History | |
---|---|
Australia | |
Namesake | John Moresby |
Builder | State Dockyard Newcastle |
Laid down | May 1962 |
Launched | 7 September 1963 |
Commissioned | 6 March 1964 |
Decommissioned | 1998 |
Renamed | MV Patricia Anne Hotung (1999) |
Identification | IMO number: 8952352 |
Motto | "With Science and Vision" |
Honours and awards | Two inherited battle honours |
Fate | Sold September 1999 as humanitarian ship |
General characteristics | |
Type | Survey ship |
Displacement | 2,340 tonnes |
Length | 95.7 m (314 ft) |
Beam | 12.8 m (42 ft) |
Draught | 3.81 m (12.5 ft) mean |
Propulsion | Diesel Electric, three English Electric diesel engines, 2 electric motors, 2 shafts |
Speed | 19 knots (35 km/h; 22 mph) |
Range | 10,000 nautical miles (19,000 km; 12,000 mi) |
Boats & landing craft carried | 3 × 34 ft (10 m) Survey Motor Boats |
Capacity | 372 tons oil fuel |
Complement | 146 |
Sensors and processing systems | TM 829 radar, Lambda position fixing system, Simrad SU2 sonar, echo sounders, magnetometer |
Armament | 2 × 40 mm Bofors guns (removed 1973) |
Aircraft carried |
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HMAS Moresby, named for the explorer Captain John Moresby, was a hydrographic survey ship of the Royal Australian Navy (RAN). Serving in the RAN from 1964 to 1998, [1] Moresby was then sold into civilian service. Renamed MV Patricia Anne Hotung, the ship was chartered by the International Organisation for Migration.
Moresby was launched at the State Dockyard, Newcastle on 7 September 1963 by the wife of Rear Admiral Gatacre. She was commissioned into the RAN on 6 March 1964. [2] Moresby was the only ship of her class to be constructed.
Throughout her career in the RAN, Moresby sailed over 1 million miles, and carried out surveys of Torres Strait, the D'Entrecasteaux Channel in Tasmania, Exmouth Gulf, Wilsons Promontory and the Gulf of Papua. [3]
In October 1999, Moresby was sold to Hong Kong businessman and philanthropist Eric Hotung via Caravelle Investments Limited of Hong Kong for A$584,985. [4] She was renamed MV Patricia Anne Hotung, [5] and underwent a A$1 million refit at Maritime Engineers in Fremantle, Western Australia, enabling the 95-metre (312 ft) ship to carry 500 passengers and 2,021 tons of cargo. [6] [5]
Patricia Anne Hotung sailed in support of the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), and transported approximately 10,000 refugees from the West Timor camps to East Timor between January 2000 and 24 July 2001. IOM Director General Brunson McKinley described the ship's role as "invaluable" and "a remarkable contribution to the international humanitarian effort to bring East Timorese refugees home to begin rebuilding their devastated country" [7]
HMAS Duchess was a Daring-class destroyer that served in the Royal Navy as HMS Duchess from 1952 to 1964, and in the Royal Australian Navy (RAN) from 1964 to 1980. She was laid down by John I. Thornycroft and Company, and commissioned into the Royal Navy in 1952.
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HMAS Vampire was the third of three Australian-built Daring-class destroyers serving in the Royal Australian Navy (RAN). One of the first all-welded ships built in Australia, she was constructed at Cockatoo Island Dockyard between 1952 and 1959, and was commissioned into the RAN a day after completion.
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The history of the Royal Australian Navy traces the development of the Royal Australian Navy (RAN) from the colonisation of Australia by the British in 1788. Until 1859, vessels of the Royal Navy made frequent trips to the new colonies. In 1859, the Australia Squadron was formed as a separate squadron and remained in Australia until 1913. Until Federation, five of the six Australian colonies operated their own colonial naval force, which formed on 1 March 1901 the Australian Navy's (AN) Commonwealth Naval Force which received Royal patronage in July 1911 and was from that time referred to as Royal Australian Navy (RAN). On 4 October 1913 the new replacement fleet for the foundation fleet of 1901 steamed through Sydney Heads for the first time.
HMAS Gawler (J188/B241/A115), named for the town of Gawler, was one of 60 constructed during World War II and one of 20 Bathurst-class corvettes built for the Admiralty but manned by personnel of and commissioned into the Royal Australian Navy (RAN). The ship was laid down by BHP at its Whyalla shipyard in early 1941, launched later that year, and commissioned in 1942.
HMAS Gladstone (J324/M324), named for the city of Gladstone, Queensland, was one of 60 Bathurst-class corvettes constructed during World War II, and one of 36 that were initially manned and commissioned solely by the Royal Australian Navy (RAN). Built by Walkers Limited, the ship was commissioned in 1943.
HMAS Stalwart was an Australian-designed and constructed Escort Maintenance ship of the Royal Australian Navy (RAN). Commissioned on 9 February 1968 and decommissioned on 9 March 1990, Stalwart served as a destroyer tender, the RAN flagship, and a training vessel during her career. She was sold in 1993 for conversion into a short-range cruise ship, under the names MV Her Majesty M, then MV Tara II. The vessel did not enter civilian service before she was broken up for scrap in 2003.
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Eric Edward Hotung CBE was a Hong Kong billionaire businessman, financier, and philanthropist.