needed, Kanimbla traded them in for a couple of 3-inch AAA guns, a single 4-incher over the stern as a stinger, and a mix of Oerlikon, Pom Pom, and Bofors mounts to help ward off Japanese aircraft.

22 October 1943. Aerial starboard broadside view of the landing ship infantry (large) HMS Kanimbla. Landing craft vehicle personnel are carried in davits along her side and others are stowed in the well deck forward, on deck forward of the funnel, and aft. A single 4-inch Mark XVI on a Mark XX mounting is fitted right aft. A 3-inch AAA gun is fitted on either side of the funnel. Single 20 mm Oerlikon AA guns are fitted port and starboard in the bows, the bridge wings, on the main superstructure abaft the funnel, and on the poop. Note the Type 271 radar lantern above the bridge. The ship is painted dark grey, probably G10, all over. (Naval Historical Collection, AWM 300849)

HMAS Kanimbla as landing ship infantry (LSI) circa 1944-45. AWM 018605

HMAS Kanimbla entering Brisbane in 1944 with LCVPs in davits

HMAS Kanimbla LSI, note her stinger over the stern

Troops descending scrambling nets note LCVPs

Kanimbla and her two half-sisters, augmented by members of the country’s new Beach Commando units, went on to participate in amphibious landings at Hollandia, Morotai, Leyte Gulf, Lingayen Gulf, Brunei, and Balikpapan.

Most of that time was as part of the Allied 7th PHIBFOR, and she dutifully submitted war diary reports in USN format which are now in the National Archives.

At sea, 5 June 1945. A line of landing ship tanks moves behind HMAS Kanimbla, as the convoy makes its way to northwest Borneo for the Oboe 6 operation. AWM 108926

10 June 1945, Matilda tanks of 2/9 Armoured Regiment being driven ashore through the surf from Landing Ship Medium 237, at the north end of Brunei’s Muara Beach during the Oboe 6 Operation. One of the LSI HMAS Kanimbla’s LCVPs (K14) is seen to the left.

A rating returning to Kanimbla after ferrying troops ashore during landing and resupply operations

She earned battle honors for “New Guinea 1944″, “Leyte Gulf 1944”, “Lingayen Gulf 1945”, “Borneo 1945”, and “Pacific 1945″, ignoring her key role in Operation Bishop in 1941, her two years of convoy duty, and her freighter harvesting in 1940. Apart from capturing 22 ships she also steamed more than 470,000 miles during the war.

Post-war, her camo stripped off and guns landed, she settled into a two-year run as the government’s shuttle service, taking Australian troops around the Pacific for occupation duty, and then returning them home.

Kure, Japan. 1947-01-18. After troops have disembarked from HMAS Kanimbla they make their way to Kure Oval where they were formed into units. AWM 13849

View of soldiers embarking on the ship Kanimbla at Rabaul 1946 Collections SWA 7943-AMWA48890

24 November 1947, LCVP K2 approaches HMAS Kanimbla, Port Phillip Bay. SLV Collection Allan C. Green

Speaking of returning home, she also carried demobilized Tongan troops back to their archipelago and, eventually, would repatriate interned Japanese citizens back to their shell-shocked homeland.

KANIMBLA taking Tongan troops to Tonga 1945

Kure, Japan. 1947-01-18. Japanese repatriates are waiting to disembark from HMAS Kanimbla after it arrived from Australia. AWM 132848

Her final mission in government service was to sail from Sydney in late 1948, bound for Britain carrying the RAN crew that would bring back the new Australian aircraft carrier HMAS Sydney.

On Kanimbla’s return voyage to Australia, released from her contract, she called at Genoa and embarked 432 Italian bachelors destined for Melbourne and embarked on the next chapter of her career.

Back to Peace

The only Australian-registered ship to play a role in the migrant trade, Kanimbla spent much of her time between 1947 and 1951 shuttling displaced European immigrants, between their port of entry (Perth) and Port Melbourne where they would be processed and assigned work duties on two year passes.

Then came a decade of commercial trade around the island continent. Her swan song. By this time she was configured for 231 First Class and 125 Second Class for coastal runs, or and 371 One Class cabins for longer cruises.

As noted by Freemantle Ports, “Kanimbla was the largest and last liner to be built for the Sydney – Fremantle service which she plied during the summer months. In winter, Kanimbla operated a service between Melbourne, Sydney and Queensland.”

She continued in this role with Westralia, Duntroon, and Manoora, until eventually, she was the final in the trade.

In April 1958, a large crowd is gathered to bid farewells to Kanimbla as she departs C Shed, Victoria Quay on a scheduled voyage to Adelaide, Melbourne, and Sydney. Steam tug Wyola assisting. Photo by Freemantle Ports.

Westralia and Duntroon were laid up by 1959 and, in 1961, Kanimbla and Manoora followed.

Kanimbla 1960, Victorian Collections

In 1961, Kanimbla was sold to the Pacific Transport Company chartered several times over, renamed TSMV Oriental Queen. She spent the next three years carrying Islamic pilgrims from Indonesia to Jeddah and back on charter to the Indonesian government. Then came a more familiar kind of route service.

TSMV Oriental Queen during her Australian season of Cruises for Dover Pacific Cruises via SS Maritime.

