Australia Station

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Australia Station
Australia Station Squadron (AWM 304426).jpg
Royal Navy squadron on the Australia Station moored in Sydney in 1880
ActiveCreated in 1859
Disbanded1913
Country
  • United Kingdom,
  • subsequently Australia
Branch
Type Fleet

The Australia Station was the British, and later Australian, naval command responsible for the waters around the Australian continent. [1] Australia Station was under the command of the Commander-in-Chief, Australia Station, whose rank varied over time.

Contents

History

Admiralty House, Sydney, the residence for the Commander-in-Chief of the Royal Navy's Australia Squadron from 1885 to 1913 Admiralty House, Kirribilli (8823530532).jpg
Admiralty House, Sydney, the residence for the Commander-in-Chief of the Royal Navy's Australia Squadron from 1885 to 1913

In the years following the establishment of the British colony of New South Wales in 1788, Royal Navy ships stationed in Australian waters formed part of the East Indies Squadron and came under the command of the East Indies Station. From the 1820s, a ship was sent annually to New South Wales, and occasionally to New Zealand. [2]

In 1848, an Australian Division of the East Indies Station was established, [3] and in 1859 the British Admiralty established an independent command, the Australia Station, under the command of a commodore who was assigned as Commander-in-Chief, Australia Station. [1] The Australian Squadron was created to which British naval ships serving on the Australia Station were assigned. [4] The changes were partially in recognition of the fact that a large part of the East Indies Station had been detached to Australian waters, and also reflecting growing concern for the strategic situation in the western Pacific in general, and in Tahiti and New Zealand in particular. [1] In 1884, the commander of the Australia Station was upgraded to the rank of rear admiral. [1]

At its establishment, the Australia Station encompassed Australia and New Zealand, with its eastern boundary including Samoa and Tonga, its western edge in the Indian Ocean, south of India and its southern edge defined by the Antarctic Circle. The boundaries were modified in 1864, 1872 and 1893. [1] At its largest, the Australia Station reached from the Equator to the Antarctic in its greatest north–south axis, and covered a quarter of the Southern Hemisphere in its extreme east–west dimension, including Papua New Guinea, New Zealand, Melanesia and Polynesia. [5]

On 1 January 1901, Australia became a federation of six States, as the Commonwealth of Australia, which took over the defence forces from all the States. In March 1901, the Commonwealth took over the colonial navies to form the Commonwealth Naval Forces. The Australian and New Zealand governments agreed with the Imperial government to help fund the Royal Navy's Australian Squadron, while the Admiralty committed itself to maintain the Squadron at a constant strength. [6] In 1902, the commander of the Australia Station was upgraded to the rank of vice admiral. The boundaries were again modified in 1908. On 10 July 1911, King George V granted the title of "Royal Australian Navy" to the CNF. [7]

The Australian Squadron was disbanded in 1911 and the Australia Station passed to the Commonwealth Naval Forces. The Station was reduced to cover Australia and its island dependencies to the north and east, excluding New Zealand and its surrounds, which became part of the China Station and called the New Zealand Naval Forces. [1] In 1913, the Royal Australian Navy came under Australian command, and responsibility for the reduced Australia Station passed to the new RAN. [1] The Royal Navy's Australia Station ceased in 1913 and responsibility handed over to the Royal Australian Navy and its Sydney based depots, dockyards and structures were gifted to the Commonwealth of Australia. The Royal Navy continued to support the RAN and provided additional blue-water defence capability in the Pacific up to the early years of World War II.

In 1921, a separate New Zealand Station was established, and the New Zealand Naval Forces renamed the New Zealand Division of the Royal Navy. [8] In 1958, the Australia Station was redrawn again, now to include Papua New Guinea. [1]

Commanders-in-Chief, Australia Station

The following is a list of the Royal Navy officers who occupied the post of Commander-in-Chief, Australia Station:[ citation needed ]

