Minesweepers of the Royal New Zealand Navy
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Commissioned minesweepers and danlayers of the Royal New Zealand Navy (RNZN) from its formation on 1 October 1941 to the present. The RNZN was created two years into World War II. For coherence this article covers the war years from the start, and thus includes also the New Zealand minesweepers operating from the beginning of the war.
World War II minesweepers
During World War II the RNZN operated 39 minesweepers and danlayers. This included 20 naval trawlers (13 Castle class, 3 Bird class and 4 Isles class), 5 converted trawlers, 10 converted merchant boats and 4 danlayers.
Naval trawlers
Naval trawlers were trawlers purpose built to Admiralty specification to operate as minesweepers and/or anti-submarine boats.
Castle class
Thirteen Castle class naval trawlers were commissioned. Apart from the James Cosgrove and Wakakura, all were built in New Zealand by government directive, circa 1942. They were 135-foot (41 m) long, displaced 540 tons standard or 612 tons loaded, and were designed for a complement of 27. The three-cylinder engine of 480 ihp from A & G Price of Thames gave a speed of 10 knots (19 km/h). The coal-fired boiler was of the Scotch marine type. The boiler size governed the size of ship that could be manufactured, and as boiler plate of the required size was not available, two completed boilers and some partly completed boilers were supplied from Britain.[1]
Name | Pnd | Builder | Dates | Career | Fate |
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HMNZS Aroha | T24 | Stevenson & Cook, Port Chalmers | 1943–1945 | Served at Auckland [2] | |
HMNZS Awatere | T25 | Patent Slip, Wellington | 1943–1945 | Served at Wellington | |
HMNZS Hautapu | T26 | Stevenson & Cook, Port Chalmers | 1943–1947 | Served in Lytteton | |
HMNZS Hinau | T17 | Senior Foundry Co., Auckland | 1942–1945 | LL Flotilla AS | |
HMNZS James Cosgrove | T10 | 1941–1944 | |||
HMNZS Maimai | T27 | Stevenson & Cook, Port Chalmers | 1943–1946 | Served at Wellington | |
HMNZS Manuka | T19 | Mason Bros, Auckland | 1942–1945 | LL Flotilla AS | |
HMNZS Pahau | T28 | Stevenson & Cook, Port Chalmers | 1944–1945 | Served in Wellington | |
HMNZS Rimu | T18 | Seager Bros Shipbuilders Ltd | 1942–1945 | LL Flotilla AS | |
HMNZS Waiho | T34 | Stevenson & Cook, Port Chalmers | 1944–1946 | Served in Auckland | Sold to Red Funnel trawlers[3] |
HMNZS Waima | T33 | Stevenson & Cook, Port Chalmers | 1944–1946 | Served in Lytteton | Sold to Red Funnel trawlers[3] |
HMNZS Waipu | T32 | Stevenson & Cook, Port Chalmers | 1943–1946 | Served in Auckland | |
HMNZS Wakakura | T00 | 1941–1947 | 1926–1941 was HMS Wakakura in the New Zealand Division of the Royal Navy. Used as danlayer from July 1944. |
In addition two further Castle trawlers, Tawhai and Waikato, were completed in 1946 but were not commissioned.
Bird class
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On 29 January 1943, in a classic duel, Kiwi and Moa rammed and wrecked the Japanese submarine I-1.
The Bird class naval trawlers were 168-foot (51 m) long, displaced 923 tons full load, and could manage 13 knots (24 km/h). They had a complement of 33–35 and were armed with one 4-inch (100 mm) gun, 2x1 Hotchkiss guns, twin Lewis guns and 40 depth charges. They were equipped with asdic.