As noted by SSMaritime:

TSMV Oriental Queen began to operate a program of cruises between Australia, New Zealand, and Japan and during one stay in Yokohama, she was used as a floating hotel for Australian and New Zealand visitors to the 1964 Tokyo Olympic Games. Her accommodation now included 4 suites, as well as single, twin, triple, and four-berth cabins.

TSMV Oriental Queen soon became a popular sight in both New Zealand and Australia and became a popular means of crossing the Tasman Sea to and from Australia. As a cruise ship, she offered economical fares. Thus being a hit with both the younger and older generations.

With her cruises so popular it was decided to fit her with an outdoor pool and a Lido Deck, which enhanced her even further as a cruise ship. She also operated several Pacific cruises during 1965 and 1966. Oriental Queen was a regular visitor to both Auckland and Sydney.

Shifting to an even more basic Honolulu and Los Angeles and Yokohama to Guam runs in 1967, she sailed her last in 1973 and was then broken up for scrap in Taiwan.

Epilogue

Her bell is preserved in the Australian National Maritime Museum, which also has several pieces of maritime art depicting our girl.

McIlwraith McEacharn Line Motor Vessel Kanimbla by Charles Bryant ANMM Collection 00037800

HMAS Kanimbla, original painted by Bob Bluey Paton, ex-crew member, Victorian Collections

Kanimbla is depicted arriving in Hong Kong to commence duties with the British Royal Navy under the command of Royal Australian Navy Commander F E Getting. Kanimbla was used on the passenger service between Cairns and Fremantle from 1936 to 1939, when it was requisitioned into the Royal Navy as an Armed Merchant Cruiser. ANMM Collection 00042375

There are also several monuments and markers around the country dedicated to her memory.

In so much as amphibious warfare, once the Royal Australian Navy got rid of its trio of WWII-converted LSIs in 1949, they replaced them with a half dozen small Mark 3 LSTs borrowed from the Royal Navy which would remain in service until 1955. The job shifted to the Army in 1959, accomplished by four LSM-1 class ships picked up surplus from the U.S. Navy. These LSMs, named after Australian generals, operated through Vietnam and were disposed of in 1975.

The RAN only got back into the big ‘phib game in 1994 by picking up a pair of low-mileage former USN Newport class LSTs, which were recast as the Kanimbla class Landing Platform Amphibious (LPAs). With that, USS Saginaw (LST 1188) became the second HMAS Kanimbla (L 51) while her sister USS Fairfax County (LST 1193) became the second HMAS Manoora (L 52). The two served until 2011, replaced by the Bay-class landing ship dock HMAS Choules and two large Canberra-class landing helicopter docks.

HMAS Kanimbla returns to Sydney from humanitarian operations in Banda Aceh and Nias on 30 April 2005


Ships are more than steel
and wood
And heart of burning coal,
For those who sail upon
them know
That some ships have a
soul.


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Tiger Stripe Redux

Spotted in the PI recently, 1st Group guys are channeling a very 1969 Southeast Asia vibe with Tiger Stripe pattern cammies to include boonie hats and full-color patches. I think it is a great look for a peacetime training deployment, especially because Apocalypse Now was filmed in the Philippines and the obvious Vietnam-era tie-in to the pattern in that region.

A U.S. Army Green Beret from 1st Special Forces Group (Airborne) overlooks movement on an objective alongside a service member with the Philippine National Police Special Action Force the, during Balikatan 24 in Rizal, Palawan, Philippines, April 27, 2024. BK 24 is an annual exercise between the Armed Forces of the Philippines and U.S. military designed to strengthen bilateral interoperability, capabilities, trust, and cooperation built over decades of shared experiences. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Asa Bingham)

U.S. Army Green Berets from 1st Special Forces Group (Airborne) meet with service members from the Armed Forces of the Philippines Special Operations Command with 5th Scout Ranger Company, 5th Scout Ranger Battalion, 1st Scout Ranger Regiment-1st Light Reaction Company, 1st Light Reaction Battalion, Light Reaction Regiment, and the Philippine National Police Special Action Force to discuss training in Rizal, Palawan, Philippines, during Balikatan 24, April 27, 2024. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Asa Bingham) (Portions of this image have been blurred for security reasons.)

A U.S. Army Green Beret from 1st Special Forces Group (Airborne) conducts an after-action review with service members from the Armed Forces of the Philippines Special Operations Command during Balikatan 24 in Rizal, Palawan, Philippines, April 27, 2024. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Asa Bingham) (Portions of this image have been blurred for security reasons.)

A U.S. Army Green Beret from 1st Special Forces Group (Airborne) practices military movement techniques alongside service members from the Armed Forces of the Philippines Special Operations Command 5th Scout Ranger Company, 5th Scout Ranger Battalion, 1st Scout Ranger Regiment during Balikatan 24 in Rizal, Palawan, Philippines, April 27, 2024.  (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Asa Bingham) (Portions of this image have been blurred for security reasons.)

For reference, check out this below shot of an ERDL-clad SGT Curtis E. Hester firing his M-16 rifle, while Tiger-striped SGT Billy H. Faulks calls for air support, Co D, 151st (Ranger) Inf., Vietnam, 1969.

For those curious about Tiger Stripe and its effectiveness, check the below.

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