RankNameTerm beganTerm ended
Commander-in-Chief, Australia Station
Commodore William Loring 26 March 185910 March 1860
Commodore Beauchamp Seymour, CB10 March 186021 July 1862
Commodore William Burnett, CB21 July 18627 February 1863
Commodore Sir William Wiseman, Bt. CB20 April 186323 May 1866
Commodore Rochfort Maguire 23 May 186628 May 1867
Commodore Rowley Lambert, CB28 May 18678 April 1870
Commodore Frederick Stirling 8 April 187022 May 1873
Commodore James Goodenough, CB, CMG22 May 187320 August 1875
Commodore Anthony Hoskins, CB7 September 187512 September 1878
Commodore John Wilson 12 September 187821 January 1882
Commodore James Erskine 21 January 188212 November 1884
Rear Admiral Sir George Tryon, KCB12 November 18841 February 1887
Rear Admiral Henry Fairfax 1 February 188710 September 1889
Rear AdmiralThe Hon. Lord Charles Scott, CB10 September 188912 September 1892
Rear Admiral Nathaniel Bowden-Smith 12 September 18921 November 1894
Rear Admiral Cyprian Bridge 1 November 18941 November 1897
Rear Admiral Hugo Pearson 1 November 18981 October 1900
Rear Admiral Lewis Beaumont 1 October 190016 January 1903
Vice Admiral Sir Arthur Fanshawe, KCMG16 January 1903 [9] 10 September 1905
Vice Admiral Sir Wilmot Fawkes, KCB, KCVO10 September 190531 December 1907
Vice Admiral Sir Richard Poore, Bt. KCB, CVO31 December 190731 December 1910
Vice Admiral Sir George King-Hall, KCB, CVO31 December 191023 June 1913

List of ships assigned to the Station

This is a list of ships that were assigned to the station between 1859 until 1913. The Australian Squadron was replaced by the Royal Australian Navy Fleet when it sailed into Sydney Harbour on 4 October 1913. [10]