Name | Dates | Career | Notes |
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HMNZS Kiwi (T102) | 1941–1946 1948–1949 1951–1956 |
AS MS Training ship Training ship |
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HMNZS Moa (T233) | 1941–1943 | AS MS | Sunk by enemy aircraft on 7 April 1943 near Tulagi Harbour in the Solomon Islands. Five crew men were lost. |
HMNZS Tui (T234) | 1941–1946 1952–1955 1956–1967 |
AS MS Training ship Research ship |
On 19 August 1943 Tui and some US Kingfisher float-planes jointly sank the Japanese submarine I-17. |
Isles class
The Isles class naval trawlers were 164-foot (50 m) long, displaced 740 tons full load, and could manage 12 knots (22 km/h). They had a complement of 40 and were armed with one 12-pdr gun, three 20 mm Oerlikons (3x1) and depth charges.
Name | Dates | Career | Fate |
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HMNZS Inchkeith (T155) | 1941–1946 | ||
HMNZS Killegray (T174) | 1941–1946 | ||
HMNZS Sanda (T160) | 1941–1946 | ||
HMNZS Scarba (T175) | 1941–1946 |
Other types
Converted trawlers
Name | Dates | Career | Fate |
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HMNZS Futurist (T12) | 1941–1944 | Functioned as a boom gate vessel 1944 | |
HMNZS Humphrey (T12) | 1941–1944 | ||
HMNZS Kapuni (T15) | 1941–1945 | Functioned as supply ship 1945 | |
HMNZS South Sea (T22) | 1941–1942 | Sunk 19 December 1942 | |
HMNZS Thomas Currell (T11) | 1941–1944 | Functioned throughout World War II as a minesweeper vessel. | Currently beached and deteriorating on the coast of Chatham Island. |
Converted merchant boats
Name[4] | Dates | Career | Fate |
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HMNZS Breeze (T02) | 1942–1944 | ||
HMNZS Duchess (T06) | 1940–1945 | examination vessel 1942–45 liberty launch 1945 |
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HMNZS Gale (T04) | 1941–1944 | ||
HMNZS Hawea (T16) | 1941–1945 | Functioned as supply ship in 1945. | |
HMNZS Kapuni (T15) | 1941–1945 | Functioned as patrol boat 1940 and supply ship 1944–45. | |
HMNZS Matai (T01) | 1941–1946 | Functioned as transport ship 1945–1946. | |
HMNZS Muritai (T05) | 1941–1946 | Functioned as training and cable-lifting ship 1945–1946. | |
HMS Puriri (T02) | 1941 | Puriri was sunk just before the creation of the RNZN. | 14 May 1941 struck a German mine 9 miles (14 km) NE of the Whangarei heads and sunk with the loss of 5 crew members. |
HMNZS Rata (T03) | 1941–1943 | ||
HMNZS Viti (T?) | 1941–1945 |
Danlayers
Name | Type | Dates | Career | Fate |
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HMNZS Coastguard (T12) | Converted trawler | 1941–1960 | Functioned as a stores ship 1945–1960 | |
HMNZS Kaiwaka (T14) | Converted merchant ship | 1941–1945 | ||
HMNZS Nora Niven (T23) | Converted trawler | 1941–1944 | ||
HMNZS Phyllis T22 | Converted trawler | 1943–1944 |
COMSOPAC
COMSOPAC is an acronym for Commander South Pacific.
During World War II, one of the major United States theatre commands was the command of the South Pacific Area. This command was usually referred to as COMSOPAC (COMmander SOuth PACific)
It was formed in April 1942 as a subordinate command of Pacific Ocean Areas, commanded by Robert L. Ghormley through October 1942, William Halsey, Jr. to June 1944, John H. Newton to March 1945, and Admiral William L. Calhoun to the end of the war.
In June 1942 New Zealand passed the operational control of most of its South Pacific naval forces to COMSOPAC. This continued until COMSOPAC released control in June 1945.