ShipDate joinedDate leftNotes
Iris 25 March 18591861Flagship between 25 March 1859 until 10 March 1860. Undertook operations during First Taranaki War in New Zealand.
Niger 25 March 18591860Undertook operations during First Taranaki War.
Pelorus May 1859July 1862Flagship between 10 March 1859 until July 1862. Undertook operations during First Taranaki War.
Fawn 30 October 185911 April 1863
Bramble 1859May 1859Tender to Squadron.
Cordelia (1856) 1859December 1860Undertook operations during First Taranaki War.
Elk 18591860Undertook operations during First Taranaki War.
Harrier (1854) December 1860September 1864Participated in rescue operation when HMS Orpheus was wrecked in Manukau Harbour, New Zealand, and was also grounded but was refloated. Undertook operations during Invasion of Waikato and also the Tauranga Campaign in New Zealand.
Miranda December 1860September 1864Undertook operations during Invasion of Waikato and also the Tauranga Campaign in New Zealand.
Pioneer (1856) March 18621863
Orpheus July 18627 February 1863Flagship between July 1862 until 7 February 1863. Was wrecked in Manukau Harbour with the loss of 189 seaman including Commander-in-chief, Australia Station Commodore William Farquharson Burnett. 70 crewmen survived.
Beatrice September 18621880Jointly owned by Royal Navy and Colony of South Australia until purchased outright by South Australia in 1880. Conducted survey operations around Northern Australia.
Eclipse November 18621866Undertook operations during Invasion of Waikato and also the Tauranga Campaign.
Curacoa (1854) 20 April 18631866Flagship from 20 April 1863 until May 1866. Undertook operations during Invasion of Waikato and also the Tauranga Campaign.
Hecate June 18631864Conducted survey operations of Botany Bay, Moreton Bay and Brisbane River.
Esk July 18632 July 1867Undertook operations during Invasion of Waikato and also the Tauranga Campaign.
Falcon December 1863November 1867Undertook operations during Invasion of Waikato and also the Tauranga Campaign.
Salamander February 18644 July 1867Conducted survey operations along Great Barrier Reef and between Wilsons Promontory and Port Phillip Bay.
Brisk October 18641868Provided escort for operations during Second Taranaki War, New Zealand.
Challenger (1858) May 18661870Flagship between May 1866 and 3 September 1870. Conducted a punitive operation in 1866 against some Fijian natives.
Virago 30 November 186628 June 1871Conducted survey operations along Great Barrier Reef, Queensland, Norfolk Island and New Zealand.
Charybdis March 1867November 1868
Rosario November 18671875Undertook anti-blackbirding operations in the South Pacific.
Blanche January 18681875Undertook a punitive operation in 1869 against some Solomon Islands natives. Conducted survey operations of Rabaul Harbour.
Clio (1858) 17 April 187016 October 1873Flagship between 3 September 1870 and 17 September 1873. Ran into a reef and holed in Bligh Sound, New Zealand, in 1871 and repaired.
Basilisk March 18711874Undertook survey operations around Eastern New Guinea, under the command of Captain John Moresby. Undertook anti-blackbirding operations in the South Pacific.
Cossack September 1871October 1873
Dido 18711875Ran aground at Hobart, Tasmania in 1875 but was refloated.
Pearl 22 May 18731875Flagship from 17 September 1873 until 7 September 1875. Commander-in-chief Commodore James Graham Goodenough and two sailors died from poisonous arrows fired by natives from Santa Cruz Islands in 1875.
Conflict August 18731882Built by John Cuthbert, Sydney. Undertook anti-blackbirding operations in the South Pacific. In 1879 undertook punitive operation in against some Solomon Islands natives.
Alacrity 18731882Built in Sydney as Ethel. Undertook survey operations around Fiji and Solomon Islands. Sold to Colony of New South Wales and served as a powder hulk.
Beagle 1873March 1883Built by John Cuthbert, Darling Harbour, Sydney. Undertook anti-blackbirding operations in the South Pacific. In 1879 undertook punitive operation against some Solomon Islands natives.
Renard 1873March 1883Built by John Cuthbert, Sydney. Undertook anti-blackbirding operations in the South Pacific. Undertook survey operations around Fiji and Russell Islands.
Sandfly 18731883Built by John Cuthbert, Sydney. Undertook anti-blackbirding operations in the South Pacific. Undertook survey operations around Solomon Islands and New Guinea. Commanding officer, Lieutenant Bower, and three sailors were killed by natives on Mandolina Island, near Guadalcanal.
Barracouta August 1874July 1876Participated in Samoan Operations in 1876.
Sappho December 1874August 1878
Nymphe March 1875November 1878
Sapphire March 1875July 1879
Wolverine 7 September 1875January 1882Flagship from 7 September 1875 until 21 January 1882. Sold to Colony of New South Wales and served as a training ship.
Emerald September 1878October 1881Took punitive action against natives who killed commander of HMS Sandfly.
Cormorant 18781882Took punitive action against natives who killed commander of HMS Sandfly.
Danae 1878August 1880
Miranda September 1880May 1886
Alert 18801882
Meda 18801886Undertook survey work along North West Australia. She was sold in 1887 to the Colony of Western Australia.
Diamond October 1881August 1888
Espiegle November 1881March 1885
Nelson 21 January 18823 September 1888Flagship from 21 January 1882 until 1888.
Lark 18821886
Raven 25 April 1883October 1890
Harrier (1881) September 18831888
Undine September 18831888
Swinger 2 October 1883August 1891
Dart 18831904
Paluma 18841895Built for Colony of Queensland, she was commissioned in Royal Navy on loan. She was returned to Queensland in 1895 and renamed HMQS Paluma.
Myrmidon 14 March 18851888Undertook surveys along the North of Australia, Darwin and Bass Strait.
Opal March 188511 May 1890
Rapid July 18861 December 1897
Flying Fish 18861866
Calliope September 1887October 1889Participated in the 1889 Samoan conflict.
Egeria 18871894She undertook survey work around Western Pacific islands and Hobart.
Royalist May 1888June 1899Sent to the Gilbert Islands and on 27 May 1892 the islands were proclaimed to be a British protectorate. [11] Participated in the 1899 Samoan civil war.
Orlando 1 September 18881898Flagship from 1 September 1888 until November 1897.
Lizard January 18891904Participated during the Boxer Rebellion in 1900.
Rambler October 18891890She undertook survey work along North Western coast of Australia.
Penguin 14 January 18901888She undertook survey work around Western Pacific islands, New Zealand and Great Barrier Reef. She was transferred for harbour service at Sydney before being commissioned into the RAN as HMAS Penguin a depot ship.
Mildura 18 March 18901905Part of the auxiliary squadron.
Goldfinch March 1890August 1899
Cordelia (1881) 18901891During practice firing one of her guns burst killing five sailors on 28 June 1891.
Curacoa (1878) 1890December 1894Sent to the Ellice Islands and between 9 and 16 October 1892 made a formal declaration on each island that it was to be a British protectorate. [12]
Tauranga 27 January 18911904Part of the auxiliary squadron. Participated in the 1899 Samoan civil war.
Ringarooma 3 February 18911904Grounded on a reef at Malekula Island, New Hebrides on 31 August 1894 and was towed off by a French warship. Part of the auxiliary squadron.
Katoomba 24 March 1891January 1906Part of the auxiliary squadron.
Wallaroo 31 March 1891January 1906Part of the auxiliary squadron. Participated during the Boxer Rebellion in 1900. One of her boilers exploded on 7 January 1904 killing 4 sailors.
Boomerang 18911904
Karrakatta 18911903
Ringdove 1891February 1901
Pylades November 189429 January 1905
Waterwitch 18951900
Torch February 18971913
Royal Arthur 4 November 18976 April 1904Flagship from 4 November 1897 until April 1904.
Mohawk December 18971900Escorted New South Wales Naval Brigade to China during the Boxer Rebellion in 1900.
Porpoise December 1897June 1901Participated in the 1899 Samoan civil war.
Archer 1900December 1901
Phoebe 19 February 190123 December 1905
Sparrow February 19011904Later commissioned in New Zealand Marine Department as training ship NZS Amokura in 1905
Psyche 22 September 19031913Was later commissioned in RAN in 1915 as HMAS Psyche.
Mutine December 1903February 1905
Clio (1903) 19 January 190414 April 1905
Cadmus 13 April 1904May 1905
Euryalus July 19041905Flagship between 26 March 1904 and February 1905.
Challenger (1902) 19041912
Powerful February 1905December 1911Flagship from 1905 to 1911.
Pegasus March 1905March 1913
Pyramus 16 September 19051913She grounded on a reef near Cooktown on 22 June 1907 and was refloated.
Pioneer (1899) September 19051 March 1913Commissioned as HMAS Pioneer in 1913.
Encounter December 190521 June 1912Commissioned as HMAS Encounter on 1 July 1912.
Cambrian 19051913Flagship between January and October 1913, the last flagship of Australia Station
Prometheus 19051913
Fantome 19061913Undertook survey work along the North and Eastern coasts of Australia and New Guinea.
Sealark 19101913Undertook survey work in the Torres Strait and Solomon Islands.
Drake 30 November 19111 January 1913Flagship between 1911 and 1 January 1913.

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References

Citations

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Dennis et al. 2008, p. 53.
  2. Nicholls, B. (1988). The Colonial Volunteers: The Defence Forces of the Australian Colonies 1836–1901. North Sydney: Allen & Unwin. p. 2. ISBN   978-0-04302-003-6.
  3. Graham, G. S. (1967). Great Britain in the Indian Ocean: A study of Maritime Enterprise 1810–1850 . Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 459. OCLC   456365.
  4. Dennis et al. 2008, pp. 53 & 67.
  5. Blunt, A. (2002). Key Resources Guide on Australian Maritime Strategy (PDF). Canberra: Information and Research Services, Department of the Parliamentary Library. pp. 16–17. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 November 2003.
  6. Dennis et al. 2008, p. 67.
  7. Stevens, D. "The RAN – A Brief History". Royal Australian Navy. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
  8. McGibbon, I. C.; Goldstone, Paul (2000). The Oxford Companion to New Zealand Military History. Auckland: Oxford University Press. pp. 45–46. ISBN   978-0-19558-376-2.
  9. "Naval & Military intelligence". The Times. No. 36980. London. 17 January 1903. p. 9.
  10. Bastock, J. (1988). Ships on the Australia Station. Frenchs Forest: Child & Associates Publishing. pp. 23–24. ISBN   978-0-86777-348-4.
  11. Resture, Jane. "Tuvalu History – The Davis Diaries". Archived from the original on 3 December 2011. Retrieved 20 September 2011.
  12. Teo, N. P. (1983). "Chapter 17: Colonial Rule". In Laracy, Hugh (ed.). Tuvalu: A History. Suva: University of the South Pacific and the Government of Tuvalu. pp. 127–139. OCLC   20637433.

Sources

Dennis, P.; Grey, J.; Morris, E.; Prior, R. (2008). The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History (2nd ed.). South Melbourne: Oxford University Press. ISBN   978-0-19551-784-2. OCLC   271822831.

Further reading

Frame, T. R. (2004). No Pleasure Cruise: the Story of the Royal Australian Navy. Crows Nest: Allen & Unwin. ISBN   978-1-74114-233-4. OCLC   225590479.