The headquarters for COMSOPAC were initially located in Auckland, New Zealand. In July 1942 they were transferred to Nouméa, New Caledonia,
The 25th Minesweeping Flotilla
In the early months of World War II the New Zealand minesweepers had no formal grouping as a flotilla Then Niagra was sunk in June 1940. On 18 July 1940 the Naval Board designated the First Group for coastal minesweeping, and allocated Port minesweepers to the main ports. They were:[5]
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On 14 November 1940, a few weeks after the founding of the Royal New Zealand Navy, they were reorganised as the First Minesweeping Flotilla (NZ)
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Then on 23 December 1940 the Port minesweepers were separated, and the remaining minesweepers were organised into the 25th Minesweeping Flotilla. This name aligned with the flotilla names used by the Royal Navy. The makeup of this flotilla changed during the course of the war, as new minesweepers were commissioned, others sunk or withdrawn for repairs or refitting, and requirements changed.
Here is a snapshot of the 25th Minesweeping Flotilla on 27 March 1943:
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The Port minesweepers were organised into their own flotillas. Eleven new Castle class minesweepers joined the Port flotillas on completion, 1943–44.
Post war
Ton class
The RNZN operated two Ton class minesweepers on anti-infiltration patrols in Malaysian coastal waters during 1966 and 1967. They are the only commissioned RNZN ships never to have visited NZ.
Name | Dates | Career | Fate |
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HMNZS Santon (M1178) | 1965–1966 | 1967 sold to Argentina and renamed ARA Chubat (M3) | |
HMNZS Hickleton (M1131) | 1965–1966 | 1967 sold to Argentina and renamed ARA Neuquen (M1) |
These Admiralty designed coastal minesweepers were built with composite hulls of wood on aluminium frames and a minimum of magnetic material in the hull. They were intended to meet the threat of seabed mines laid in shallow coastal waters. Their shallow draft gave them some protection against pressure and contact mines, and allowed them to navigate in shallow inshore waters. They were 153 feet (47 m) long, displaced 360 tons standard, could manage 15 knots (28 km/h), and had a complement of 32. They were named after British villages which ended with "ton".
Early in 1965 Indonesia was employing a policy of confrontation against Malaysia. New Zealand agreed to assist Malaysia by deploying two Royal Navy minesweepers then in reserve at Singapore. These were commissioned into the RNZN on 10 April 1965 and joined the Royal Navy's 11th Minesweeping Squadron (also Ton class), taking part in anti-infiltration patrols in Malaysian waters.
In their first year they carried out 200 patrols, with 20 incidents involving intruding Indonesians, often taking as prisoners those aboard intercepting small craft. By the time the Indonesian confrontation policy ended in August 1966 Hickleton and Santon had jointly steamed 130,000 miles (210,000 km).
See also
Notes
- ↑ Breeze pp. 157-162
- ↑ Films produced by N.Z. National Film Unit The launching of HMNZS Aroha at Port Chalmers
- ↑ Photos of the converted merchant ships
- ↑ McDougall (1989) Pages 82–83
References
- Breeze, G. E., M.I.Mech.E, A.M.Inst.N.A. Shipbuilding in New Zealand NZIE Proceedings Volume 32, 1946 pp. 155–184 (Shipbuilding during WWII in New Zealand)
- McDougall, R J (1989) New Zealand Naval Vessels. Page 54-84. Government Printing Office. ISBN 978-0-477-01399-4
- Waters, Sydney David (1956) The Royal New Zealand Navy, Historical Publications Branch, Wellington:
Further reading
- Burgess, Michael (1981)The Royal New Zealand Navy: A Pictorial History. Allied Press Ltd. ISBN 978-0-908641-25-3 (many pictures of New Zealand minesweepers)
- Harker, Jack (2000)The Rockies: New Zealand Minesweepers at War. Silver Owl Press. ISBN 0-9597979-9-8
- Harker, Jack S (2001) The birth and growth of the Royal New Zealand Navy. Pentland. ISBN 1-85821-804-7
- Harker, Jack S. (2006) Left hand down a bit! : the Wakakura story. Kotuku Media. ISBN 0-908967-04-7
- Johnston, James Ian (2005) Face with Fortitude. Ianswork Publishers. ISBN 0-473-10011-8
- Wright, Gerry (2006) A Kiwi on our Funnel : The story of HMNZ ships Hickleton and Stanton. Zenith Print and Design. ISBN 0473108224